Abstract
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli ketopantoate reductase in complex with 2′-monophosphoadenosine 5′-diphosphoribose, a fragment of NADP+ that lacks the nicotinamide ring, is reported. The ligand is bound at the enzyme active site in the opposite orientation to that observed for NADP+, with the adenine ring occupying the lipophilic nicotinamide pocket. Isothermal titration calorimetry with R31A and N98A mutants of the enzyme is used to show that the unusual 'reversed binding mode' observed in the crystal is triggered by changes in the protonation of binding groups at low pH. This research has important implications for fragment-based approaches to drug design, namely that the crystallization conditions and the chemical modification of ligands can have unexpected effects on the binding modes. © International Union of Crystallography, 2007.
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Ciulli, A., Lobley, C. M. C., Tuck, K. L., Smith, A. G., Blundell, T. L., & Abell, C. (2007). pH-tuneable binding of 2′-phospho-ADP-ribose to ketopantoate reductase: A structural and calorimetric study. Acta Crystallographica Section D: Biological Crystallography, 63(2), 171–178. https://doi.org/10.1107/S0907444906044465
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