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Enzyme binds both sides of the mirror

by Phillip Broadwith, RSC last modified 11-06-09 07:00 AM Copyright 2009 RSC
Enzyme binds both sides of the mirror

The three ways enantiomers can bind in enzymes: only one enantiomer binds (top); each binds individually (middle); both bind together (bottom) © Angewandte Chemie

European chemists have discovered that both mirror-image forms of a particular compound can bind at the same time in the same site of an enzyme, a phenomenon that has never been seen before. The finding has significance for drug discovery screening and studies of how small molecules interact with proteins.

Rolf Breinbauer from Graz University of Technology, Austria, and Wulf Blankenfeldt from the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology in Dortmund, Germany, were studying a metabolic enzyme from a species of the bacterium Burkholderia cepacia, using racemic mixtures of chiral probe molecules to find ones that bound in the enzyme's active site. In most cases only one form of a chiral (or 'handed') molecule would bind at once, but they found that in one instance both enantiomeric forms occupied the binding site at the same time.  More...

http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/News/2009/November/06110901.asp

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