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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print June 4, 2004
Department of Life Science, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taipei 11221
Corresponding Author: shliaw{at}ym.edu.tw
Guanine deaminase, a key enzyme in the nucleotide metabolism, catalyzes the hydrolytic deamination of guanine into xanthine. The crystal structure of the 156-residue guanine deaminase from Bacillus subtilis has been solved at 1.17 Å resolution. Unexpectedly, the C-terminal segment is swapped to form an inter-subunit active site and an intertwined dimer with an extensive interface of 3900 Å2 per monomer. The essential zinc ion is ligated by a water molecule together with His53, Cys83 and Cys86. The reaction intermediate was modeled into the active-site cavity based on the tightly bound imidazole and water molecules, allowing identification of the conserved deamination mechanism and specific substrate recognition by Asp114 and Tyr156'. The closed conformation also reveals that substrate binding seals the active-site entrance, which is controlled by the C-terminal tail. Therefore, the domain swapping has not only facilitated the dimerization, but has also ensured specific substrate recognition. Finally, a detailed structural comparison of the cytidine deaminase superfamily illustrates the functional versatility of the divergent active sites found in the guanine, cytosine and cytidine deaminases, and suggests putative specific substrate-interacting residues for other members such as dCMP deaminases.
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M405304200
Submitted on May 12, 2004
Revised on June 2, 2004
Accepted on June 4, 2004
Crystal structure of bacillus subtilis guanine deaminase. The first domain-swapped structure in the cytidine deaminase superfamily
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