{"title":"人类V类乙醇脱氢酶的计算研究——奇怪的兄弟。","authors":"Linus J Östberg, Bengt Persson, Jan-Olov Höög","doi":"10.1186/s12858-016-0072-y","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>All known attempts to isolate and characterize mammalian class V alcohol dehydrogenase (class V ADH), a member of the large ADH protein family, at the protein level have failed. This indicates that the class V ADH protein is not stable in a non-cellular environment, which is in contrast to all other human ADH enzymes. In this report we present evidence, supported with results from computational analyses performed in combination with earlier in vitro studies, why this ADH behaves in an atypical way.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Using a combination of structural calculations and sequence analyses, we were able to identify local structural differences between human class V ADH and other human ADHs, including an elongated β-strands and a labile α-helix at the subunit interface region of each chain that probably disturb it. Several amino acid residues are strictly conserved in class I-IV, but altered in class V ADH. This includes a for class V ADH unique and conserved Lys51, a position directly involved in the catalytic mechanism in other ADHs, and nine other class V ADH-specific residues.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>In this study we show that there are pronounced structural changes in class V ADH as compared to other ADH enzymes. Furthermore, there is an evolutionary pressure among the mammalian class V ADHs, which for most proteins indicate that they fulfill a physiological function. We assume that class V ADH is expressed, but unable to form active dimers in a non-cellular environment, and is an atypical mammalian ADH. This is compatible with previous experimental characterization and present structural modelling. It can be considered the odd sibling of the ADH protein family and so far seems to be a pseudoenzyme with another hitherto unknown physiological function.</p>","PeriodicalId":9113,"journal":{"name":"BMC Biochemistry","volume":"17 1","pages":"16"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-07-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1186/s12858-016-0072-y","citationCount":"9","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Computational studies of human class V alcohol dehydrogenase - the odd sibling.\",\"authors\":\"Linus J Östberg, Bengt Persson, Jan-Olov Höög\",\"doi\":\"10.1186/s12858-016-0072-y\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>All known attempts to isolate and characterize mammalian class V alcohol dehydrogenase (class V ADH), a member of the large ADH protein family, at the protein level have failed. This indicates that the class V ADH protein is not stable in a non-cellular environment, which is in contrast to all other human ADH enzymes. In this report we present evidence, supported with results from computational analyses performed in combination with earlier in vitro studies, why this ADH behaves in an atypical way.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Using a combination of structural calculations and sequence analyses, we were able to identify local structural differences between human class V ADH and other human ADHs, including an elongated β-strands and a labile α-helix at the subunit interface region of each chain that probably disturb it. Several amino acid residues are strictly conserved in class I-IV, but altered in class V ADH. This includes a for class V ADH unique and conserved Lys51, a position directly involved in the catalytic mechanism in other ADHs, and nine other class V ADH-specific residues.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>In this study we show that there are pronounced structural changes in class V ADH as compared to other ADH enzymes. Furthermore, there is an evolutionary pressure among the mammalian class V ADHs, which for most proteins indicate that they fulfill a physiological function. We assume that class V ADH is expressed, but unable to form active dimers in a non-cellular environment, and is an atypical mammalian ADH. This is compatible with previous experimental characterization and present structural modelling. 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引用次数: 9
摘要
背景:所有已知的在蛋白质水平上分离和表征哺乳动物V类乙醇脱氢酶(class V ADH)的尝试都失败了,该类乙醇脱氢酶是ADH大蛋白家族的一员。这表明V类ADH蛋白在非细胞环境中不稳定,这与所有其他人类ADH酶相反。在本报告中,我们提出了证据,并结合早期体外研究进行计算分析的结果,为什么这种ADH以非典型方式表现。结果:结合结构计算和序列分析,我们能够识别出人类V类ADH与其他人类ADH之间的局部结构差异,包括在每个链的亚基界面区有一个细长的β-链和一个不稳定的α-螺旋,这可能会干扰它。若干氨基酸残基在I-IV类中严格保守,但在V类ADH中发生改变。这包括一个针对V类ADH的独特且保守的Lys51,一个直接参与其他ADH催化机制的位置,以及其他9个V类ADH特异性残基。结论:在本研究中,我们发现与其他ADH酶相比,V类ADH存在明显的结构变化。此外,在哺乳动物V类ADHs中存在进化压力,这对大多数蛋白质来说表明它们具有生理功能。我们假设V类ADH是表达的,但不能在非细胞环境中形成活性二聚体,是一种非典型的哺乳动物ADH。这与以前的实验表征和目前的结构建模是一致的。它可以被认为是ADH蛋白家族的奇怪兄弟,到目前为止似乎是一种具有另一种迄今未知生理功能的假酶。
Computational studies of human class V alcohol dehydrogenase - the odd sibling.
Background: All known attempts to isolate and characterize mammalian class V alcohol dehydrogenase (class V ADH), a member of the large ADH protein family, at the protein level have failed. This indicates that the class V ADH protein is not stable in a non-cellular environment, which is in contrast to all other human ADH enzymes. In this report we present evidence, supported with results from computational analyses performed in combination with earlier in vitro studies, why this ADH behaves in an atypical way.
Results: Using a combination of structural calculations and sequence analyses, we were able to identify local structural differences between human class V ADH and other human ADHs, including an elongated β-strands and a labile α-helix at the subunit interface region of each chain that probably disturb it. Several amino acid residues are strictly conserved in class I-IV, but altered in class V ADH. This includes a for class V ADH unique and conserved Lys51, a position directly involved in the catalytic mechanism in other ADHs, and nine other class V ADH-specific residues.
Conclusions: In this study we show that there are pronounced structural changes in class V ADH as compared to other ADH enzymes. Furthermore, there is an evolutionary pressure among the mammalian class V ADHs, which for most proteins indicate that they fulfill a physiological function. We assume that class V ADH is expressed, but unable to form active dimers in a non-cellular environment, and is an atypical mammalian ADH. This is compatible with previous experimental characterization and present structural modelling. It can be considered the odd sibling of the ADH protein family and so far seems to be a pseudoenzyme with another hitherto unknown physiological function.
期刊介绍:
BMC Biochemistry is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of biochemical processes, including the structure, function and dynamics of metabolic pathways, supramolecular complexes, enzymes, proteins, nucleic acids and small molecular components of organelles, cells and tissues. BMC Biochemistry (ISSN 1471-2091) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, MEDLINE, BIOSIS, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus, Zoological Record, Thomson Reuters (ISI) and Google Scholar.