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1.
Inorg Chem ; 60(20): 15208-15214, 2021 Oct 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34597021

RESUMO

The use of lanthanide complexes as powerful auxiliaries for biocrystallography prompted us to systematically analyze the influence of the commercial crystallization kit composition on the efficiency of two lanthanide additives: [Eu(DPA)3]3- and Tb-Xo4. This study reveals that the tris(dipicolinate) complex presents a lower chemical stability and a strong tendency toward false positives, which are detrimental for its use in a high-throughput robotized crystallization platform. In particular, the crystal structures of (Mg(H2O)6)3[Eu(DPA)3]2·7H2O (1), {(Ca(H2O)4)3[Eu(DPA)3]2}n·10nH2O (2), and {Cu(DPA)(H2O)2}n (3), resulting from spontaneous crystallization in the presence of a divalent alkaline-earth cation and transmetalation, are reported. On the other hand, Tb-Xo4 is perfectly soluble in the crystallization media, stable in the presence of alkaline-earth dications, and slowly decomposes (within days) by transmetalation with transition metals. The original structure of [Tb4L4(H2O)4]Cl4·15H2O (4) is also described, where L represents a bis(pinacolato)triazacyclononane ligand. This paper also highlights a potential synergy of interactions between Tb-Xo4 and components of the crystallization mixtures, leading to the formation of complex adducts like {AdkA/Tb-Xo4/Mg2+/glycerol} in the protein binding sites. The observation of such multicomponent adducts illustrated the complexity and versatility of the supramolecular chemistry occurring at the surface of the proteins.


Assuntos
Cátions Bivalentes/química , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Elementos da Série dos Lantanídeos/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Tamanho da Partícula
2.
Chemistry ; 23(60): 15227-15232, 2017 Oct 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28983993

RESUMO

The productive exploration of chemical space is an enduring challenge in chemical biology and medicinal chemistry. Natural products are biologically relevant, and their frameworks have facilitated chemical tool and drug discovery. A "top-down" synthetic approach is described that enabled a range of complex bridged intermediates to be converted with high step efficiency into 26 diverse sp3 -rich scaffolds. The scaffolds have local natural product-like features, but are only distantly related to specific natural product frameworks. To assess biological relevance, a set of 52 fragments was prepared, and screened by high-throughput crystallography against three targets from two protein families (ATAD2, BRD1 and JMJD2D). In each case, 3D fragment hits were identified that would serve as distinctive starting points for ligand discovery. This demonstrates that frameworks that are distantly related to natural products can facilitate discovery of new biologically relevant regions within chemical space.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos/química , ATPases Associadas a Diversas Atividades Celulares/química , ATPases Associadas a Diversas Atividades Celulares/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Produtos Biológicos/síntese química , Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Domínio Catalítico , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/química , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala , Histona Acetiltransferases , Chaperonas de Histonas , Humanos , Histona Desmetilases com o Domínio Jumonji/química , Histona Desmetilases com o Domínio Jumonji/metabolismo , Ligantes , Simulação de Acoplamento Molecular , Proteínas Nucleares/química , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Domínios Proteicos , Teoria Quântica , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/síntese química , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/química , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/metabolismo
3.
Elife ; 122023 03 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36881464

RESUMO

Much of our current understanding of how small-molecule ligands interact with proteins stems from X-ray crystal structures determined at cryogenic (cryo) temperature. For proteins alone, room-temperature (RT) crystallography can reveal previously hidden, biologically relevant alternate conformations. However, less is understood about how RT crystallography may impact the conformational landscapes of protein-ligand complexes. Previously, we showed that small-molecule fragments cluster in putative allosteric sites using a cryo crystallographic screen of the therapeutic target PTP1B (Keedy et al., 2018). Here, we have performed two RT crystallographic screens of PTP1B using many of the same fragments, representing the largest RT crystallographic screens of a diverse library of ligands to date, and enabling a direct interrogation of the effect of data collection temperature on protein-ligand interactions. We show that at RT, fewer ligands bind, and often more weakly - but with a variety of temperature-dependent differences, including unique binding poses, changes in solvation, new binding sites, and distinct protein allosteric conformational responses. Overall, this work suggests that the vast body of existing cryo-temperature protein-ligand structures may provide an incomplete picture, and highlights the potential of RT crystallography to help complete this picture by revealing distinct conformational modes of protein-ligand systems. Our results may inspire future use of RT crystallography to interrogate the roles of protein-ligand conformational ensembles in biological function.


Assuntos
Cristalografia , Proteína Tirosina Fosfatase não Receptora Tipo 1 , Sítio Alostérico , Sítios de Ligação , Ligantes , Temperatura , Proteína Tirosina Fosfatase não Receptora Tipo 1/química
4.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 18(1): 74-8, 2011 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21169697

RESUMO

Lanthanoid ions exhibit extremely large anomalous X-ray scattering at their L(III) absorption edge. They are thus well suited for anomalous diffraction experiments. A novel class of lanthanoid complexes has been developed that combines the physical properties of lanthanoid atoms with functional chemical groups that allow non-covalent binding to proteins. Two structures of large multimeric proteins have already been determined by using such complexes. Here the use of the luminescent europium tris-dipicolinate complex [Eu(DPA)(3)](3-) to solve the low-resolution structure of a 444 kDa homododecameric aminopeptidase, called PhTET1-12s from the archaea Pyrococcus horikoshii, is reported. Surprisingly, considering the low resolution of the data, the experimental electron density map is very well defined. Experimental phases obtained by using the lanthanoid complex lead to maps displaying particular structural features usually observed in higher-resolution maps. Such complexes open a new way for solving the structure of large molecular assemblies, even with low-resolution data.


Assuntos
Aminopeptidases/química , Proteínas Arqueais/química , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Elementos da Série dos Lantanídeos/química , Cristalização , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Pyrococcus horikoshii/enzimologia , Espalhamento de Radiação , Difração de Raios X
5.
Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ; 77(Pt 1): 62-74, 2021 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33404526

RESUMO

Despite the tremendous success of X-ray cryo-crystallography in recent decades, the transfer of crystals from the drops in which they are grown to diffractometer sample mounts remains a manual process in almost all laboratories. Here, the Shifter, a motorized, interactive microscope stage that transforms the entire crystal-mounting workflow from a rate-limiting manual activity to a controllable, high-throughput semi-automated process, is described. By combining the visual acuity and fine motor skills of humans with targeted hardware and software automation, it was possible to transform the speed and robustness of crystal mounting. Control software, triggered by the operator, manoeuvres crystallization plates beneath a clear protective cover, allowing the complete removal of film seals and thereby eliminating the tedium of repetitive seal cutting. The software, either upon request or working from an imported list, controls motors to position crystal drops under a hole in the cover for human mounting at a microscope. The software automatically captures experimental annotations for uploading to the user's data repository, removing the need for manual documentation. The Shifter facilitates mounting rates of 100-240 crystals per hour in a more controlled process than manual mounting, which greatly extends the lifetime of the drops and thus allows a dramatic increase in the number of crystals retrievable from any given drop without loss of X-ray diffraction quality. In 2015, the first in a series of three Shifter devices was deployed as part of the XChem fragment-screening facility at Diamond Light Source, where they have since facilitated the mounting of over 120 000 crystals. The Shifter was engineered to have a simple design, providing a device that could be readily commercialized and widely adopted owing to its low cost. The versatile hardware design allows use beyond fragment screening and protein crystallography.


Assuntos
Desenho de Equipamento , Microscopia , Proteínas/química , Software , Cristalização , Cristalografia por Raios X
6.
J Vis Exp ; (171)2021 05 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34125095

RESUMO

In fragment-based drug discovery, hundreds or often thousands of compounds smaller than ~300 Da are tested against the protein of interest to identify chemical entities that can be developed into potent drug candidates. Since the compounds are small, interactions are weak, and the screening method must therefore be highly sensitive; moreover, structural information tends to be crucial for elaborating these hits into lead-like compounds. Therefore, protein crystallography has always been a gold-standard technique, yet historically too challenging to find widespread use as a primary screen. Initial XChem experiments were demonstrated in 2014 and then trialed with academic and industrial collaborators to validate the process. Since then, a large research effort and significant beamtime have streamlined sample preparation, developed a fragment library with rapid follow-up possibilities, automated and improved the capability of I04-1 beamline for unattended data collection, and implemented new tools for data management, analysis and hit identification. XChem is now a facility for large-scale crystallographic fragment screening, supporting the entire crystals-to-deposition process, and accessible to academic and industrial users worldwide. The peer-reviewed academic user program has been actively developed since 2016, to accommodate projects from as broad a scientific scope as possible, including well-validated as well as exploratory projects. Academic access is allocated through biannual calls for peer-reviewed proposals, and proprietary work is arranged by Diamond's Industrial Liaison group. This workflow has already been routinely applied to over a hundred targets from diverse therapeutic areas, and effectively identifies weak binders (1%-30% hit rate), which both serve as high-quality starting points for compound design and provide extensive structural information on binding sites. The resilience of the process was demonstrated by continued screening of SARS-CoV-2 targets during the COVID-19 pandemic, including a 3-week turn-around for the main protease.


Assuntos
Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Proteínas/química , Humanos
7.
Biochimie ; 191: 118-125, 2021 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34517052

RESUMO

Prion disease is caused by the misfolding of the cellular prion protein, PrPC, into a self-templating conformer, PrPSc. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and X-ray crystallography revealed the 3D structure of the globular domain of PrPC and the possibility of its dimerization via an interchain disulfide bridge that forms due to domain swap or by non-covalent association of two monomers. On the contrary, PrPSc is composed by a complex and heterogeneous ensemble of poorly defined conformations and quaternary arrangements that are related to different patterns of neurotoxicity. Targeting PrPC with molecules that stabilize the native conformation of its globular domain emerged as a promising approach to develop anti-prion therapies. One of the advantages of this approach is employing structure-based drug discovery methods to PrPC. Thus, it is essential to expand our structural knowledge about PrPC as much as possible to aid such drug discovery efforts. In this work, we report a crystallographic structure of the globular domain of human PrPC that shows a novel dimeric form and a novel oligomeric arrangement. We use molecular dynamics simulations to explore its structural dynamics and stability and discuss potential implications of these new quaternary structures to the conversion process.


Assuntos
Proteínas PrPC/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Humanos , Domínios Proteicos , Estrutura Quaternária de Proteína
8.
ChemMedChem ; 15(24): 2513-2520, 2020 12 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32812371

RESUMO

Combined photochemical arylation, "nuisance effect" (SN Ar) reaction sequences have been employed in the design of small arrays for immediate deployment in medium-throughput X-ray protein-ligand structure determination. Reactions were deliberately allowed to run "out of control" in terms of selectivity; for example the ortho-arylation of 2-phenylpyridine gave five products resulting from mono- and bisarylations combined with SN Ar processes. As a result, a number of crystallographic hits against NUDT7, a key peroxisomal CoA ester hydrolase, have been identified.


Assuntos
Derivados de Benzeno/síntese química , Inibidores Enzimáticos/síntese química , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/síntese química , Derivados de Benzeno/metabolismo , Catálise , Técnicas de Química Sintética/métodos , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Desenho de Fármacos , Inibidores Enzimáticos/metabolismo , Estudos de Viabilidade , Humanos , Paládio/química , Estudo de Prova de Conceito , Ligação Proteica , Piridinas/síntese química , Piridinas/metabolismo , Pirofosfatases/metabolismo , Pirrolidinonas/síntese química , Pirrolidinonas/metabolismo , Bibliotecas de Moléculas Pequenas/metabolismo , Nudix Hidrolases
9.
Chem Sci ; 11(39): 10792-10801, 2020 May 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34094333

RESUMO

Organic synthesis underpins the evolution of weak fragment hits into potent lead compounds. Deficiencies within current screening collections often result in the requirement of significant synthetic investment to enable multidirectional fragment growth, limiting the efficiency of the hit evolution process. Diversity-oriented synthesis (DOS)-derived fragment libraries are constructed in an efficient and modular fashion and thus are well-suited to address this challenge. To demonstrate the effective nature of such libraries within fragment-based drug discovery, we herein describe the screening of a 40-member DOS library against three functionally distinct biological targets using X-Ray crystallography. Firstly, we demonstrate the importance for diversity in aiding hit identification with four fragment binders resulting from these efforts. Moreover, we also exemplify the ability to readily access a library of analogues from cheap commercially available materials, which ultimately enabled the exploration of a minimum of four synthetic vectors from each molecule. In total, 10-14 analogues of each hit were rapidly accessed in three to six synthetic steps. Thus, we showcase how DOS-derived fragment libraries enable efficient hit derivatisation and can be utilised to remove the synthetic limitations encountered in early stage fragment-based drug discovery.

10.
Methods Enzymol ; 610: 251-264, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30390801

RESUMO

The XChem facility at Diamond Light Source offers fragment screening by X-ray crystallography as a general access user program. The main advantage of X-ray crystallography as a primary fragment screen is that it yields directly the location and pose of the fragment hits, whether within pockets of interest or merely on surface sites: this is the key information for structure-based design and for enabling synthesis of follow-up molecules. Extensive streamlining of the screening experiment at XChem has engendered a very active user program that is generating large amounts of data: in 2017, 36 academic and industry groups generated 35,000 datasets of uniquely soaked crystals. It has also generated a large number of learnings concerning the main remaining bottleneck, namely, obtaining a suitable crystal system that will support a successful fragment screen. Here we discuss the practicalities of generating screen-ready crystals that have useful electron density maps, and how to ensure they will be successfully reproduced and usable at a facility outside the home lab.


Assuntos
Cristalização/métodos , Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Proteínas/química , Animais , Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Humanos , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Proteínas/genética
11.
ChemMedChem ; 13(10): 1051-1057, 2018 05 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29578648

RESUMO

Epigenetics is a rapidly growing field in drug discovery. Of particular interest is the role of post-translational modifications to histones and the proteins that read, write, and erase such modifications. The development of inhibitors for reader domains has focused on single domains. One of the major difficulties of designing inhibitors for reader domains is that, with the notable exception of bromodomains, they tend not to possess a well-enclosed binding site amenable to small-molecule inhibition. As many of the proteins in epigenetic regulation have multiple domains, there are opportunities for designing inhibitors that bind at a domain-domain interface which provide a more suitable interaction pocket. Examination of X-ray structures of multiple domains involved in recognising and modifying post-translational histone marks using the SiteMap algorithm identified potential binding sites at domain-domain interfaces. For the tandem plant homeodomain-bromodomain of SP100C, a potential inter-domain site identified computationally was validated experimentally by the discovery of ligands by X-ray crystallographic fragment screening.


Assuntos
Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Epigênese Genética , Proteínas de Plantas/química , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Ligação Proteica , Sítios de Ligação , Simulação por Computador , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de Plantas , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Conformação Proteica , Domínios Proteicos , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Relação Estrutura-Atividade
12.
Nat Commun ; 8: 15123, 2017 04 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28436492

RESUMO

In macromolecular crystallography, the rigorous detection of changed states (for example, ligand binding) is difficult unless signal is strong. Ambiguous ('weak' or 'noisy') density is experimentally common, since molecular states are generally only fractionally present in the crystal. Existing methodologies focus on generating maximally accurate maps whereby minor states become discernible; in practice, such map interpretation is disappointingly subjective, time-consuming and methodologically unsound. Here we report the PanDDA method, which automatically reveals clear electron density for the changed state-even from inaccurate maps-by subtracting a proportion of the confounding 'ground state'; changed states are objectively identified from statistical analysis of density distributions. The method is completely general, implying new best practice for all changed-state studies, including the routine collection of multiple ground-state crystals. More generally, these results demonstrate: the incompleteness of atomic models; that single data sets contain insufficient information to model them fully; and that accuracy requires further map-deconvolution approaches.

13.
Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ; 73(Pt 3): 246-255, 2017 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28291760

RESUMO

The steady expansion in the capacity of modern beamlines for high-throughput data collection, enabled by increasing X-ray brightness, capacity of robotics and detector speeds, has pushed the bottleneck upstream towards sample preparation. Even in ligand-binding studies using crystal soaking, the experiment best able to exploit beamline capacity, a primary limitation is the need for gentle and nontrivial soaking regimens such as stepwise concentration increases, even for robust and well characterized crystals. Here, the use of acoustic droplet ejection for the soaking of protein crystals with small molecules is described, and it is shown that it is both gentle on crystals and allows very high throughput, with 1000 unique soaks easily performed in under 10 min. In addition to having very low compound consumption (tens of nanolitres per sample), the positional precision of acoustic droplet ejection enables the targeted placement of the compound/solvent away from crystals and towards drop edges, allowing gradual diffusion of solvent across the drop. This ensures both an improvement in the reproducibility of X-ray diffraction and increased solvent tolerance of the crystals, thus enabling higher effective compound-soaking concentrations. The technique is detailed here with examples from the protein target JMJD2D, a histone lysine demethylase with roles in cancer and the focus of active structure-based drug-design efforts.


Assuntos
Acústica/instrumentação , Cristalização/instrumentação , Proteínas/química , Cristalização/economia , Cristalização/métodos , Cristalografia por Raios X , Desenho de Equipamento , Fatores de Tempo
14.
Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ; 73(Pt 3): 267-278, 2017 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28291762

RESUMO

XChemExplorer (XCE) is a data-management and workflow tool to support large-scale simultaneous analysis of protein-ligand complexes during structure-based ligand discovery (SBLD). The user interfaces of established crystallographic software packages such as CCP4 [Winn et al. (2011), Acta Cryst. D67, 235-242] or PHENIX [Adams et al. (2010), Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221] have entrenched the paradigm that a `project' is concerned with solving one structure. This does not hold for SBLD, where many almost identical structures need to be solved and analysed quickly in one batch of work. Functionality to track progress and annotate structures is essential. XCE provides an intuitive graphical user interface which guides the user from data processing, initial map calculation, ligand identification and refinement up until data dissemination. It provides multiple entry points depending on the need of each project, enables batch processing of multiple data sets and records metadata, progress and annotations in an SQLite database. XCE is freely available and works on any Linux and Mac OS X system, and the only dependency is to have the latest version of CCP4 installed. The design and usage of this tool are described here, and its usefulness is demonstrated in the context of fragment-screening campaigns at the Diamond Light Source. It is routinely used to analyse projects comprising 1000 data sets or more, and therefore scales well to even very large ligand-design projects.


Assuntos
Gráficos por Computador , Proteínas/química , Software , Algoritmos , Cristalografia por Raios X , Ligantes , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Proteínas/metabolismo , Interface Usuário-Computador , Fluxo de Trabalho
15.
Chem Sci ; 7(3): 2322-2330, 2016 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29910922

RESUMO

Research into the chemical biology of bromodomains has been driven by the development of acetyl-lysine mimetics. The ligands are typically anchored by binding to a highly conserved asparagine residue. Atypical bromodomains, for which the asparagine is mutated, have thus far proven elusive targets, including PHIP(2) whose parent protein, PHIP, has been linked to disease progression in diabetes and cancers. The PHIP(2) binding site contains a threonine in place of asparagine, and solution screening have yielded no convincing hits. We have overcome this hurdle by combining the sensitivity of X-ray crystallography, used as the primary fragment screen, with a strategy for rapid follow-up synthesis using a chemically-poised fragment library, which allows hits to be readily modified by parallel chemistry both peripherally and in the core. Our approach yielded the first reported hit compounds of PHIP(2) with measurable IC50 values by an AlphaScreen competition assay. The follow-up libraries of four poised fragment hits improved potency into the sub-mM range while showing good ligand efficiency and detailed structural data.

16.
Front Microbiol ; 5: 66, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24600446

RESUMO

Protein-solvent interactions govern the behaviors of proteins isolated from extreme halophiles. In this work, we compared the solvent envelopes of two orthologous tetrameric malate dehydrogenases (MalDHs) from halophilic and non-halophilic bacteria. The crystal structure of the MalDH from the non-halophilic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus (Ca MalDH) solved, de novo, at 1.7 Å resolution exhibits numerous water molecules in its solvation shell. We observed that a large number of these water molecules are arranged in pentagonal polygons in the first hydration shell of Ca MalDH. Some of them are clustered in large networks, which cover non-polar amino acid surface. The crystal structure of MalDH from the extreme halophilic bacterium Salinibacter ruber (Sr) solved at 1.55 Å resolution shows that its surface is strongly enriched in acidic amino acids. The structural comparison of these two models is the first direct observation of the relative impact of acidic surface enrichment on the water structure organization between a halophilic protein and its non-adapted counterpart. The data show that surface acidic amino acids disrupt pentagonal water networks in the hydration shell. These crystallographic observations are discussed with respect to halophilic protein behaviors in solution.

17.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 48(97): 11886-8, 2012 Dec 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23123834

RESUMO

New trisdipicolinic acid-lanthanide complexes are reported as phasing agents for X-ray crystallography of proteins. It is demonstrated that CuAAC modifications allow protein co-crystallization with low concentration of lanthanide complexes leading to an accurate structure determination.


Assuntos
Európio/química , Muramidase/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Ácidos Picolínicos/química , Proteínas de Plantas/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Muramidase/metabolismo , Compostos Organometálicos/síntese química
18.
J Mol Biol ; 404(3): 493-505, 2010 Dec 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20888835

RESUMO

Several experimental techniques were applied to unravel fine molecular details of protein adaptation to high salinity. We compared four homologous enzymes, which suggested a new halo-adaptive state in the process of molecular adaptation to high-salt conditions. Together with comparative functional studies, the structure of malate dehydrogenase from the eubacterium Salinibacter ruber shows that the enzyme shares characteristics of a halo-adapted archaea-bacterial enzyme and of non-halo-adapted enzymes from other eubacterial species. The S. ruber enzyme is active at the high physiological concentrations of KCl but, unlike typical halo-adapted enzymes, remains folded and active at low salt concentrations. Structural aspects of the protein, including acidic residues at the surface, solvent-exposed hydrophobic surface, and buried hydrophobic surface, place it between the typical halo-adapted and non-halo-adapted proteins. The enzyme lacks inter-subunit ion-binding sites often seen in halo-adapted enzymes. These observations permit us to suggest an evolutionary pathway that is highlighted by subtle trade-offs to achieve an optimal compromise among solubility, stability, and catalytic activity.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Bacteroidetes/enzimologia , Malato Desidrogenase/química , Malato Desidrogenase/metabolismo , Proteínas Arqueais/química , Proteínas Arqueais/metabolismo , Domínio Catalítico , Chloroflexus/enzimologia , Cristalografia por Raios X , Estabilidade Enzimática/efeitos dos fármacos , Haloarcula marismortui/enzimologia , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , L-Lactato Desidrogenase/química , L-Lactato Desidrogenase/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Cloreto de Potássio/farmacologia , Conformação Proteica/efeitos dos fármacos , Estrutura Quaternária de Proteína , Salinidade , Solubilidade/efeitos dos fármacos , Especificidade da Espécie , Thermus thermophilus/enzimologia
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