Kisker lab: 5B5Q: Difference between revisions
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<scene name='78/781027/Bonus/5'>Bonus figure:</scene> The active-site cysteine sidechain acting as a nucleophile in the hydrolysis reaction is buried surprisingly deeply, barely visible in the surface view (yellow). The alpha helix inserted between strand 1 and two (shown in yellow) is above the substrate binding cavity, with Val 271 blocking access to the active site. A all-atom view of the <scene name='78/781027/Panelf/1'>active site</scene> (catalytic triad in yellow, blue, red for Cys, His, Asp, respectively, with hydrophobic side chains in black) shows how inaccessible the active site cysteine is. Same as <scene name='78/781027/Panelf/2'>surface</scene>. | <scene name='78/781027/Bonus/5'>Bonus figure:</scene> The active-site cysteine sidechain acting as a nucleophile in the hydrolysis reaction is buried surprisingly deeply, barely visible in the surface view (yellow). The alpha helix inserted between strand 1 and two (shown in yellow) is above the substrate binding cavity, with Val 271 blocking access to the active site. A all-atom view of the <scene name='78/781027/Panelf/1'>active site</scene> (catalytic triad in yellow, blue, red for Cys, His, Asp, respectively, with hydrophobic side chains in black) shows how inaccessible the active site cysteine is. Same as <scene name='78/781027/Panelf/2'>surface</scene>. | ||
<scene name='78/781027/Panele/ | <scene name='78/781027/Panele/3'>Panel E:</scene> Detail of the active site of Cdu1 with the SENP8-Nedd8 complex superposed. The superposition shows where substrate would bind in relation to catalytic triad. The color scheme is like Panel A for Cub1 and like Panel C for the product complex of SENP8. | ||
<jmol> | <jmol> |
Revision as of 00:43, 1 May 2018
How this page was createdHow this page was created
The goal of this page is to make the figures found in the paper describing the 5B5Q structure three-dimensional and interactive. The figures are closely modeled on Figure 2 panels A-E of the paper. Biochemistry students from Westfield State University created the initial drafts of the figures, and revised them after getting feedback from researchers of the Kisker lab in Würzburg, Germany, who authored the primary citation. A special thank you goes to Ose Aimua, Nina Aldabayeva, Faiqa Ashraf, Kaleigh Florek, Ellie Hoeg, Aya Maytham, Christian Mikule, Brigid Murray, Kevin Pelletier, Brandon Reder, Erin Riley, Brian Schuler, and Jakob Wyman for the revisions of figures and for working on the links to other proteopedia pages.
Chlamydia inhibits apoptosisChlamydia inhibits apoptosis
Chlamydia reproduces inside human cells. One defense of the human body against Chlamydia is to kill affected cells before Chlamydia reproduces. This is done through a process called apoptosis, programmed cell death. One player in apoptosis is the human protein Mcl-1. High Mcl-1 levels inhibit one of the signalling pathways that lead to apoptosis. Chlamydia inhibits Mcl-1 degradation so that Mcl-1 levels remain high.
Protein ubiquitination and degradationProtein ubiquitination and degradation
Human cells have a protein assembly called the proteasome, which specializes in degrading proteins. Ubiquitin is a small, highly soluble protein that is attached to other proteins as a signal. The proteasome only degrades proteins that are poly-ubiquitinated, i.e. are covalently linked to a linear chain of ubiquitins. The covalent link is between the amino group of a lysine side chain and the carboxylic acid of a glycine at the C-terminus of ubiquitin.
The deubiquitinase activity of Cdu1 stabilizes Mcl-1The deubiquitinase activity of Cdu1 stabilizes Mcl-1
The Chlamydia protein Cdu1 is a protease that catalyzes the hydrolysis of ubiquitin chains from Mcl-1. When polyubiquitinated, Mcl-1 is destined to be degraded by the proteasome, lowering the level of Mcl-1 and subsequently leading to apoptosis. The activity of Cdu1 counteracts this by removing the ubiquitin, thus leading to higher levels of Mcl-1 in the cell.
StructureStructure
Relevant LinksRelevant Links
5b5q : autogenerated Proteopedia page on coordinates
Ubiquitin Structure & Function : Proteopedia article on Ubiquitin Structure, function and conjugation
Ubiquitin chains : Proteopedia article on Ubiquitin Chains