4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

ADP-ribosyltransferases: plastic tools for inactivating protein and small molecular weight targets

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 81-87

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0168-1656(01)00356-X

Keywords

ADP-ribosylation; bacterial toxins; amino acid sequence alignment; sequence homology; structure prediction; protein design

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ADP-ribosyltransferases (ADPRTs) form an interesting class of enyzmes with well-established roles as potent bacterial toxins and metabolic regulators. ADPRTs catalyze the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety from NAD+ onto specific substrates including proteins. ADP-ribosylation usually inactivates the function of the target. ADPRTs have become adapted to function in extra- and intracellular settings. Regulation of ADPRT activity can be mediated by ligand binding to associated regulatory domains, proteolytic cleavage, disulphide bond reduction, and association with other proteins. Crystallisation has revealed a conserved core set of elements that define an unusual minimal scaffold of the catalytic domain with remarkably plastic sequence requirements-only a single glutamic acid residue critical to catalytic activity is invariant. These inherent properties of ADPRTs suggest that the ADPRT catalytic fold is an attractive, malleable subject for protein design. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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