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Structure of the monofunctional heme catalase DR 1998 from D einococcus radiodurans
Author(s) -
Borges Patrícia T.,
Frazão Carlos,
Miranda Cecília S.,
Carrondo Maria A.,
Romão Célia V.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/febs.12895
Subject(s) - heme , deinococcus radiodurans , catalase , chemistry , crystallography , stereochemistry , protein structure , biochemistry , enzyme , dna
Deinococcus radiodurans is an aerobic organism with the ability to survive under conditions of high radiation doses or desiccation. As part of its protection system against oxidative stress, this bacterium encodes three monofunctional catalases. The DR 1998 catalase belongs to clade 1, and is present at high levels under normal growth conditions. The crystals of DR 1998 diffracted very weakly, and the merged diffraction data showed an R sym of 0.308. Its crystal structure was determined and refined to 2.6 Å. The four molecules present in the asymmetric unit form, by crystallographic symmetry, two homotetramers with 222 point‐group symmetry. The overall structure of DR 1998 is similar to that of other monofunctional catalases, showing higher structural homology with the catalase structures of clade 1. Each monomer shows the typical catalase fold, and contains one heme b in the active site. The heme is coordinated by the proximal ligand Tyr369, and on the heme distal side the essential His81 and Asn159 are hydrogen‐bonded to a water molecule. A 25‐Å‐long channel is the main channel connecting the active site to the external surface. This channel starts with a hydrophobic region from the catalytic heme site, which is followed by a hydrophilic region that begins on Asp139 and expands up to the protein surface. Apart from this channel, an alternative channel, also near the heme active site, is presented and discussed. Database Coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank in Europe under accession code 4CAB

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