1996
DOI: 10.1002/pro.5560050110
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A structural basis for enantioselective inhibition of Candida rugosa lipase by long‐chain aliphatic alcohols

Abstract: Molecular modeling showed that the enantiomers of heptyl2-methyldecanoate are productively bound to the active site of Candida rugosa lipase in quite different conformations. The fast-reacting S-enantiomer may well occupy the previously identified acyl-binding tunnel in the active site of the lipase. By contrast, the slow-reacting R-enantiomer must be bound to the active site, leaving the tunnel empty to allow the formation of two catalytically essential hydrogen bonds between His 449 of the catalytic triad an… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…[29] The experimental evidence is that adding long-chain alcohols decreases the enantioselectivity of the CRL-catalyzed esterification of 2-methyldecanoic acid from E = 83 (90 mM n-heptanol) to E = 37 (900 mM n-heptanol). [30] The decreased enantioselectivity stems from slower reaction of the fast enantiomer, but no change in the reaction rate of the slow enantiomer.…”
Section: Orientation Of the Slow-reacting Enantiomermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[29] The experimental evidence is that adding long-chain alcohols decreases the enantioselectivity of the CRL-catalyzed esterification of 2-methyldecanoic acid from E = 83 (90 mM n-heptanol) to E = 37 (900 mM n-heptanol). [30] The decreased enantioselectivity stems from slower reaction of the fast enantiomer, but no change in the reaction rate of the slow enantiomer.…”
Section: Orientation Of the Slow-reacting Enantiomermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Molecular modeling studies (Kazlauskas 2000) on the stereoselectivity of lipases mostly perform conformational analysis (Uppenberg et al 1995; Holmquist et al 1996; Botta et al 1997; Yagnik et al 1997), the rational design of the active site (Scheib et al 1998, 1999; Manetti et al 2000) or substrates (Stadler et al 1995; Tafi et al 2000) or energy based evaluation of enantioselectivity (Haeffner et al 1998).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although lipases have no general similarity, a consensus sequence common to all lipases is the amino acid sequence of the nucleophilic elbow; G-X-S-X-G-Sm, where Sm is a small residue. Molecular modeling studies (Kazlauskas 2000) on the stereoselectivity of lipases mostly perform conformational analysis (Uppenberg et al 1995;Holmquist et al 1996;Botta et al 1997;Yagnik et al 1997), the rational design of the active site (Scheib et al 1998(Scheib et al , 1999Manetti et al 2000) or substrates (Stadler et al 1995;Tafi et al 2000) or energy based evaluation of enantioselectivity (Haeffner et al 1998).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%