Dunn_2005_J.Mol.Biol_346_253

Reference

Title : The structure of the C-C bond hydrolase MhpC provides insights into its catalytic mechanism - Dunn_2005_J.Mol.Biol_346_253
Author(s) : Dunn G , Montgomery MG , Mohammed F , Coker A , Cooper JB , Robertson T , Garcia JL , Bugg TD , Wood SP
Ref : Journal of Molecular Biology , 346 :253 , 2005
Abstract :

2-Hydroxy-6-ketonona-2,4-diene-1,9-dioic acid 5,6-hydrolase (MhpC) is a 62 kDa homodimeric enzyme of the phenylpropionate degradation pathway of Escherichia coli. The 2.1 A resolution X-ray structure of the native enzyme determined from orthorhombic crystals confirms that it is a member of the alpha/beta hydrolase fold family, comprising eight beta-strands interconnected by loops and helices. The 2.8 A resolution structure of the enzyme co-crystallised with the non-hydrolysable substrate analogue 2,6-diketo-nona-1,9-dioic acid (DKNDA) confirms the location of the active site in a buried channel including Ser110, His263 and Asp235, postulated contributors to a serine protease-like catalytic triad in homologous enzymes. It appears that the ligand binds in two separate orientations. In the first, the C6 keto group of the inhibitor forms a hemi-ketal adduct with the Ser110 side-chain, the C9 carboxylate group interacts, via the intermediacy of a water molecule, with Arg188 at one end of the active site, while the C1 carboxylate group of the inhibitor comes close to His114 at the other end. In the second orientation, the C1 carboxylate group binds at the Arg188 end of the active site and the C9 carboxylate group at the His114 end. These arrangements implicated His114 or His263 as plausible contributors to catalysis of the initial enol/keto tautomerisation of the substrate but lack of conservation of His114 amongst related enzymes and mutagenesis results suggest that His263 is the residue involved. Variability in the quality of the electron density for the inhibitor amongst the eight molecules of the crystal asymmetric unit appears to correlate with alternative positions for the side-chain of His114. This might arise from half-site occupation of the dimeric enzyme and reflect the apparent dissociation of approximately 50% of the keto intermediate from the enzyme during the catalytic cycle.

PubMedSearch : Dunn_2005_J.Mol.Biol_346_253
PubMedID: 15663942
Gene_locus related to this paper: ecoli-mhpc

Related information

Gene_locus ecoli-mhpc
Structure ecoli-mhpc    1U2E

Citations formats

Dunn G, Montgomery MG, Mohammed F, Coker A, Cooper JB, Robertson T, Garcia JL, Bugg TD, Wood SP (2005)
The structure of the C-C bond hydrolase MhpC provides insights into its catalytic mechanism
Journal of Molecular Biology 346 :253

Dunn G, Montgomery MG, Mohammed F, Coker A, Cooper JB, Robertson T, Garcia JL, Bugg TD, Wood SP (2005)
Journal of Molecular Biology 346 :253