L-Hydantoinase from Arthrobacter aurescens (L-Hyd) is a member of the
dihydropyrimidinases which in turn belong to the cyclic amidases.
Dihydropyrimidinases catalyze the reversible hydrolytic ring opening of
dihydropyrimidines as the second step in the catabolism of pyrimidines.
In biotechnology, their hydroloytic activity on five-membered cyclic
diamides (hydantoins) is used in the enantio-specific production of
amino acids from racemic hydantoins. L-Hyd differs from most of the
other dihydropyrimidinases by an L-enantio specificity and by lacking
activity on possible natural substrates such as dihydropyrimidines. In
this paper, we describe the three-dimensional structure of L-Hyd which
Was solved by molecular replacement using a homology model and
subsequently refined to 2.6 Angstrom resolution. Each subunit of the
tetrameric L-Hyd consists of an elliptically distorted
(alpha/beta)(s)-barrel domain, which hosts the active site, and a
beta-sheet domain. In the active site, a binuclear zinc center activates
a Water molecule for nucleophilic attack on the substrates' amide bond.
L-Hyd shows a strong homology both in fold and in metal coordination in
the active site to another dihydropyrimidinase from Thermus sp.
(D-hydantoinase) and to a slightly lesser degree to ureases,
dihydroorotase and phosphotriesterase. Using the homology to ureases, a
model for the transition state was modeled in the active site of L-Hyd
and D-hydantoinase. This model could provide an explanation for the
different substrate and enantio selectivities of both
dihydropyrimidinases.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ISI:000176674100007
%A Abendroth, J
%A Niefind, K
%A May, O
%A Siemann, M
%A Syldatk, C
%A Schomburg, D
%C 1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA
%D 2002
%I AMER CHEMICAL SOC
%J BIOCHEMISTRY
%K imported myown
%N 27
%P 8589-8597
%R 10.1021/bi0157722
%T The structure of L-hydantoinase from Arthobacter aurescens leads to an
understanding of dihydropyrimidinase substrate and enantio specificity
%U https://doi.org/10.1021/bi0157722
%V 41
%X L-Hydantoinase from Arthrobacter aurescens (L-Hyd) is a member of the
dihydropyrimidinases which in turn belong to the cyclic amidases.
Dihydropyrimidinases catalyze the reversible hydrolytic ring opening of
dihydropyrimidines as the second step in the catabolism of pyrimidines.
In biotechnology, their hydroloytic activity on five-membered cyclic
diamides (hydantoins) is used in the enantio-specific production of
amino acids from racemic hydantoins. L-Hyd differs from most of the
other dihydropyrimidinases by an L-enantio specificity and by lacking
activity on possible natural substrates such as dihydropyrimidines. In
this paper, we describe the three-dimensional structure of L-Hyd which
Was solved by molecular replacement using a homology model and
subsequently refined to 2.6 Angstrom resolution. Each subunit of the
tetrameric L-Hyd consists of an elliptically distorted
(alpha/beta)(s)-barrel domain, which hosts the active site, and a
beta-sheet domain. In the active site, a binuclear zinc center activates
a Water molecule for nucleophilic attack on the substrates' amide bond.
L-Hyd shows a strong homology both in fold and in metal coordination in
the active site to another dihydropyrimidinase from Thermus sp.
(D-hydantoinase) and to a slightly lesser degree to ureases,
dihydroorotase and phosphotriesterase. Using the homology to ureases, a
model for the transition state was modeled in the active site of L-Hyd
and D-hydantoinase. This model could provide an explanation for the
different substrate and enantio selectivities of both
dihydropyrimidinases.
@article{ISI:000176674100007,
abstract = {{L-Hydantoinase from Arthrobacter aurescens (L-Hyd) is a member of the
dihydropyrimidinases which in turn belong to the cyclic amidases.
Dihydropyrimidinases catalyze the reversible hydrolytic ring opening of
dihydropyrimidines as the second step in the catabolism of pyrimidines.
In biotechnology, their hydroloytic activity on five-membered cyclic
diamides (hydantoins) is used in the enantio-specific production of
amino acids from racemic hydantoins. L-Hyd differs from most of the
other dihydropyrimidinases by an L-enantio specificity and by lacking
activity on possible natural substrates such as dihydropyrimidines. In
this paper, we describe the three-dimensional structure of L-Hyd which
Was solved by molecular replacement using a homology model and
subsequently refined to 2.6 Angstrom resolution. Each subunit of the
tetrameric L-Hyd consists of an elliptically distorted
(alpha/beta)(s)-barrel domain, which hosts the active site, and a
beta-sheet domain. In the active site, a binuclear zinc center activates
a Water molecule for nucleophilic attack on the substrates' amide bond.
L-Hyd shows a strong homology both in fold and in metal coordination in
the active site to another dihydropyrimidinase from Thermus sp.
(D-hydantoinase) and to a slightly lesser degree to ureases,
dihydroorotase and phosphotriesterase. Using the homology to ureases, a
model for the transition state was modeled in the active site of L-Hyd
and D-hydantoinase. This model could provide an explanation for the
different substrate and enantio selectivities of both
dihydropyrimidinases.}},
added-at = {2018-01-25T13:38:08.000+0100},
address = {{1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA}},
affiliation = {{Schomburg, D (Reprint Author), Univ Cologne, Inst Biochem, Zulpicher Str 47, D-50674 Cologne, Germany.
Univ Cologne, Inst Biochem, D-50674 Cologne, Germany.
Univ Stuttgart, Inst Bioverfahrenstech, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.}},
author = {Abendroth, J and Niefind, K and May, O and Siemann, M and Syldatk, C and Schomburg, D},
biburl = {https://puma.ub.uni-stuttgart.de/bibtex/295c4520e0ad8f198f8d3fe8e94708372/siemannherzberg},
da = {{2018-01-25}},
doc-delivery-number = {{570TM}},
doi = {{10.1021/bi0157722}},
interhash = {62157174ee151133165f24165472ea80},
intrahash = {95c4520e0ad8f198f8d3fe8e94708372},
issn = {{0006-2960}},
journal = {{BIOCHEMISTRY}},
journal-iso = {{Biochemistry}},
keywords = {imported myown},
keywords-plus = {{AMINO-ACIDS; DSM-3745; PURIFICATION; UREASE; ZINC; ENANTIOSELECTIVITY;
MICROORGANISMS; AMIDOHYDROLASE; DEGRADATION; EVOLUTION}},
language = {{English}},
month = {{JUL 9}},
number = {{27}},
number-of-cited-references = {{39}},
orcid-numbers = {{Schomburg, Dietmar/0000-0002-3354-822X}},
pages = {{8589-8597}},
publisher = {{AMER CHEMICAL SOC}},
research-areas = {{Biochemistry \& Molecular Biology}},
times-cited = {{46}},
timestamp = {2018-01-25T12:38:18.000+0100},
title = {{The structure of L-hydantoinase from Arthobacter aurescens leads to an
understanding of dihydropyrimidinase substrate and enantio specificity}},
type = {{Article}},
unique-id = {{ISI:000176674100007}},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/bi0157722},
usage-count-last-180-days = {{0}},
usage-count-since-2013 = {{7}},
volume = {{41}},
web-of-science-categories = {{Biochemistry \& Molecular Biology}},
year = {{2002}}
}