Identification of the zinc binding ligands and the catalytic residue in human aspartoacylase, an enzyme involved in Canavan disease

  • Herga, S.
  • Berrin, J.-G.
  • Perrier, J.
  • Puigserver, A.
  • Giardina, T.
Publication date
October 2006
Publisher
Published by Elsevier B.V.

Abstract

AbstractCanavan disease is an autosomal-recessive neurodegenerative disorder caused by a lack of aspartoacylase, the enzyme that degrades N-acetylaspartate (NAA) into acetate and aspartate. With a view to studying the mechanisms underlying the action of human aspartoacylase (hASP), this enzyme was expressed in a heterologous Escherichia coli system and characterized. The recombinant protein was found to have a molecular weight of 36kDa and kinetic constants Km and kcat of 0.20±0.03mM and 14.22±0.48s−1, respectively. Sequence alignment showed that this enzyme belongs to the carboxypeptidase metalloprotein family having the conserved motif H21xxE24(91aa)H116. We further investigated the active site of hASP by performing modelling studies and ...

Extracted data

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