Making or Breaking Metal-Dependent Catalytic Activity: The Role of Stammers in Designed Three-Stranded Coiled Coils |
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Authors: | Dr. Tyler B. J. Pinter Elizabeth C. Manickas Audrey E. Tolbert Dr. Karl J. Koebke Dr. Aniruddha Deb Prof. James E. Penner-Hahn Prof. Vincent L. Pecoraro |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109 USA |
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Abstract: | While many life-critical reactions would be infeasibly slow without metal cofactors, a detailed understanding of how protein structure can influence catalytic activity remains elusive. Using de novo designed three-stranded coiled coils ( TRI and Grand peptides formed using a heptad repeat approach), we examine how the insertion of a three residue discontinuity, known as a stammer insert, directly adjacent to a (His)3 metal binding site alters catalytic activity. The stammer, which locally alters the twist of the helix, significantly increases copper-catalyzed nitrite reductase activity (CuNiR). In contrast, the well-established zinc-catalyzed carbonic anhydrase activity (p-nitrophenyl acetate, pNPA) is effectively ablated. This study illustrates how the perturbation of the protein sequence using non-coordinating and non-acid base residues in the helical core can perturb metalloenzyme activity through the simple expedient of modifying the helical pitch adjacent to the catalytic center. |
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Keywords: | coiled coils enzyme catalysis metalloproteins protein design stammers |
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