Ke. Jaeger et al., TOPOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND MODELING OF THE 3D STRUCTURE OF LIPASE FROM PSEUDOMONAS-AERUGINOSA, FEBS letters, 332(1-2), 1993, pp. 143-149
Lipase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a M(r) 29 kDa protein with a sin
gle functional disulfide bond as shown by a shift in electrophoretic m
obility after treatment with dithiothreitol and iodoacetamide. Limited
proteolysis of lipase with Staphylococcus aureus protease V8 resulted
in cleavage after amino acid residues Asp38 and Glu46. Comparison of
the lipase amino acid sequence with those of other hydrolases with kno
wn 3D structures indicated that the folding pattern might be compatibl
e with the alpha/beta hydrolase fold, thereby allowing us to construct
a 3D model which fitted the biochemical properties. The model predict
s a catalytic triad consisting of Ser82, Asp229 and His251, and contai
ns a disulfide bond connecting residues Cys183 and Cys235. Residues As
p38 and Glu46 are located at the surface of the enzyme, whereas the di
sulfide bond is rather inaccessible, which is in agreement with the fi
nding that the protein needed to be partly unfolded before a reduction
of the disulfide bond could take place. A striking prediction from th
e model was the lack of a lid-like alpha-helical loop structure coveri
ng the active site which confers to other well-characterized lipases a
unique property known as interfacial activation. Experimental determi
nation of lipase activity under conditions where the substrate existed
either as monomeric solutions or aggregates confirmed the absence of
interfacial activation.