Abstract
Heparinase II (HepII) is an 85-kDa dimeric enzyme that depolymerizes both heparin and heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans through a β-elimination mechanism. Recently, we determined the crystal structure of HepII from Pedobacter heparinus (previously known as Flavobacterium heparinum) in complex with a heparin disaccharide product, and identified the location of its active site. Here we present the structure of HepII complexed with a heparan sulfate disaccharide product, proving that the same binding/active site is responsible for the degradation of both uronic acid epimers containing substrates. The key enzymatic step involves removal of a proton from the C5 carbon (a chiral center) of the uronic acid, posing a topological challenge to abstract the proton from either side of the ring in a single active site.Wehave identified three potential active site residues equidistant from C5 and located on both sides of the uronate product and determined their role in catalysis using a set of defined tetrasaccharide substrates. HepII H202A/Y257A mutant lost activity for both substrates andwedetermined its crystal structure complexed with a heparan sulfate-derived tetrasaccharide. Basedonkinetic characterization of various mutants and the structure of the enzyme-substrate complex we propose residues participating in catalysis and their specific roles. © 2010 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Shaya, D., Zhao, W., Garron, M. L., Xiao, Z., Cui, Q., Zhang, Z., … Cygler, M. (2010). Catalytic mechanism of heparinase II investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and the crystal structure with its substrate. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285(26), 20051–20061. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.101071
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