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Journal of Molecular Biology
Volume 291, Issue 2, 13 August 1999, Pages 393-415
 
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doi:10.1006/jmbi.1999.2929    
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Copyright © 1999 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

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Crystallographic and Calorimetric Analysis of Peptide Binding to OppA Protein*1

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S. H. Sleigha, P. R. Seaversa, A. J. Wilkinsona, J. E. Ladburyb and J. R. H. Tamea, f1, f2

a Structural Biology Centre Department of Chemistry, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, UK

b Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London, Gower St. London, WC1E 6BT, UK


Received 3 February 1999; 
revised 25 May 1999; 
accepted 8 June 1999. 
Available online 2 May 2002.

Abstract

Isothermal titration calorimetry has been used to study the binding of 20 different peptides to the peptide binding protein OppA, and the crystal structures of the ligand complexes have been refined. This periplasmic binding protein, part of the oligopeptide permease system of Gram negative bacteria, has evolved to bind and enclose small peptides of widely varying sequences. The peptides used in this study have the sequence Lys-X-Lys, where X is any of the 20 commonly occurring amino acids. The various side-chains found at position 2 on the ligand fit into a hydrated pocket. The majority of side-chains are restrained to particular conformations within the pocket. Water molecules act as flexible adapters, matching the hydrogen-bonding requirements of the protein and ligand and shielding charges on the buried ligand. This use of water by OppA to broaden the repertoire of its binding site is not unique, but contrasts sharply with other proteins which use water to help bind ligands highly selectively. Predicting the thermodynamics of binding from the structure of the complexes is highly complicated by the influence of water on the system.

Author Keywords: X-ray crystallography; calorimetry; peptide-binding protein; water

*1 Edited by K. Nagai

f1 Corresponding author

f2 E-mail address of the corresponding author: tame@yorvic.york.ac.uk


Journal of Molecular Biology
Volume 291, Issue 2, 13 August 1999, Pages 393-415
 
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