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The use of ene adducts to study and engineer enoyl-thioester reductases
- Source :
- Nat Chem Biol, NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- An improved understanding of enzymes' catalytic proficiency and stereoselectivity would further enable applications in chemistry, biocatalysis and industrial biotechnology. We use a chemical probe to dissect individual catalytic steps of enoyl-thioester reductases (Etrs), validating an active site tyrosine as the cryptic proton donor and explaining how it had eluded definitive identification. This information enabled the rational redesign of Etr, yielding mutants that create products with inverted stereochemistry at wild type-like turnover frequency.
- Subjects :
- Models, Molecular
Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors
Stereochemistry
Protein Conformation
Reductase
Thioester
Protein Engineering
01 natural sciences
Catalysis
Adduct
Substrate Specificity
03 medical and health sciences
Oxidoreductase
Molecular Biology
health care economics and organizations
Ene reaction
030304 developmental biology
chemistry.chemical_classification
0303 health sciences
Binding Sites
010405 organic chemistry
Stereoisomerism
Cell Biology
0104 chemical sciences
Enzyme
chemistry
Biocatalysis
Tyrosine
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Stereoselectivity
Protons
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nat Chem Biol, NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1b1644de5b6c3a6a232147951f7ae17c