JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Structural defects underlying protein dysfunction in human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase A(-) deficiency.

The enzyme variant glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) A(-), which gives rise to human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, is a protein of markedly reduced structural stability. This variant differs from the normal enzyme, G6PD B, in two amino acid substitutions. A further nondeficient variant, G6PD A, bears only one of these two mutations and is structurally stable. In this study, the synergistic structural defect in recombinant G6PD A(-) was reflected by reduced unfolding enthalpy due to loss of beta-sheet and alpha-helix interactions where both mutations are found. This was accompanied by changes in inner spatial distances between residues in the coenzyme domain and the partial disruption of tertiary structure with no significant loss of secondary structure. However, the secondary structure of G6PD A(-) was qualitatively affected by an increase in beta-sheets substituting beta-turns related to the lower unfolding enthalpy. The structural changes observed did not affect the active site of the mutant proteins, since its spatial position was unmodified. The final result is a loss of folding determinants leading to a protein with decreased intracellular stability. This is suggested as the cause of the enzyme deficiency in the red blood cell, which is unable to perform de novo protein synthesis.

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