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The nicotinamide dinucleotide binding motif: a comparison of nucleotide binding proteins
Author(s) -
Bellamacina Cornelia R.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.10.11.8836039
Subject(s) - cofactor , nicotinamide , chemistry , nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide , binding site , stereochemistry , nad+ kinase , amino acid , protein structure , biochemistry , peptide sequence , enzyme , gene
Classical nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ) binding proteins contain a βαβαβ unit. By comparing 14 such proteins, it is observed that an additional β strand associates with this unit to form the “core” topology, the minimum structure necessary to bind cofactor. Although the overall topologies of the cofactor binding domains of nicotinamide binding proteins vary, they all contain at least the core topology. The first 30‐35 amino acids of the core topology, called the “fingerprint” region, are diagnostic for the presence of a dinucleotide binding fold. There are four characteristics of this fingerprint region: 1) a phosphate binding consensus sequence, GXGXXG, 2) six positions usually occupied by small hydrophobic amino acids, 3) a conserved, negatively charged residue (Glu or Asp) at the end of the second β strand of the fingerprint region, and 4) a conserved positively charged residue (Arg or Lys) at the beginning of the first β strand of the fingerprint region. The core topologies of the classical nicotinamide binding proteins overlap well with root mean squared deviations of main chain atoms ranging from 0.7 to 4.7 Å. A conserved interaction (found in 8 of the 12 classical nicotinamide binding proteins studied) between the cofactor and the protein is a hydrogen bond between the pyrophosphate oxygen of NAD(P) + and the carboxy‐terminal glycine of the phosphate binding helix, the first α helix of the βαβαβ unit. The classical nicotinamide binding proteins all bind their cofactor in the same location and orientation, with the cofactor itself adopting a similar extended conformation in every structure. Although observed less frequently than the classical fold, numerous nonclassical folding patterns are also used by proteins that bind NAD(P) + .—Bellamacina, C. R. The nicotinamide dinucleotide binding motif: a comparison of nucleotide binding proteins. FASEB J. 10, 1257‐1269 (1996)