Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity

l-Asparaginases have remained an intriguing research topic since their discovery ∼120 years ago, especially after their introduction in the 1960s as very efficient antileukemic drugs. In addition to bacterial asparaginases, which are still used to treat childhood leukemia, enzymes of plant and mamma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joanna I. Loch, Mariusz Jaskolski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Union of Crystallography 2021-07-01
Series:IUCrJ
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scripts.iucr.org/cgi-bin/paper?S2052252521006011
id doaj-e0c8552f43754f758d5182ea1d3a9104
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e0c8552f43754f758d5182ea1d3a91042021-07-05T12:49:39ZengInternational Union of CrystallographyIUCrJ2052-25252021-07-018451453110.1107/S2052252521006011lz5050Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversityJoanna I. Loch0Mariusz Jaskolski1Department of Crystal Chemistry and Crystal Physics, Faculty of Chemistry, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, PolandDepartment of Crystallography, Faculty of Chemistry, A. Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Polandl-Asparaginases have remained an intriguing research topic since their discovery ∼120 years ago, especially after their introduction in the 1960s as very efficient antileukemic drugs. In addition to bacterial asparaginases, which are still used to treat childhood leukemia, enzymes of plant and mammalian origin are now also known. They have all been structurally characterized by crystallography, in some cases at outstanding resolution. The structural data have also shed light on the mechanistic details of these deceptively simple enzymes. Yet, despite all this progress, no better therapeutic agents have been found to beat bacterial asparaginases. However, a new option might arise with the discovery of yet another type of asparaginase, those from symbiotic nitrogen-fixing Rhizobia, and with progress in the protein engineering of enzymes with desired properties. This review surveys the field of structural biology of l-asparaginases, focusing on the mechanistic aspects of the well established types and speculating about the potential of the new members of this amazingly diversified family.http://scripts.iucr.org/cgi-bin/paper?S2052252521006011leukemial-asparaginasesamidohydrolasescatalytic mechanismactive sitenucleophiles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joanna I. Loch
Mariusz Jaskolski
spellingShingle Joanna I. Loch
Mariusz Jaskolski
Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
IUCrJ
leukemia
l-asparaginases
amidohydrolases
catalytic mechanism
active site
nucleophiles
author_facet Joanna I. Loch
Mariusz Jaskolski
author_sort Joanna I. Loch
title Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
title_short Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
title_full Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
title_fullStr Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
title_full_unstemmed Structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
title_sort structural and biophysical aspects of l-asparaginases: a growing family with amazing diversity
publisher International Union of Crystallography
series IUCrJ
issn 2052-2525
publishDate 2021-07-01
description l-Asparaginases have remained an intriguing research topic since their discovery ∼120 years ago, especially after their introduction in the 1960s as very efficient antileukemic drugs. In addition to bacterial asparaginases, which are still used to treat childhood leukemia, enzymes of plant and mammalian origin are now also known. They have all been structurally characterized by crystallography, in some cases at outstanding resolution. The structural data have also shed light on the mechanistic details of these deceptively simple enzymes. Yet, despite all this progress, no better therapeutic agents have been found to beat bacterial asparaginases. However, a new option might arise with the discovery of yet another type of asparaginase, those from symbiotic nitrogen-fixing Rhizobia, and with progress in the protein engineering of enzymes with desired properties. This review surveys the field of structural biology of l-asparaginases, focusing on the mechanistic aspects of the well established types and speculating about the potential of the new members of this amazingly diversified family.
topic leukemia
l-asparaginases
amidohydrolases
catalytic mechanism
active site
nucleophiles
url http://scripts.iucr.org/cgi-bin/paper?S2052252521006011
work_keys_str_mv AT joannailoch structuralandbiophysicalaspectsoflasparaginasesagrowingfamilywithamazingdiversity
AT mariuszjaskolski structuralandbiophysicalaspectsoflasparaginasesagrowingfamilywithamazingdiversity
_version_ 1721318571976425472