Zhou_2020_Biochem.Biophys.Res.Commun__

Reference

Title : Structure of a gut microbial diltiazem-metabolizing enzyme suggests possible substrate binding mode - Zhou_2020_Biochem.Biophys.Res.Commun__
Author(s) : Zhou S , Ko TP , Huang JW , Liu W , Zheng Y , Wu S , Wang Q , Xie Z , Liu Z , Chen CC , Guo RT
Ref : Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications , : , 2020
Abstract :

When administrated orally, the vasodilating drug diltiazem can be metabolized into diacetyl diltiazem in the presence of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, a human gut microbe. The removal of acetyl group from the parent drug is carried out by the GDSL/SGNH-family hydrolase BT4096. Here the crystal structure of the enzyme was solved by mercury soaking and single-wavelength anomalous diffraction. The protein folds into two parts. The N-terminal part comprises the catalytic domain which is similar to other GDSL/SGNH hydrolases. The flanking C-terminal part is made up of a beta-barrel subdomain and an alpha-helical subdomain. Structural comparison shows that the catalytic domain is most akin to acetyl-xylooligosaccharide esterase and allows a plausible binding mode of diltiazem to be proposed. The beta-barrel subdomain is similar in topology to the immunoglobulin-like domains, including some carbohydrate-binding modules, of various bacterial glycoside hydrolases. Consequently, BT4096 might originally function as an oligosaccharide deacetylase with additional subdomains that could enhance substrate binding, and it acts on diltiazem just by accident.

PubMedSearch : Zhou_2020_Biochem.Biophys.Res.Commun__
PubMedID: 32423809

Related information

Substrate Diltiazem

Citations formats

Zhou S, Ko TP, Huang JW, Liu W, Zheng Y, Wu S, Wang Q, Xie Z, Liu Z, Chen CC, Guo RT (2020)
Structure of a gut microbial diltiazem-metabolizing enzyme suggests possible substrate binding mode
Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications :

Zhou S, Ko TP, Huang JW, Liu W, Zheng Y, Wu S, Wang Q, Xie Z, Liu Z, Chen CC, Guo RT (2020)
Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications :