5ixe

From Proteopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

1.75A RESOLUTION STRUCTURE OF 5-Fluoroindole BOUND BETA-GLYCOSIDASE (W33G) FROM SULFOLOBUS SOLFATARICUS

Structural highlights

5ixe is a 2 chain structure with sequence from Saccharolobus solfataricus P2. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:X-ray diffraction, Resolution 1.75Å
Ligands:14O, CL, MPD
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Function

BGAL_SACS2

Publication Abstract from PubMed

Chemical biology has long sought to build protein switches for use in molecular diagnostics, imaging, and synthetic biology. The overarching challenge for any type of engineered protein switch is the ability to respond in a selective and predictable manner that caters to the specific environments and time scales needed for the application at hand. We previously described a general method to design switchable proteins, called "chemical rescue of structure", that builds de novo allosteric control sites directly into a protein's functional domain. This approach entails first carving out a buried cavity in a protein via mutation, such that the protein's structure is disrupted and activity is lost. An exogenous ligand is subsequently added to substitute for the atoms that were removed by mutation, restoring the protein's structure and thus its activity. Here, we begin to ask what principles dictate such switches' response to different activating ligands. Using a redesigned beta-glycosidase enzyme as our model system, we find that the designed effector site is quite malleable and can accommodate both larger and smaller ligands, but that optimal rescue comes only from a ligand that perfectly replaces the deleted atoms. Guided by these principles, we then altered the shape of this cavity by using different cavity-forming mutations, and predicted different ligands that would better complement these new cavities. These findings demonstrate how the protein switch's response can be tuned via small changes to the ligand with respect to the binding cavity, and ultimately enabled us to design an improved switch. We anticipate that these insights will help enable the design of future systems that tune other aspects of protein activity, whereby, like evolved protein receptors, remolding the effector site can also adjust additional outputs such as substrate selectivity and activation of downstream signaling pathways.

Full and Partial Agonism of a Designed Enzyme Switch.,Budiardjo SJ, Licknack TJ, Cory MB, Kapros D, Roy A, Lovell S, Douglas J, Karanicolas J ACS Synth Biol. 2016 Jul 22. PMID:27389009[1]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Loading citation details..
Citations
No citations found

See Also

References

  1. Budiardjo SJ, Licknack TJ, Cory MB, Kapros D, Roy A, Lovell S, Douglas J, Karanicolas J. Full and Partial Agonism of a Designed Enzyme Switch. ACS Synth Biol. 2016 Jul 22. PMID:27389009 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.6b00097

Contents


PDB ID 5ixe

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools