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ABSTRACT: The Fasciola hepatica thioredoxin protein structure has been determined to 1.45A resolution. This is the first example of a single crystal structure to show the active site cysteine residues in both the reduced and disulfide oxidised form. Consistent with this observation the process of oxidation appears to require very little rearrangement of the surrounding protein structure. The F. hepatica thioredoxin structure has been compared to other thioredoxin protein structures already known and is found to be highly conserved. The F. hepatica protein is most similar to that of the thioredoxin from its human and animal hosts but it resembles other parasitic thioredoxins with regard to having no additional cysteine residues and is therefore not regulated by transient disulfide bond formation as proposed for thioredoxins from higher eukaryotic species.
Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 07/2008; 161(1):44-8. · 2.55 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Periplasmic SER (selenate reductase) from Thauera selenatis is classified as a member of the Tat (twin-arginine translocase)-translocated (Type II) molybdoenzymes and comprises three subunits each containing redox cofactors. Variable-temperature X-band EPR spectra of the purified SER complex showed features attributable to centres [3Fe-4S]1+, [4Fe-4S]1+, Mo(V) and haem-b. EPR-monitored redox-potentiometric titration of the SerABC complex (SerA-SerB-SerC, a hetero-trimetric complex of alphabetagamma subunits) revealed that the [3Fe-4S] cluster (FS4, iron-sulfur cluster 4) titrated as n=1 Nernstian component with a midpoint redox potential (E(m)) of +118+/-10 mV for the [3Fe-4S]1+/0 couple. A [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster EPR signal developed over a range of potentials between 300 and -200 mV and was best fitted to two sequential Nernstian n=1 curves with midpoint redox potentials of +183+/-10 mV (FS1) and -51+/-10 mV (FS3) for the two [4Fe-4S]1+/2+ cluster couples. Upon further reduction, the observed signal intensity of the [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster decreases. This change in intensity can again be fitted to an n=1 Nernstian component with a midpoint potential (E(m)) of about -356 mV (FS2). It is considered likely that, at low redox potential (E(m) less than -300 mV), the remaining oxidized cluster is reduced (spin S=1/2) and strongly spin-couples to a neighbouring [4Fe-4S]1+ cluster rendering both centres EPR-silent. The involvement of both [3Fe-4S] and [4Fe-4S] clusters in electron transfer to the active site of the periplasmic SER was demonstrated by the re-oxidation of the clusters under anaerobic selenate turnover conditions. Attempts to detect a high-spin [4Fe-4S] cluster (FS0) in SerA at low temperature (5 K) and high power (100 mW) were unsuccessful. The Mo(V) EPR recorded at 60 K, in samples poised at pH 6.0, displays principal g values of g3 approximately 1.999, g2 approximately 1.996 and g1 approximately 1.965 (g(av) 1.9867). The dominant features at g2 and g3 are not split, but hyperfine splitting is observed in the g1 region of the spectrum and can be best simulated as arising from a single proton with a coupling constant of A1 (1H)=1.014 mT. The presence of the haem-b moiety in SerC was demonstrated by the detection of a signal at g approximately 3.33 and is consistent with haem co-ordinated by methionine and lysine axial ligands. The combined evidence from EPR analysis and sequence alignments supports the assignment of the periplasmic SER as a member of the Type II molybdoenzymes and provides the first spectro-potentiometric insight into an enzyme that catalyses a key reductive reaction in the biogeochemical selenium cycle.
Biochemical Journal 12/2007; 408(1):19-28. · 4.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The crystal structure of a (-) gamma-lactamase from an Aureobacterium species showed a molecule bound covalently to the active site serine residue. This enzyme complex represented the first structure of a stably bound tetrahedral intermediate for an alpha/beta hydrolase fold enzyme. The structural elucidation of tetrahedral intermediates is important for the understanding of enzymatic mechanism, substrate recognition and enzyme inhibition. In this paper, we report the synthesis and subsequent characterisation of (3aR,7aS)-3a,4,7,7a-tetrahydrobenzo-[1,3]-dioxol-2-one (BD1), the molecule modelled into the Aureobacterium (-) gamma-lactamase active site. This molecule has been confirmed to be an inhibitor and to be displaced from the enzyme by the racemic gamma-lactam substrate.
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 10/2005; 3(18):3260-2. · 3.70 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The structure of the recombinant (-) gamma-lactamase from an Aureobacterium species has been solved at 1.73A resolution in the cubic space group F23 with unit cell parameters a=b=c=240.6A. The trimeric enzyme has an alpha/beta hydrolase fold and closely resembles the cofactor free haloperoxidases. The structure has been solved in complex with a covalently bound ligand originating from the host cell and also in the unligated form. The associated density in the former structure has been interpreted as the two-ring ligand (3aR,7aS)-3a,4,7,7a-tetrahydro-benzo [1,3] dioxol-2-one which forms a tetrahedral complex with OG of the catalytic Ser98. Soaks of these crystals with the industrial substrate gamma-lactam or its structural analogue, norcamphor, result in the displacement of the ligand from the enzyme active site, thereby allowing determination of the unligated structure. The presence of the ligand in the active site protects the enzyme from serine hydrolase inhibitors. Cyclic ethylene carbonate, the first ring of the ligand, was shown to be a substrate of the enzyme.
Journal of Molecular Biology 05/2004; 338(3):519-32. · 4.00 Impact Factor