Anthony Noles Sandbox: Difference between revisions
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==Mechanism of Aconitase== | ==Mechanism of Aconitase== | ||
{{STRUCTURE_7acn | PDB=7acn | SCENE= }} | {{STRUCTURE_7acn | PDB=7acn | SCENE= }}Aconitase contains an <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster/1'>4Fe-4S iron-sulfur cluster</scene>. This iron sulfur cluster does not participate in redox as most do, but holds the OH goup of citrate to facilitate its elimination.<ref>PMID:16407072 </ref> It is at this 4Fe-4S site that catalysis occurs and citrate or <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster_bound_isocitrate/1'>isocitrate</scene> is bound. The rest of the <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster_w_active_site/2'>active site</scene> is made up of residues Gln72, Asp100, His101, Asp165, Ser166, His167, His147, Glu262, Asn258, Cys358, Cys421, Cys424, Cys358, Cys421, Asn446, Arg447, Arg452, Asp568, Ser642, Ser643, Arg644, Arg580. <ref name="Beinert">Beinert, H., Kennedy, M. C., Stout, C.D. “Aconitase as Iron−Sulfur Protein, Enzyme, and Iron-Regulatory Protein.” Chem. Rev. 1996, 96, 2335−2373.</ref> | ||
Aconitase contains an <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster/1'>4Fe-4S iron-sulfur cluster</scene>. This iron sulfur cluster does not participate in redox as most do, but holds the OH goup of citrate to facilitate its elimination.<ref>PMID:16407072 </ref> It is at this 4Fe-4S site that catalysis occurs and citrate or <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster_bound_isocitrate/1'>isocitrate</scene> is bound. The rest of the <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Fe-scluster_w_active_site/2'>active site</scene> is made up of residues Gln72, Asp100, His101, Asp165, Ser166, His167, His147, Glu262, Asn258, Cys358, Cys421, Cys424, Cys358, Cys421, Asn446, Arg447, Arg452, Asp568, Ser642, Ser643, Arg644, Arg580. <ref name="Beinert">Beinert, H., Kennedy, M. C., Stout, C.D. “Aconitase as Iron−Sulfur Protein, Enzyme, and Iron-Regulatory Protein.” Chem. Rev. 1996, 96, 2335−2373.</ref> | |||
Substrate-free aconitase contains a [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster with hydroxyl bound to one of the Fe. Upon binding of substrate the bound hydroxyl is protonated. A hydrogen bond from <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His101/1'>His101</scene> to the isocitrate hydroxyl is donated to form water. Alternatively, the proton could be donated by <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His167/1'>His167</scene> as this histidine is hydrogen bonded to a H2O molecule. His167 is also hydrogen bonded to the bound H2O in the [4Fe-4S] cluster. Both <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His_101_and_167/1'>His101 and His167</scene> are paired with carboxylates (<scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Asp100_and_glu262/1'>Asp100 and Glu262</scene>, respectively) and are likely to be protonated. The conformational change associated with substrate binding reorients the cluster. <ref name="Beinert" /> The residue which removes a proton from citrate or isocitrate is <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Ser642/2'>Ser642</scene>. <ref name="Beinert" /> This causes the cis-Aconitate intermediate (seen below), which consists of a double bond, which is a direct result of the deprotonation. Then, there is a rehydration of the double bond of cis-aconitate to form isocitrate (if the original substrate was citrate). To better understand this, consider this process as stages, seen below. | Substrate-free aconitase contains a [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster with hydroxyl bound to one of the Fe. Upon binding of substrate the bound hydroxyl is protonated. A hydrogen bond from <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His101/1'>His101</scene> to the isocitrate hydroxyl is donated to form water. Alternatively, the proton could be donated by <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His167/1'>His167</scene> as this histidine is hydrogen bonded to a H2O molecule. His167 is also hydrogen bonded to the bound H2O in the [4Fe-4S] cluster. Both <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/His_101_and_167/1'>His101 and His167</scene> are paired with carboxylates (<scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Asp100_and_glu262/1'>Asp100 and Glu262</scene>, respectively) and are likely to be protonated. The conformational change associated with substrate binding reorients the cluster. <ref name="Beinert" /> The residue which removes a proton from citrate or isocitrate is <scene name='Anthony_Noles_Sandbox/Ser642/2'>Ser642</scene>. <ref name="Beinert" /> This causes the cis-Aconitate intermediate (seen below), which consists of a double bond, which is a direct result of the deprotonation. Then, there is a rehydration of the double bond of cis-aconitate to form isocitrate (if the original substrate was citrate). To better understand this, consider this process as stages, seen below. |