1scr
HIGH-RESOLUTION STRUCTURES OF SINGLE-METAL-SUBSTITUTED CONCANAVALIN A: THE CO,CA-PROTEIN AT 1.6 ANGSTROMS AND THE NI,CA-PROTEIN AT 2.0 ANGSTROMSHIGH-RESOLUTION STRUCTURES OF SINGLE-METAL-SUBSTITUTED CONCANAVALIN A: THE CO,CA-PROTEIN AT 1.6 ANGSTROMS AND THE NI,CA-PROTEIN AT 2.0 ANGSTROMS
Structural highlights
Function[CONA_CANEN] D-mannose specific lectin. Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe molecular structures of cobalt- and nickel-substituted concanavalin A have been refined at 1.6 and 2.0 A resolution, respectively. Both metal derivatives crystallize in space group I222 with approximate cell dimensions a = 89, b = 87 and c = 63 A and one monomer in the asymmetric unit. The final R factor for Co-substituted concanavalin A is 17.8% for 29 211 reflections with F > 1.0sigma(F) between 8.0 and 1.6 A. For Ni-substituted concanavalin A the final R factor is 15.9% for 16 128 reflections with F > 1.0sigma(F) between 8.0 and 2.0 A resolution. Both structures contain a transition-metal binding site and a calcium-binding site but, unlike Cd-substituted concanavalin A, do not have a third metal-binding site. The Co-substituted concanavalin A structure diffracts to the highest resolution of any concanavalin A structure reported to date. A comparison of the structures of Ni-, Co-, Cd-substituted and native concanavalin A gives an indication of coordinate errors, which is a useful baseline for comparisons with saccharide complexes of concanavalin A described in other work. We also give a detailed account of multiple conformations which were found for five side-chain residues. High-resolution structures of single-metal-substituted concanavalin A: the Co,Ca-protein at 1.6 A and the Ni,Ca-protein at 2.0 A.,Emmerich C, Helliwell JR, Redshaw M, Naismith JH, Harrop SJ, Raftery J, Kalb AJ, Yariv J, Dauter Z, Wilson KS Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr. 1994 Sep 1;50(Pt 5):749-56. PMID:15299372[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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