Science, Vol.268, No.5213, 998-1004, 1995
The Crystal-Structure of Urease from Klebsiella-Aerogenes
The crystal structure of urease from Klebsiella aerogenes has been determined at 2.2 Angstrom resolution and refined to an R factor of 18.2 percent. The enzyme contains four structural domains : three with novel folds playing structural roles, and an (alpha beta)8 barrel domain, which contains the bi-nickel center. The two active site nickels are 3.5 Angstrom apart. One nickel ion is coordinated by three ligands (with low occupancy of a fourth ligand) and the second is coordinated by five ligands. A carbamylated lysine provides an oxygen ligand to each nickel, explaining why carbon dioxide is required for the activation of urease apoenzyme. The structure is compatible with a catalytic mechanism whereby urea ligates Ni-1 to complete its tetrahedral coordination and a hydroxide ligand of Ni-2 attacks the carbonyl carbon. A surprisingly high structural similarity between the urease catalytic domain and that of the zinc-dependent adenosine deaminase reveals a remarkable example of active site divergence.
Keywords:JACK-BEAN UREASE;SITE-DIRECTED MUTAGENESIS;ACTIVE-SITE;HELICOBACTER-PYLORI;BETA-MERCAPTOETHANOL;PROTEIN-STRUCTURE;EC 3.5.1.5;NICKEL;GENES;SEQUENCE