Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10768689 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Monoclinic crystal structure of C-terminal desundecapeptide nitrite reductase (NiRc-11) from Achromobacter cycloclastes was determined at 2.6Â Ã
. NiRc-11 exists as a loose trimer in the crystal. Deletion of 11 residues eliminates all intersubunit hydrogen bonds mediated by the C-terminal tail. The rigid irregular coil 105-112, which constitutes part of the sidewall of the active site pocket, undergoes conformational changes and becomes highly flexible in NiRc-11. Correspondingly, the linker segments between the two copper sites 95-100 and 135-136 are partly relaxed in conformation, which leads to disrupted active site microenvironments responsible for the activity loss and spectral change of NiRc-11. Comparison with the native structure revealed a bulky residue Met331 fastened by hydrogen bonding, which may play a direct role in keeping the right copper site geometry by protruding its side chain against the irregular coil 105-112. Sequence alignment showed that the bulky residue is conserved at position 331, indicating an equal importance of C-terminal segment in other copper-containing nitrite reductases.
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Authors
Hai-Tao Li, Tschining Chang, Wen-Chang Chang, Chung-Jung Chen, Ming-Yih Liu, Lu-Lu Gui, Ji-Ping Zhang, Xiao-Min An, Wen-Rui Chang,