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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 266, Issue 8, 4848-4852, 03, 1991

Structurally conserved water molecules in ribonuclease T1

R Malin, P Zielenkiewicz and W Saenger
Institut fur Kristallographie, Freie Universitat Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany.

In the high resolution (1.7-1.9 A) crystal structures of ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) in complex with guanosine, guanosine 2'-phosphate, guanylyl 2',5'-guanosine, and vanadate, there are 30 water sites in nearly identical (+/- 1 A) positions that are considered conserved. One water is tightly bound to Asp76(O delta), Thr93(O gamma), Cys6(O), and Asn9(N); another bridges two loops by hydrogen-bonding to Tyr68(O eta) and to Ser35(N), Asn36(N); a loop structure is stabilized by two waters coordinated to Gly31(O) and His27(N delta), and by water bound to cis- Pro39(O). Most notable is a hydrogen-bonded chain of 10 water molecules. Waters 1-5 of this chain are inaccessible to solvent, are anchored at Trp59(N), and stitch together the loop formed by segments 60-68; waters 5-8 coordinate to Ca2+, and waters 9 and 10 hydrogen-bond to N-terminal side chains of the alpha-helix. The water chain and two conserved water molecules are bound to amino acids adjacent to the active site residues His40, Glu58, Arg77, and His92; they are probably involved in maintaining their spatial orientation required for catalysis. Water sites must be considered in genetic engineering; the mutation Trp59Tyr, which probably influences the 10-water chain, doubles the catalytic activity of RNase T1.
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Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USAHome page
S. Shaltiel, S. Cox, and S. S. Taylor
Conserved water molecules contribute to the extensive network of interactions at the active site of protein kinase A
PNAS, January 20, 1998; 95(2): 484 - 491.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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