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Hole, oxyanion

Figure 11.6 A schematic view of the presumed binding mode of the tetrahedral transition state intermediate for the deacylation step. The four essential features of the serine proteinases are highlighted in yellow the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole, the specificity pocket, and the unspecific main-chain substrate binding. Figure 11.6 A schematic view of the presumed binding mode of the tetrahedral transition state intermediate for the deacylation step. The four essential features of the serine proteinases are highlighted in yellow the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole, the specificity pocket, and the unspecific main-chain substrate binding.
This inhibitor does not form a covalent bond to Ser 195 but one of its carboxy oxygen atoms is in the oxyanion hole forming hydrogen bonds to the main-chain NH groups of residues 193 and 195. The tyrosyl side chain is positioned in the specificity pocket, which derives its specificity mainly from three residues, 216, 226, and 189, as we shall see later. The main chain of... [Pg.211]

Figure 11.9 A diagram of the active site of chymotrypsin with a bound inhibitor, Ac-Pro-Ala-Pro-Tyr-COOH. The diagram illustrates how this inhibitor binds in relation to the catalytic triad, the strbstrate specificity pocket, the oxyanion hole and the nonspecific substrate binding region. The Inhibitor is ted. Hydrogen bonds between Inhibitor and enzyme are striped. (Adapted from M.N.G. James et al., /. Mol. Biol. 144 43-88, 1980.)... Figure 11.9 A diagram of the active site of chymotrypsin with a bound inhibitor, Ac-Pro-Ala-Pro-Tyr-COOH. The diagram illustrates how this inhibitor binds in relation to the catalytic triad, the strbstrate specificity pocket, the oxyanion hole and the nonspecific substrate binding region. The Inhibitor is ted. Hydrogen bonds between Inhibitor and enzyme are striped. (Adapted from M.N.G. James et al., /. Mol. Biol. 144 43-88, 1980.)...
Figure 11.10 Topological diagram of the two domains of chymotrypsin, illustrating that the essential active-site residues are part of the same two loop regions (3-4 and 5-6, red) of the two domains. These residues form the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole (green), and the substrate binding regions (yellow and blue) including essential residues in the specificity pocket. Figure 11.10 Topological diagram of the two domains of chymotrypsin, illustrating that the essential active-site residues are part of the same two loop regions (3-4 and 5-6, red) of the two domains. These residues form the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole (green), and the substrate binding regions (yellow and blue) including essential residues in the specificity pocket.
The C-terminal part is green. The catalytic triad Asp 32, His 64, and Ser 221 as well as Asn 15S, which forms part of the oxyanion hole are shown in purple. The main chain of part of a polypeptide Inhibitor is shown in red. Main-chain residues around 101 and 127 (orange circles) form the nonspecific binding regions of peptide substrates. [Pg.216]

The active site of subtilisin is outside the carboxy ends of the central p strands analogous to the position of the binding sites in other a/p proteins as discussed in Chapter 4. Details of this active site are surprisingly similar to those of chymotrypsin, in spite of the completely different folds of the two enzymes (Figures 11.14 and 11.9). A catalytic triad is present that comprises residues Asp 32, His 64 and the reactive Ser 221. The negatively charged oxygen atom of the tetrahedral transition state binds in an oxyanion hole,... [Pg.216]

Figure 11.14 Schematic diagram of the active site of subtilisin. A region (residues 42-45) of a bound polypeptide inhibitor, eglin, is shown in red. The four essential features of the active site— the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole, the specificity pocket, and the region for nonspecific binding of substrate—are highlighted in yellow. Important hydrogen bonds between enzyme and inhibitor are striped. This figure should be compared to Figure 11.9, which shows the same features for chymotrypsin. (Adapted from W. Bode et al., EMBO /. Figure 11.14 Schematic diagram of the active site of subtilisin. A region (residues 42-45) of a bound polypeptide inhibitor, eglin, is shown in red. The four essential features of the active site— the catalytic triad, the oxyanion hole, the specificity pocket, and the region for nonspecific binding of substrate—are highlighted in yellow. Important hydrogen bonds between enzyme and inhibitor are striped. This figure should be compared to Figure 11.9, which shows the same features for chymotrypsin. (Adapted from W. Bode et al., EMBO /.
The single mutation Asp 32-Ala reduces the catalytic reaction rate by a factor of about lO compared with wild type. This rate reduction reflects the role of Asp 32 in stabilizing the positive charge that His 64 acquires in the transition state. A similar reduction of kcat and kcat/ m (2.5 x 10 ) is obtained for the single mutant Asn 155-Thr. Asn 155 provides one of the two hydrogen bonds to the substrate transition state in the oxyanion hole of subtilisin. [Pg.218]

Bryan, P., et al. Site-directed mutagenesis and the role of the oxyanion hole in subtilisin. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83 3743-3745, 1986. [Pg.220]

X-ray crystallographic studies of serine protease complexes with transition-state analogs have shown how chymotrypsin stabilizes the tetrahedral oxyanion transition states (structures (c) and (g) in Figure 16.24) of the protease reaction. The amide nitrogens of Ser and Gly form an oxyanion hole in which the substrate carbonyl oxygen is hydrogen-bonded to the amide N-H groups. [Pg.519]

The oxyanion hole of chymotryp.sin. stabilize.s the tetrahedral oxyanion tran.sition. state.s of die mechani.sm in Figure 16.24. [Pg.519]

For many serine and cysteine peptidases catalysis first involves formation of a complex known as an acyl intermediate. An essential residue is required to stabilize this intermediate by helping to form the oxyanion hole. In cathepsin B a glutamine performs this role and sometimes a catalytic tetrad (Gin, Cys, His, Asn) is referred too. In chymotrypsin, a glycine is essential for stabilizing the oxyanion hole. [Pg.877]

Exercise 7.4. (a) Use the parameters of Table 7.3 and the LD model to calculate the activation energy of the 2— 3 step in solution, (b) Repeat the same calculation in a protein model where a positive charge of +0.5 (3 A from the carbonyl carbon) represents the oxyanion holes, while a negative charge of -0.5 near the His+ residue represents the somewhat screened Asp 102. Simulate the rest of the system by the LD model. [Pg.181]

Orbitals, atomic, see Atomic orbitals Orbitals, molecular, see Molecular orbitals Orbital steering mechanism, 220-221 Oxyanion intermediates, 172,181,185,210 Oxyanion hole, 181... [Pg.233]

Tetrhedral intermediate, 172 Thermodynamic cycles, 186 Thermolysin, zinc as cofactor for, 204 Thrombin, 170 Torsional potential, 111 Transition states, 41-42,44, 45,46, 88, 90-92 in amide hydrolysis, 219-221 oxyanion hole and, 181 stabilization of, 181,181 carbonium ion, 154,155,156-161, 167-169 for gas-phase reactions, 43... [Pg.235]

In principle, numerous reports have detailed the possibility to modify an enzyme to carry out a different type of reaction than that of its attributed function, and the possibility to modify the cofactor of the enzyme has been well explored [8,10]. Recently, the possibility to directly observe reactions, normally not catalyzed by an enzyme when choosing a modified substrate, has been reported under the concept of catalytic promiscuity [9], a phenomenon that is believed to be involved in the appearance of new enzyme functions during the course of evolution [23]. A recent example of catalytic promiscuity of possible interest for novel biotransformations concerns the discovery that mutation of the nucleophilic serine residue in the active site of Candida antarctica lipase B produces a mutant (SerlOSAla) capable of efficiently catalyzing the Michael addition of acetyl acetone to methyl vinyl ketone [24]. The oxyanion hole is believed to be complex and activate the carbonyl group of the electrophile, while the histidine nucleophile takes care of generating the acetyl acetonate anion by deprotonation of the carbon (Figure 3.5). [Pg.69]

The mechanism for the lipase-catalyzed reaction of an acid derivative with a nucleophile (alcohol, amine, or thiol) is known as a serine hydrolase mechanism (Scheme 7.2). The active site of the enzyme is constituted by a catalytic triad (serine, aspartic, and histidine residues). The serine residue accepts the acyl group of the ester, leading to an acyl-enzyme activated intermediate. This acyl-enzyme intermediate reacts with the nucleophile, an amine or ammonia in this case, to yield the final amide product and leading to the free biocatalyst, which can enter again into the catalytic cycle. A histidine residue, activated by an aspartate side chain, is responsible for the proton transference necessary for the catalysis. Another important factor is that the oxyanion hole, formed by different residues, is able to stabilize the negatively charged oxygen present in both the transition state and the tetrahedral intermediate. [Pg.172]

On the basis of the quantum-chemical studies, it has been established that it is the so called oxyanion hole of the enzyme that binds the carbonyl oxygen or nitrile nitrogen, enhancing the attack of a nucleophile, which is, in turn, activated by histidine (Scheme 5.22) [110]. [Pg.113]

This model clearly shows that the catalytic machinery involves a dyad of histidine and aspartate together with the oxyanion hole. Hence, it does not involve serine, which is the key amino acid in the hydrolytic activity of lipases, and, together with aspartate and histidine, constitutes the active site catalytic triad. This has been confirmed by constructing a mutant in which serine was replaced with alanine (Serl05Ala), and finding that it catalyzes the Michael additions even more efficiently than the wild-type enzyme (an example of induced catalytic promiscuity ) [105]. [Pg.113]

Zhang Y, Kua J, McCammon JA (2002) Role of the catalytic triad and oxyanion hole in acetylcholinesterase catalysis an ab initio QM/MM study. J Am Chem Soc 124 10572—10577... [Pg.349]

Clearly, the oxyanion hole is now as significant a feature of the binding site of such acyl transfer abzymes as it is already for esterases and peptidases — and not without good reason. Knossow has analysed the structures of three esterase-like catalytic antibodies, each elicited in response to the same phosphonate TSA hapten (Charbonnier et al., 1997). Catalysis for all three is accounted for by transition state stabilization and in each case there is an... [Pg.263]

The mechanism by which serine peptidases, particularly serine endopep-tidases (EC 3.4.21), hydrolyze peptide bonds in peptides and proteins has been extensively investigated by X-ray crystallography, site-directed mutagenesis, detection of intermediates, chemical modification, H-NMR spectroscopy, and neutron diffraction [2-14], These studies revealed that all serine peptidases possess a catalytic triad, composed of a serine, a histidine, and an aspartate residue, and a so-called oxyanion hole formed by backbone NH groups. [Pg.68]

Fig. 3.3. Major steps in the hydrolase-catalyzed hydrolysis of peptide bonds, taking chymo-trypsin, a serine hydrolase, as the example. Asp102, His57, and Ser195 represent the catalytic triad the NH groups of Ser195 and Gly193 form the oxyanion hole . Steps a-c acylation Steps d-f deacylation. A possible mechanism for peptide bond synthesis by peptidases is represented by the reverse sequence Steps f-a. Fig. 3.3. Major steps in the hydrolase-catalyzed hydrolysis of peptide bonds, taking chymo-trypsin, a serine hydrolase, as the example. Asp102, His57, and Ser195 represent the catalytic triad the NH groups of Ser195 and Gly193 form the oxyanion hole . Steps a-c acylation Steps d-f deacylation. A possible mechanism for peptide bond synthesis by peptidases is represented by the reverse sequence Steps f-a.
Carbothioic O-acid esters (3.1 to be distinguished from carbothioic S-acid esters, R-CO-SR, discussed in Chapt. 7) are not hydrolyzed by serine peptidases. It has been postulated that the thiocarbonyl S-atom, which is larger and less prone to H-bonding than the carbonyl O-atom, cannot interact effectively with the oxyanion hole. The resulting inability to stabilize the transition state considerably reduces the rate of hydrolysis. [Pg.74]

The mechanism of hydrolysis of cysteine peptidases, in particular cysteine endopeptidases (EC 3.4.22), shows similarities and differences with that of serine peptidases [2] [3a] [55 - 59]. Cysteine peptidases also form a covalent, ac-ylated intermediate, but here the attacking nucleophile is the SH group of a cysteine residue, or, rather, the deprotonated thiolate group. Like in serine hydrolases, the imidazole ring of a histidine residue activates the nucleophile, but there is a major difference, since here proton abstraction does not appear to be concerted with nucleophilic substitution but with formation of the stable thiolate-imidazolium ion pair. Presumably as a result of this specific activation of the nucleophile, a H-bond acceptor group like Glu or Asp as found in serine hydrolases is seldom present to complete a catalytic triad. For this reason, cysteine endopeptidases are considered to possess a catalytic dyad (i.e., Cys-S plus H-His+). The active site also contains an oxyanion hole where the terminal NH2 group of a glutamine residue plays a major role. [Pg.77]

Fig. 3.9. The Cys-thiolate/His-imidazolium catalytic dyad and the oxyanion hole of papain,... [Pg.78]

R. Menard, J. Carriere, P. Laflamme, C. Plouffe, H. E. Khouri, T. Vernet, D. Tessier, D. Y. Thomas, A. C. Storer, Contribution of the Glutamine 19 Side Chain to Transition State Stablization in the Oxyanion Hole of Papain , Biochemistry 1991, 30, 8924-8928. [Pg.94]


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Acetylcholinesterase oxyanion hole

Contributions of Oxyanion Holes to Catalysis

Esterase oxyanion holes

Esterases oxyanion hole

Examples of Enolate Oxyanion Holes

Intermediates enzymes with oxyanion holes

Lipase oxyanion hole

Oxyanion

Oxyanion Holes and Their Mimics

Oxyanion Holes with Enolate Intermediates

Oxyanion Holes with Tetrahedral Intermediates

Oxyanion hole formation of in trypsinogen

Oxyanion hole mimics

Oxyanion hole of serine proteases

Serine proteases oxyanion hole

Trypsin oxyanion hole, structure

Utilization of Oxyanion Holes in Enzymes for Other Reactions

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