Back to Search Start Over

Crystal structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase

Authors :
Dagmar Ringe
Thomas R. Barry
Gregory A. Petsko
Shawn Doonan
Constance J. Jeffery
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1998.

Abstract

The crystal structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) has been determined to 2.05 A resolution in the presence of the cofactor pyridoxal-5'-phosphate and the competitive inhibitor maleate. The structure was solved by the method of molecular replacement. The final value of the crystallographic R-factor after refinement was 23.1% with good geometry of the final model. The yeast cytoplasmic enzyme is a homodimer with two identical active sites containing residues from each subunit. It is found in the "closed" conformation with a bound maleate inhibitor in each active site. It shares the same three-dimensional fold and active site residues as the aspartate aminotransferases from Escherichia coli, chicken cytoplasm, and chicken mitochondria, although it shares less than 50% sequence identity with any of them. The availability of four similar enzyme structures from distant regions of the evolutionary tree provides a measure of tolerated changes that can arise during millions of years of evolution.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62e5105abb90f3beedfbe3a9be5c7ee9