Crystal structure of human glyoxalase I--evidence for gene duplication and 3D domain swapping.

Article Details

Citation

Cameron AD, Olin B, Ridderstrom M, Mannervik B, Jones TA

Crystal structure of human glyoxalase I--evidence for gene duplication and 3D domain swapping.

EMBO J. 1997 Jun 16;16(12):3386-95.

PubMed ID
9218781 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The zinc metalloenzyme glyoxalase I catalyses the glutathione-dependent inactivation of toxic methylglyoxal. The structure of the dimeric human enzyme in complex with S-benzyl-glutathione has been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement (MIR) and refined at 2.2 A resolution. Each monomer consists of two domains. Despite only low sequence homology between them, these domains are structurally equivalent and appear to have arisen by a gene duplication. On the other hand, there is no structural homology to the 'glutathione binding domain' found in other glutathione-linked proteins. 3D domain swapping of the N- and C-terminal domains has resulted in the active site being situated in the dimer interface, with the inhibitor and essential zinc ion interacting with side chains from both subunits. Two structurally equivalent residues from each domain contribute to a square pyramidal coordination of the zinc ion, rarely seen in zinc enzymes. Comparison of glyoxalase I with other known structures shows the enzyme to belong to a new structural family which includes the Fe2+-dependent dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase and the bleomycin resistance protein. This structural family appears to allow members to form with or without domain swapping.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Lactoylglutathione lyaseQ04760Details