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Mechanisms and Structures of Crotonase Superfamily Enzymes – How Nature Controls Enolate and Oxyanion Reactivity

ملخص البحث
Structural and mechanistic studies on the crotonase superfamily (CS) are reviewed with the aim of illustrating how a conserved structural platform can enable catalysis of a very wide range of reactions. Many CS reactions have precedent in the ‘carbonyl’ chemistry of organic synthesis; they include alkene hydration/isomerization, aryl-halide dehalogenation, (de)carboxylation, CoA ester and peptide hydrolysis, fragmentation of β-diketones and C-C bond formation, cleavage and oxidation. CS enzymes possess a canonical fold formed from repeated ββα units that assemble into two approximately perpendicular β-sheets surrounded by α-helices. CS enzymes often, although not exclusively, oligomerize as trimers or dimers of trimers. Two conserved backbone NH groups in CS active sites form an oxyanion ‘hole’ that can stabilize enolate/oxyanion intermediates. The range and efficiency of known CS-catalyzed reactions coupled to their common structural platforms suggest that CS variants may have widespread utility in biocatalysis.
مؤلف البحث
Refaat B. Hamed, Edward T. Batchelar, Clifton I. J., Christopher J. Schofield
قسم البحث
مجلة البحث
Cell. Mol. Life Sci., DOI: 10.1007/s00018-008-8082-6
مؤلف البحث
تصنيف البحث
1
عدد البحث
Vol. 65
سنة البحث
2008