Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.

Human lysozyme is a key component of the innate immune system, and recombinant forms of the enzyme represent promising leads in the search for therapeutic agents able to treat drug-resistant infections. The wild type protein, however, fails to participate effectively in clearance of certain infectio...

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Main Authors: Avinash Gill, Thomas C Scanlon, Daniel C Osipovitch, Dean R Madden, Karl E Griswold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-03-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3049763?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-76e2b8418ffb4f2db96d0f368d6432f52020-11-24T22:16:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-03-0163e1678810.1371/journal.pone.0016788Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.Avinash GillThomas C ScanlonDaniel C OsipovitchDean R MaddenKarl E GriswoldHuman lysozyme is a key component of the innate immune system, and recombinant forms of the enzyme represent promising leads in the search for therapeutic agents able to treat drug-resistant infections. The wild type protein, however, fails to participate effectively in clearance of certain infections due to inherent functional limitations. For example, wild type lysozymes are subject to electrostatic sequestration and inactivation by anionic biopolymers in the infected airway. A charge engineered variant of human lysozyme has recently been shown to possess improved antibacterial activity in the presence of disease associated inhibitory molecules. Here, the 2.04 Å crystal structure of this variant is presented along with an analysis that provides molecular level insights into the origins of the protein's enhanced performance. The charge engineered variant's two mutated amino acids exhibit stabilizing interactions with adjacent native residues, and from a global perspective, the mutations cause no gross structural perturbations or loss of stability. Importantly, the two substitutions dramatically expand the negative electrostatic potential that, in the wild type enzyme, is restricted to a small region near the catalytic residues. The net result is a reduction in the overall strength of the engineered enzyme's electrostatic potential field, and it appears that the specific nature of this remodeled field underlies the variant's reduced susceptibility to inhibition by anionic biopolymers.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3049763?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Avinash Gill
Thomas C Scanlon
Daniel C Osipovitch
Dean R Madden
Karl E Griswold
spellingShingle Avinash Gill
Thomas C Scanlon
Daniel C Osipovitch
Dean R Madden
Karl E Griswold
Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Avinash Gill
Thomas C Scanlon
Daniel C Osipovitch
Dean R Madden
Karl E Griswold
author_sort Avinash Gill
title Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
title_short Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
title_full Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
title_fullStr Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
title_full_unstemmed Crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
title_sort crystal structure of a charge engineered human lysozyme having enhanced bactericidal activity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-03-01
description Human lysozyme is a key component of the innate immune system, and recombinant forms of the enzyme represent promising leads in the search for therapeutic agents able to treat drug-resistant infections. The wild type protein, however, fails to participate effectively in clearance of certain infections due to inherent functional limitations. For example, wild type lysozymes are subject to electrostatic sequestration and inactivation by anionic biopolymers in the infected airway. A charge engineered variant of human lysozyme has recently been shown to possess improved antibacterial activity in the presence of disease associated inhibitory molecules. Here, the 2.04 Å crystal structure of this variant is presented along with an analysis that provides molecular level insights into the origins of the protein's enhanced performance. The charge engineered variant's two mutated amino acids exhibit stabilizing interactions with adjacent native residues, and from a global perspective, the mutations cause no gross structural perturbations or loss of stability. Importantly, the two substitutions dramatically expand the negative electrostatic potential that, in the wild type enzyme, is restricted to a small region near the catalytic residues. The net result is a reduction in the overall strength of the engineered enzyme's electrostatic potential field, and it appears that the specific nature of this remodeled field underlies the variant's reduced susceptibility to inhibition by anionic biopolymers.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3049763?pdf=render
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