| Sweetening Cyclic Peptide Libraries Chemistry & Biology, Volume 11, Issue 12, 1 December 2004, Pages 1599-1600 Christopher N. Boddy Summary Enzymatic macrolactamization of linear glycosidated peptides provides access to an important class of drug-like molecules. The work presented in this issue [] shows that it may be possible to make complex libraries of glycosidated cyclic peptides by incorporating glycosidated amino acids into linear peptides via solid-phase peptide synthesis followed by thioesterase-mediated peptide cyclization. Summary | Full Text | PDF (57 kb) |
| A Fine Balancing Act of Type III Polyketide Synthase Chemistry & Biology, Volume 11, Issue 9, 1 September 2004, Pages 1177-1178 Shiou-Chuan Tsai Summary In this issue of , a novel Aldol-Switch mechanism is proposed for the biosynthesis of type III polyketides, which include many antioxidants found in colorful fruits . Based on structural and mutagenesis studies, the Aldol-Switch mechanism suggests that electronic effects balance between two competing cyclization specificities in Type III polyketide synthases. A novel hypothesis is also used to explain stilbenecarboxylate biosynthesis. Summary | Full Text | PDF (49 kb) |
| Not so picky: a permissive thioesterase domain cyclizes novel integrin binders Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Volume 27, Issue 3, 1 March 2002, Pages 119-120 Rebecca W Alexander Full Text | PDF (58 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2185-2194, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80094-9
Research Article
K. Seshadri, V.S. Rao and S. Vishveshwara
Molecular Biophysics Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India.
A wealth of information available from x-ray crystallographic structures of enzyme-ligand complexes makes it possible to study interactions at the molecular level. However, further investigation is needed when i) the binding of the natural substrate must be characterized, because ligands in the stable enzyme-ligand complexes are generally inhibitors or the analogs of substrate and transition state, and when ii) ligand binding is in part poorly characterized. We have investigated these aspects in the binding of substrate uridyl 3',5'-adenosine (UpA) to ribonuclease A (RNase A). Based on the systematically docked RNase A-UpA complex resulting from our previous study, we have undertaken a molecular dynamics simulation of the complex with solvent molecules. The molecular dynamics trajectories of this complex are analyzed to provide structural explanations for varied experimental observations on the ligand binding at the B2 subsite of ribonuclease A. The present study suggests that B2 subsite stabilization can be effected by different active site groups, depending on the substrate conformation. Thus when adenosine ribose pucker is O4'-endo, Gln69 and Glu111 form hydrogen-bonding contacts with adenine base, and when it is C2'-endo, Asn71 is the only amino acid residue in direct contact with this base. The latter observation is in support of previous mutagenesis and kinetics studies. Possible roles for the solvent molecules in the binding subsites are described. Furthermore, the substrate conformation is also examined along the simulation pathway to see if any conformer has the properties of a transition state. This study has also helped us to recognize that small but concerted changes in the conformation of the substrate can result in substrate geometry favorable for 2',3' cyclization. The identified geometry is suitable for intraligand proton transfer between 2'-hydroxyl and phosphate oxygen atom. The possibility of intraligand proton transfer as suggested previously and the mode of transfer before the formation of cyclic intermediate during transphosphorylation are discussed.