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Naina Patel, Shekhar Krishnan, Marc N. Offman, Marcin Krol, Catherine X. Moss, Carly Leighton, Frederik W. van Delft, Mark Holland, JiZhong Liu, Seema Alexander, Clare Dempsey, Hany Ariffin, Monika Essink, Tim O.B. Eden, Colin Watts, Paul A. Bates, Vaskar Saha
Published in Volume 119, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2009; 119(7):1964–1973 doi:10.1172/JCI37977
Abstract | Full text | PDF | Supplemental material
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Figure 5
Molecular modeling suggests that AEP first cleaves at the N24 residue.

(A) Pairwise protein alignment for ASNase and Erwinase. Top row, ASNase; bottom row, Erwinase; middle row, consensus. Conserved amino acids are listed, favorable mismatches are shown as a colon, neutral mismatches as a period, and unfavorable mismatches as a space. AEP-cleaved amino acids in ASNase and the corresponding amino acids in Erwinase are shown in red. (B) The flexible loop containing N24. The open conformation is depicted in red, the closed conformation in blue, N24 in green. (C) Representation of the solvent accessibility surface of the ASNase tetramer generated with a 7-Å probe radius. N24 is highlighted in green; N143 is highlighted in red. Monomers are shown in different colors. The location of N24 on an exposed convex surface patch renders it readily accessible to AEP cleavage.