Analogs of reaction intermediates identify a unique substrate binding site in Candida rugosa lipase.

Article Details

Citation

Grochulski P, Bouthillier F, Kazlauskas RJ, Serreqi AN, Schrag JD, Ziomek E, Cygler M

Analogs of reaction intermediates identify a unique substrate binding site in Candida rugosa lipase.

Biochemistry. 1994 Mar 29;33(12):3494-500.

PubMed ID
8142346 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The structures of Candida rugosa lipase-inhibitor complexes demonstrate that the scissile fatty acyl chain is bound in a narrow, hydrophobic tunnel which is unique among lipases studied to date. Modeling of triglyceride binding suggests that the bound lipid must adopt a "tuning fork" conformation. The complexes, analogs of tetrahedral intermediates of the acylation and deacylation steps of the reaction pathway, localize the components of the oxyanion hole and define the stereochemistry of ester hydrolysis. Comparison with other lipases suggests that the positioning of the scissile fatty acyl chain and ester bond and the stereochemistry of hydrolysis are the same in all lipases which share the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Lipase 1P20261Details