Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Koga Yuuichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 5000076449
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Importance of the Ca2+-binding sites in the N-catalytic domain of a family I.3 lipase for activity and stability.

Bibliography Type

 

Author

K Kuwahara
C Angkawidjaja
H Matsumura
Y Koga
K Takano
S Kanaya

Summary

A family I.3 lipase from Pseudomonas sp. MIS38 (PML) contains three Ca(2+)-binding sites (Ca1-Ca3) in the N-catalytic domain. Of them, the Ca1 site is formed only in an open conformation. To analyze the role of these Ca(2+)-binding sites, three mutant proteins D157A-PML, D275A-PML and D337A-PML, which are designed to remove the Ca1, Ca2 and Ca3 sites, respectively, were constructed. Of them, the crystal structures of D157A-PML and D337A-PML in a closed conformation were determined. Both structures are nearly identical to that of the wild-type protein, except that the Ca3 site is missing in the D337A-PML structure. D157A-PML was as stable as the wild-type protein. Nevertheless, it exhibited little lipase and very weak esterase activities. D275A-PML was less stable than the wild-type protein by approximately 5 degrees C in T(1/2). It exhibited weak but significant lipase and esterase activities when compared with the wild-type protein. D337A-PML was also less stable than the wild-type protein by approximately 5 degrees C in T(1/2) but was fully active. These results suggest that the Ca1 site is required to make the active site fully open by anchoring lid 1. The Ca2 and Ca3 sites contribute to the stabilization of PML. The Ca2 site is also required to make PML fully active.

Magazine(name)

Protein engineering, design & selection : PEDS

Publisher

 

Volume

21

Number Of Pages

12

StartingPage

737

EndingPage

44

Date of Issue

2008-12

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1093/protein/gzn057

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID