Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
1stx;
SNAP-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- hydrolase-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.1 Å)
- Summary
- Structure of the k38a mutant of ecorv bound to cognate
DNA and mn2+
- Reference
-
Horton NC, Perona JJ (2004): "DNA
cleavage by EcoRV endonuclease: two metal ions in three
metal ion binding sites." Biochemistry,
43, 6841-6857. doi: 10.1021/bi0499056.
- Abstract
- Four crystal structures of EcoRV endonuclease mutants
K92A and K38A provide new insight into the mechanism of DNA
bending and the structural basis for metal-dependent
phosphodiester bond cleavage. The removal of a key active
site positive charge in the uncleaved K92A-DNA-M(2+)
substrate complex results in binding of a sodium ion in the
position of the amine nitrogen, suggesting a key role for a
positive charge at this position in stabilizing the sharp
DNA bend prior to cleavage. By contrast, two structures of
K38A cocrystallized with DNA and Mn(2+) ions in different
lattice environments reveal cleaved product complexes
featuring a common, novel conformation of the scissile
phosphate group as compared to all previous EcoRV
structures. In these structures, the released 5'-phosphate
and 3'-OH groups remain in close juxtaposition with each
other and with two Mn(2+) ions that bridge the conserved
active site carboxylates. The scissile phosphates are found
midway between their positions in the prereactive substrate
and postreactive product complexes of the wild-type enzyme.
Mn(2+) ions occupy two of the three sites previously
described in the prereactive complexes and are plausibly
positioned to generate the nucleophilic hydroxide ion, to
compensate for the incipient additional negative charge in
the transition state, and to ionize a second water for
protonation of the 3'-oxyanion. Reconciliation of these
findings with earlier X-ray and fluorescence studies
suggests a novel mechanism in which a single initially
bound metal ion in a third distinct site undergoes a shift
in position together with movement of the scissile
phosphate deeper into the active site cleft. This
reconfigures the local environment to permit binding of the
second metal ion followed by movement toward the
pentacovalent transition state. The new mechanism suggested
here embodies key features of previously proposed two- and
three-metal catalytic models, and offers a view of the
stereochemical pathway that integrates much of the copious
structural and functional data that are available from
exhaustive studies in many laboratories.