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Crystal Structure of Papaya Glutaminyl Cyclase, an Archetype for Plant and Bacterial Glutaminyl Cyclases

Authors :
Wintjens, René
Belrhali, Hassan
Clantin, Bernard
Azarkan, Mohamed
Bompard, Coralie
Baeyens-Volant, Danielle
Looze, Yvan
Villeret, Vincent
Source :
Journal of Molecular Biology. Mar2006, Vol. 357 Issue 2, p457-470. 14p.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Glutaminyl cyclases (QCs) (EC 2.3.2.5) catalyze the intramolecular cyclization of protein N-terminal glutamine residues into pyroglutamic acid with the concomitant liberation of ammonia. QCs may be classified in two groups containing, respectively, the mammalian enzymes, and the enzymes from plants, bacteria, and parasites. The crystal structure of the QC from the latex of Carica papaya (PQC) has been determined at 1.7Å resolution. The structure was solved by the single wavelength anomalous diffraction technique using sulfur and zinc as anomalous scatterers. The enzyme folds into a five-bladed β-propeller, with two additional α-helices and one β hairpin. The propeller closure is achieved via an original molecular velcro, which links the last two blades into a large eight stranded β-sheet. The zinc ion present in the PQC is bound via an octahedral coordination into an elongated cavity located along the pseudo 5-fold axis of the β-propeller fold. This zinc ion presumably plays a structural role and may contribute to the exceptional stability of PQC, along with an extended hydrophobic packing, the absence of long loops, the three-joint molecular velcro and the overall folding itself. Multiple sequence alignments combined with structural analyses have allowed us to tentatively locate the active site, which is filled in the crystal structure either by a Tris molecule or an acetate ion. These analyses are further supported by the experimental evidence that Tris is a competitive inhibitor of PQC. The active site is located at the C-terminal entrance of the PQC central tunnel. W83, W110, W169, Q24, E69, N155, K225, F22 and F67 are highly conserved residues in the C-terminal entrance, and their putative role in catalysis is discussed. The PQC structure is representative of the plants, bacterial and parasite enzymes and contrasts with that of mammalian enzymes, that may possibly share a conserved scaffold of the bacterial aminopeptidase. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222836
Volume :
357
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19965745
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2005.12.029