- Crystallization, molecular replacement solution, and refinement of tetrameric beta-amylase from sweet potato.
Crystallization, molecular replacement solution, and refinement of tetrameric beta-amylase from sweet potato.
Sweet potato beta-amylase is a tetramer of identical subunits, which are arranged to exhibit 222 molecular symmetry. Its subunit consists of 498 amino acid residues (Mr 55,880). It has been crystallized at room temperature using polyethylene glycol 1500 as precipitant. The crystals, growing to dimensions of 0.4 mm x 0.4 mm x 1.0 mm within 2 weeks, belong to the tetragonal space group P4(2)2(1)2 with unit cell dimensions of a = b = 129.63 A and c = 68.42 A. The asymmetric unit contains 1 subunit of beta-amylase, with a crystal volume per protein mass (VM) of 2.57 A3/Da and a solvent content of 52% by volume. The three-dimensional structure of the tetrameric beta-amylase from sweet potato has been determined by molecular replacement methods using the monomeric structure of soybean enzyme as the starting model. The refined subunit model contains 3,863 nonhydrogen protein atoms (488 amino acid residues) and 319 water oxygen atoms. The current R-value is 20.3% for data in the resolution range of 8-2.3 A (with 2 sigma cut-off) with good stereochemistry. The subunit structure of sweet potato beta-amylase (crystallized in the absence of alpha-cyclodextrin) is very similar to that of soybean beta-amylase (complexed with alpha-cyclodextrin). The root-mean-square (RMS) difference for 487 equivalent C alpha atoms of the two beta-amylases is 0.96 A. Each subunit of sweet potato beta-amylase is composed of a large (alpha/beta)8 core domain, a small one made up of three long loops [L3 (residues 91-150), L4 (residues 183-258), and L5 (residues 300-327)], and a long C-terminal loop formed by residues 445-493. Conserved Glu 187, believed to play an important role in catalysis, is located at the cleft between the (alpha/beta)8 barrel core and a small domain made up of three long loops (L3, L4, and L5). Conserved Cys 96, important in the inactivation of enzyme activity by sulfhydryl reagents, is located at the entrance of the (alpha/beta)8 barrel.