Issue December 2002No. 3 (p 311-486) December 2002 ISSN 0739-1102 Exploring the Role of Amino Acid-18 of the Leucine Binding Proteins of E. coli (p. 381-388)Two periplasmic binding proteins of E. coli, the leucine specific-binding protein (LS) and leucine-isoleucine-valine binding protein (LIV), have high similarity in their structure and function, but show different substrate specificity. A key difference between these proteins is residue 18 in the binding pocket, a tryptophan residue in the LS and a tyrosine residue in the LIV. To examine the role of this residue in binding specificity, we used fluorescence and 19F NMR to monitor ligand binding to three mutants: LSW18Y, LSW18F and LIVY18W. We observed leucine binding to all proteins. LS binds L-phenylalanine but the mutation from Trp to Tyr or Phe disallows this ligand and expands the binding repertoire to L-isoleucine and L-valine. The LIVY18W mutant still retains the ability to bind L-isoleucine and also binds L-phenylalanine.
Key words: 19F NMR, Leucine-binding Protein, Fluorescence, Periplasmic Binding Protein. Branka Salopek-Sondi1,a 1Department of Chemistry Subscription is more cost effective than purchasing PDFs on-the-fly. Click here for details. |