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Biophys J. 2000 Mar;78(3):1541-50.Induced fit in arginine kinase.Zhou G, Ellington WR, Chapman MS.Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-4380, USA. Creatine kinase (CK) and arginine kinase (AK) are related enzymes that
reversibly transfer a phosphoryl group between a guanidino compound and ADP. In
the buffering of ATP energy levels, they are central to energy metabolism and
have been paradigms of classical enzymology. Comparison of the open
substrate-free structure of CK and the closed substrate-bound structure of AK
reveals differences that are consistent with prior biophysical evidence of
substrate-induced conformational changes. Large and small domains undergo a
hinged 13 degrees rotation. Several loops become ordered and adopt different
positions in the presence of substrate, including one (residues 309-319) that
moves 15 A to fold over the substrates. The conformational changes appear to be
necessary in aligning the two substrates for catalysis, in configuring the
active site only when productive phosphoryl transfer is possible, and excluding
water from the active site to avoid wasteful ATP hydrolysis.
PMID: 10692338 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] This publication is one of the several that describes a structure solved either at the Kasha Laboratory, Institute of Molecular Biophysics or in collaboration with the Institute Faculty. The data used for this structure determination came in full or part from the Macromolecular X-Ray Crystallography Facility. |
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www.sb.fsu.edu/~xray/Pubs/00zhou.html
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