The structure of inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) in complex with IMP and mycophenolic acid (MPA) has been determined by X-ray diffraction. IMPDH plays a central role in B and T lymphocyte replication. MPA is a potent IMPDH inhibitor and the active metabolite of an immunosuppressive drug recently approved for the treatment of allograft rejection. IMPDH comprises two domains: a core domain, which is an alpha/beta barrel and contains the active site, and a flanking domain. The complex, in combination with mutagenesis and kinetic data, provides a structural basis for understanding the mechanism of IMPDH activity and indicates that MPA inhibits IMPDH by acting as a replacement for the nicotinamide portion of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide cofactor and a catalytic water molecule.
Conformational models of the three characterized classes of mammalian liver alcohol dehydrogenase were constructed using computer graphics based on the known three-dimensional structure of the E subunit of the horse enzyme (class 1) and the primary structures of the three human enzyme classes. This correlates the substratebinding pockets of the class I subunits (a, and y in the human enzyme) with those of the class I1 and I11 subunits (z and x, respectively) for three enzymes that differ in substrate specificity, inhibition pattern and many other properties. The substrate-binding sites exhibit pronounced differences in both shape and properties. Comparing human class I subunits with those of class 11 and I11 subunits there are no less than 8 and 10 replacements, respectively, out of 11 residues in the substrate pocket, while in the human class I isozyme variants, only 1 -3 of these 11 positions differ. A single residue, Va1294, is conserved throughout. The liver alcohol dehydrogenases, with different substrate-specificity pockets, resemble the patterns of other enzyme families such as the pancreatic serine proteases.The inner part of the substrate cleft in the class I1 and I11 enzymes is smaller than in the horse class I enzyme, because both Ser48 and Phe93 are replaced by larger residues, Thr and Tyr, respectively. In class 11, the residues in the substrate pocket are larger in about half of the positions. It is rich in aromatic residues, four Phe and one Tyr, making the substrate site distinctly smaller than in the class I subunits. In class Ill, the inner part of the substrate cleft is narrow but the outer part considerably wider and more polar than in the class I and I1 enzymes. In addition, Ser (or Thr) and Tyr in class I1 and I11 instead of His51 may influence proton abstraction/donation at the active site.Mammalian zinc-containing alcohol dehydrogenases constitute an enzyme family of multiple forms. Subunit types a, ,/I and y [l] in dimeric combinations constitute the isozymes of the human class I enzyme [2] and are all homologous to the E subunit of the horse EE isozyme [3], the only alcohol dehydrogenase crystallographically analyzed [4]. The class I1 and I11 enzymes differ considerably in primary structure [5 -81, constituting essentially separate and distinct enzymes [9] with different evolutionary rates [S].Previous model-building studies have shown large similarities between the isozymes within class I and have explained the consequences of the replacements that occur [lo]. These residue exchanges are few but have effects on substrate [lo] and coenzyme [113 binding. The inter-class differences are large and affect charge, enzyme activity, inhibition pattern, and other properties utilized for detection and purification [2]. Ethanol at 5 mM saturates the traditional class I enzymes, while at fhis concentration class I1 contributes less than 15% to the total ethanol oxidation of the liver [12]. Class I11 of human liver alcohol dehydrogenase, with x subunits, is almost inactive towards ethanol and ev...
The 12 kDa FK506-binding protein FKBP12 is a cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase that binds the macrolides FK506 and rapamycin. We have examined the role of the binding pocket residues of FKBP12 in protein-ligand interactions by making conservative substitutions of 12 of these residues by site-directed mutagenesis. For each mutant FKBP12, we measured the affinity for FK506 and rapamycin and the catalytic efficiency in the cis-frans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase reaction. The mutation of Trp59 or Phe99 generates an FKBP12 with a significantly lower affinity for FK506 than wild-type protein. Tyr26 and Tyr82 mutants are enzymatically active, demonstrating that hydrogen bonding by these residues is not required for catalysis of the cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase reaction, although these mutations alter the substrate specificity of the enzyme. We conclude that hydrophobic interactions in the active site dominate in the stabilization of FKBP12 binding to macrolide ligands and to the twisted-amide peptidyl-prolyl substrate intermediate.
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