6533b7d3fe1ef96bd12601d3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Structure of Aspergillus niger epoxide hydrolase at 1.8 A resolution: implications for the structure and function of the mammalian microsomal class of epoxide hydrolases

T. BergforsFranz OeschMichael ArandJinyu ZouB.m. HallbergSherry L. MowbrayT.a. Jones

subject

Models MolecularProtein ConformationStereochemistryEpoxide10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology610 Medicine & healthEpoxide hydrolasechemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structure1315 Structural BiologyStructural BiologyMicrosomesHydrolase1312 Molecular BiologyAnimalsHumansBinding siteEpoxide hydrolaseMolecular BiologyX-ray crystallographyEpoxide HydrolasesMicrosomal epoxide hydrolasesDrug metabolismBinding SitesbiologyMADChemistryAspergillus nigerbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryEpoxide HydrolasesMicrosome570 Life sciences; biologyAspergillus nigerDimerization

description

AbstractBackground: Epoxide hydrolases have important roles in the defense of cells against potentially harmful epoxides. Conversion of epoxides into less toxic and more easily excreted diols is a universally successful strategy. A number of microorganisms employ the same chemistry to process epoxides for use as carbon sources.Results: The X-ray structure of the epoxide hydrolase from Aspergillus niger was determined at 3.5 Å resolution using the multiwavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) method, and then refined at 1.8 Å resolution. There is a dimer consisting of two 44 kDa subunits in the asymmetric unit. Each subunit consists of an α/β hydrolase fold, and a primarily helical lid over the active site. The dimer interface includes lid–lid interactions as well as contributions from an N-terminal meander. The active site contains a classical catalytic triad, and two tyrosines and a glutamic acid residue that are likely to assist in catalysis.Conclusions: The Aspergillus enzyme provides the first structure of an epoxide hydrolase with strong relationships to the most important enzyme of human epoxide metabolism, the microsomal epoxide hydrolase. Differences in active-site residues, especially in components that assist in epoxide ring opening and hydrolysis of the enzyme–substrate intermediate, might explain why the fungal enzyme attains the greater speeds necessary for an effective metabolic enzyme. The N-terminal domain that is characteristic of microsomal epoxide hydrolases corresponds to a meander that is critical for dimer formation in the Aspergillus enzyme.

10.5167/uzh-113861https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-113861