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      Evolution of Enzymatic Activities in the Enolase Superfamily: Galactarate Dehydratase III from Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58

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          Abstract

          The genome of Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58 encodes 12 members of the enolase superfamily (ENS), eight of which are members of the mandelate racemase (MR) subgroup and, therefore, likely to be acid sugar dehydratases. Using a library of 77 acid sugars for high-throughput screening, one protein (UniProt entry A9CG74; locus tag Atu4196) showed activity with both m-galactarate and d-galacturonate. Two families of galactarate dehydratases had been discovered previously in the ENS, GalrD/TalrD [Yew, W. S., et al. (2007) Biochemistry 46, 9564–9577] and GalrD-II [Rakus, J. F., et al. (2009) Biochemistry 48, 11546–11558]; these have different active site acid/base catalysis and have no activity with d-galacturonate. A9CG74 dehydrates m-galactarate to form 2-keto-3-deoxy-galactarate but does not dehydrate d-galacturonate as expected. Instead, when A9CG74 is incubated with d-galacturonate, 3-deoxy- d- xylo-hexarate or 3-deoxy- d- lyxo-hexarate is formed. In this reaction, instead of abstracting the C5 proton α to the carboxylate group, the expected reaction for a member of the ENS, the enzyme apparently abstracts the proton α to the aldehyde group to form 3-deoxy- d- threo-hexulosuronate that undergoes a 1,2-hydride shift similar to the benzylic acid rearrangement to form the observed product. A. tumefaciens C58 does not utilize m-galactarate as a carbon source under the conditions tested in this study, although it does utilize d-galacturonate, which is a likely precursor to m-galactarate. The gene encoding A9CG74 and several genome proximal genes were upregulated with d-galacturonate as the carbon source. One of these, a member of the dihydrodipicolinate synthase superfamily, catalyzes the dehydration and subsequent decarboxylation of 2-keto-3-deoxy- d-galactarate to α-ketoglutarate semialdehyde, thereby providing a pathway for the conversion of m-galactarate to α-ketoglutarate semialdehyde.

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          Recent developments in the PHENIX software for automated crystallographic structure determination.

          A new software system called PHENIX (Python-based Hierarchical ENvironment for Integrated Xtallography) is being developed for the automation of crystallographic structure solution. This will provide the necessary algorithms to proceed from reduced intensity data to a refined molecular model, and facilitate structure solution for both the novice and expert crystallographer. Here, the features of PHENIXare reviewed and the recent advances in infrastructure and algorithms are briefly described.
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            The Structure–Function Linkage Database

            The Structure–Function Linkage Database (SFLD, http://sfld.rbvi.ucsf.edu/) is a manually curated classification resource describing structure–function relationships for functionally diverse enzyme superfamilies. Members of such superfamilies are diverse in their overall reactions yet share a common ancestor and some conserved active site features associated with conserved functional attributes such as a partial reaction. Thus, despite their different functions, members of these superfamilies ‘look alike’, making them easy to misannotate. To address this complexity and enable rational transfer of functional features to unknowns only for those members for which we have sufficient functional information, we subdivide superfamily members into subgroups using sequence information, and lastly into families, sets of enzymes known to catalyze the same reaction using the same mechanistic strategy. Browsing and searching options in the SFLD provide access to all of these levels. The SFLD offers manually curated as well as automatically classified superfamily sets, both accompanied by search and download options for all hierarchical levels. Additional information includes multiple sequence alignments, tab-separated files of functional and other attributes, and sequence similarity networks. The latter provide a new and intuitively powerful way to visualize functional trends mapped to the context of sequence similarity.
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              ARP/wARP and automatic interpretation of protein electron density maps.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biochemistry
                Biochemistry
                bi
                bichaw
                Biochemistry
                American Chemical Society
                0006-2960
                1520-4995
                13 June 2015
                13 June 2014
                01 July 2014
                : 53
                : 25
                : 4192-4203
                Affiliations
                [1] Department of Biochemistry, Department of Chemistry, and §Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , 600 South Mathews Avenue, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States
                []Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine , 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, New York 10461, United States
                []Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, School of Pharmacy, and California Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research, University of California , 1700 4th Street, San Francisco, California 94158, United States
                Author notes
                [* ]Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, 1206 W. Gregory Dr., Urbana, IL 61801. E-mail: j-gerlt@ 123456illinois.edu .
                Article
                10.1021/bi5005377
                4081050
                24926996
                838b59c7-5d23-4dd8-8fd8-78221ea6975d
                Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society

                Terms of Use

                History
                : 06 May 2014
                : 11 June 2014
                Funding
                National Institutes of Health, United States
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                bi5005377
                bi-2014-005377

                Biochemistry
                Biochemistry

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