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Crystal Structure of the Termination Module of a Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase
Alan Tanovic et al.
Science, 1159850 (26 Jun 2008)
 
Arthur Kornberg (1918–2007): A Man of More Than Just Two Cultures
pubs.acs.org
Arthur Kornberg, Professor of Biochemistry at Stanford University and one of the most important and influential scientists of the 20th century, died October 26 of respiratory failure. He had been at work only two days earlier in his office at Stanford University Medical Center. He was 89. ACS Chem Biol (2007) 2, 768–771. DOI 10.1021/cb700255z
 
Structure-based activity prediction for an enzyme of unknown function
Johannes Hermann et al.
Nature 448 (7155), 775-9 (16 Aug 2007)
With many genomes sequenced, a pressing challenge in biology is predicting the function of the proteins that the genes encode. When proteins are unrelated to others of known activity, bioinformatics inference for function becomes problematic. It would thus be useful to interrogate protein structures for function directly. Here, we predict the function of an enzyme of unknown activity, Tm0936 from Thermotoga maritima, by docking high-energy intermediate forms of thousands of candidate metabolites. The docking hit list was dominated by adenine analogues, which appeared to undergo C6-deamination. Four of these, including 5-methylthioadenosine and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), were tested as substrates, and three had substantial catalytic rate constants (105 M-1 s-1). The X-ray crystal structure of the complex between Tm0936 and the product resulting from the deamination of SAH, S-inosylhomocysteine, was determined, and it corresponded closely to the predicted structure. The deaminated products can be further metabolized by T. maritima in a previously uncharacterized SAH degradation pathway. Structure-based docking with high-energy forms of potential substrates may be a useful tool to annotate enzymes for function.

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