2akm
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Fluoride Inhibition of Enolase: Crystal Structure of the Inhibitory Complex
OverviewOverview
Enolase is a dimeric metal-activated metalloenzyme which uses two, magnesium ions per subunit: the strongly bound conformational ion and the, catalytic ion that binds to the enzyme-substrate complex inducing, catalysis. The crystal structure of the human neuronal enolase-Mg2F2P(i), complex (enolase fluoride/phosphate inhibitory complex, EFPIC) determined, at 1.36 A resolution shows that the combination of anions effectively, mimics an intermediate state in catalysis. The phosphate ion binds in the, same site as the phosphate group of the substrate/product, 2-phospho-D-glycerate/phosphoenolpyruvate, and induces binding of the, catalytic Mg2+ ion. One fluoride ion bridges the structural and catalytic, magnesium ions while the other interacts with the structural magnesium ion, and the ammonio groups of Lys 342 and Lys 393. These fluoride ion, positions correspond closely to the positions of the oxygen atoms of the, substrate's carboxylate moiety. To relate structural changes resulting, from fluoride, phosphate, and magnesium ions binding to those that are, induced by phosphate and magnesium ions alone, we also determined the, structure of the human neuronal enolase-Mg2P(i) complex (enolase phosphate, inhibitory complex, EPIC) at 1.92 A resolution. It shows the closed, conformation in one subunit and a mixture of open and semiclosed, conformations in the other. The EPFIC dimer is essentially symmetric while, the EPIC dimer is asymmetric. Isothermal titration calorimetry data, confirmed binding of four fluoride ions per dimer and yielded Kb values of, 7.5 x 10(5) +/- 1.3 x 10(5), 1.2 x 10(5) +/- 0.2 x 10(5), 8.6 x 10(4) +/-, 1.6 x 10(4), and 1.6 x 10(4) +/- 0.7 x 10(4) M(-1). The different binding, constants indicate negative cooperativity between the subunits; the, asymmetry of EPIC supports such an interpretation.
About this StructureAbout this Structure
2AKM is a Single protein structure of sequence from Homo sapiens with MG, PO4 and TRS as ligands. Active as Phosphopyruvate hydratase, with EC number 4.2.1.11 Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.
ReferenceReference
Fluoride inhibition of enolase: crystal structure and thermodynamics., Qin J, Chai G, Brewer JM, Lovelace LL, Lebioda L, Biochemistry. 2006 Jan 24;45(3):793-800. PMID:16411755
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