R. Karlsson et al., STRUCTURE OF THE MAMMALIAN CATALYTIC SUBUNIT OF CAMP-DEPENDENT PROTEIN-KINASE AND AN INHIBITOR PEPTIDE DISPLAYS AN OPEN CONFORMATION, Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography, 49, 1993, pp. 381-388
The crystal structure of a binary complex of the porcine heart catalyt
ic (C) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (space group P4(1)32;
a = 171.5 angstrom) complexed with a di-iodinated peptide inhibitor, P
KI(5-24), has been solved and refined to 2.9 angstrom resolution with
an overall R of 21.1%. The r.m.s. deviations from ideal bond lengths a
nd angles are 0.022 angstrom and 4.3-degrees. A single isotropic B of
17 angstrom2 was used for all atoms. The structure solution was carrie
d out initially by molecular replacement of electron density followed
by refinement against atomic coordinates from orthorhombic crystals of
a binary complex of the mouse recombinant enzyme previously described
[Knighton, Zheng, Ten Eyck, Ashford, Xuong, Taylor & Sowadski (1991).
Science, 253, 407-414]. The most striking difference between the two
crystal structures is a large displacement of the small lobe of the en
zyme. In the cubic crystal, the beta-sheet of the small lobe is rotate
d by 15-degrees and translated by 1.9 angstrom with respect to the ort
horhombic crystal. Possible explanations for why this binary complex c
rystallized in an open conformation in contrast to a similar binary co
mplex of the recombinant enzyme are discussed. This study demonstrates
that considerable information about parts of a crystal structure can
be obtained without a complete crystal structure analysis. Specificall
y, the six rigid-group parameters of a poly-alanine model of the beta-
structure were obtained satisfactorily from a crystal structure by ref
inement of difference Fourier coefficients based on an approximate par
tial structure model.