Authors
Glyn R Hemsworth, Edward J Taylor, Robbert Q Kim, Rebecca C Gregory, Sally J Lewis, Johan P Turkenburg, Alison Parkin, Gideon J Davies, Paul H Walton
Publication date
2013/4/24
Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume
135
Issue
16
Pages
6069-6077
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
The capacity of metal-dependent fungal and bacterial polysaccharide oxygenases, termed GH61 and CBM33, respectively, to potentiate the enzymatic degradation of cellulose opens new possibilities for the conversion of recalcitrant biomass to biofuels. GH61s have already been shown to be unique metalloenzymes containing an active site with a mononuclear copper ion coordinated by two histidines, one of which is an unusual τ-N-methylated N-terminal histidine. We now report the structural and spectroscopic characterization of the corresponding copper CBM33 enzymes. CBM33 binds copper with high affinity at a mononuclear site, significantly stabilizing the enzyme. X-band EPR spectroscopy of Cu(II)-CBM33 shows a mononuclear type 2 copper site with the copper ion in a distorted axial coordination sphere, into which azide will coordinate as evidenced by the concomitant formation of a new absorption band …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
GR Hemsworth, EJ Taylor, RQ Kim, RC Gregory… - Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2013