Title of article :
Crystal Structures of the T4 Phage β-Glucosyltransferase and the D100A Mutant in Complex with UDP-glucose: Glucose Binding and Identification of the Catalytic Base for a Direct Displacement Mechanism
Author/Authors :
Laurent Larivière، نويسنده , , Virginie Gueguen-Chaignon، نويسنده , , Ronald Melki and Solange Morera، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
T4 phage β-glucosyltransferase (BGT) is an inverting glycosyltransferase (GT) that transfers glucose from uridine diphospho-glucose (UDP-glucose) to an acceptor modified DNA. BGT belongs to the GT-B structural superfamily, represented, so far, by five different inverting or retaining GT families. Here, we report three high-resolution X-ray structures of BGT and a point mutant solved in the presence of UDP-glucose. The two co-crystal structures of the D100A mutant show that, unlike the wild-type enzyme, this mutation prevents glucose hydrolysis. This strongly indicates that Asp100 is the catalytic base. We obtained the wild-type BGT–UDP-glucose complex by soaking substrate-free BGT crystals. Comparison with a previous structure of BGT solved in the presence of the donor product UDP and an acceptor analogue provides the first model of an inverting GT-B enzyme in which both the donor and acceptor substrates are bound to the active site. The structural analyses support the in-line displacement reaction mechanism previously proposed, locate residues involved in donor substrate specificity and identify the catalytic base.
Keywords :
X-ray crystallography , UDP-glucose complex , oxocarbonium ion , T-phage , glycosyltransferase
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology