ISI Web of Knowledge Take the next step  
Web of Science®
 
Previous Record (inactive) Record 1  of  1 Next Record (inactive)
Record from Web of Science®
A COVALENT ENZYME-SUBSTRATE INTERMEDIATE WITH SACCHARIDE DISTORTION IN A MUTANT T4 LYSOZYME
Author(s): KUROKI R, WEAVER LH, MATTHEWS BW
Source: SCIENCE    Volume: 262    Issue: 5142    Pages: 2030-2033    Published: DEC 24 1993  
Times Cited: 128     References: 35     
Abstract: The glycosyl-enzyme intermediate in lysozyme action has long been considered to be an oxocarbonium ion, although precedent from other glycosidases and theoretical considerations suggest it should be a covalent enzyme-substrate adduct. The mutation of threonine 26 to glutamic acid in the active site cleft of phage T4 lysozyme (T4L) produced an enzyme that cleaved the cell wall of Escherichia coli but left the product covalently bound to the enzyme. The crystalline complex was nonisomorphous with wild-type T4L, and analysis of its structure showed a covalent linkage between the product and the newly introduced glutamic acid 26. The covalently linked sugar ring was substantially distorted, suggesting that distortion of the substrate toward the transition state is important for catalysis, as originally proposed by Phillips. It is also postulated that the adduct formed by the mutant is an intermediate, consistent with a double displacement mechanism of action in which the glycosidic linkage is cleaved with retention of configuration as originally proposed by Koshland. The peptide part of the cell wall fragment displays extensive hydrogen-bonding interactions with the carboxyl-terminal domain of the enzyme, consistent with previous studies of mutations in T4L.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Addresses:
1. UNIV OREGON, INST MOLEC BIOL, EUGENE, OR 97403 USA
2. UNIV OREGON, DEPT PHYS, EUGENE, OR 97403 USA
3. UNIV OREGON, HOWARD HUGHES MED INST, EUGENE, OR 97403 USA
Publisher: AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE, 1200 NEW YORK AVE, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20005
Subject Category: Multidisciplinary Sciences
IDS Number: MN108
ISSN: 0036-8075
Previous Record (inactive) Record 1  of  1 Next Record (inactive)
Record from Web of Science®
  
Thomson Reuters Logo