Biology:Beta-lactamase inhibitor protein

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Beta-Lactamase Inhibitor Protein
BLIP.png
Beta-Lactamase Inhibitory Protein (BLIP) with α-helices in red, β-sheets in blue, disulphides in yellow. (PDB: 3C7V​)
Identifiers
SymbolBLIP
PfamPF07467
Pfam clanCL0320
InterProIPR009099
SCOP21s0w / SCOPe / SUPFAM

Beta-Lactamase Inhibitor Proteins (BLIPs) are a family of proteins produced by bacterial species including Streptomyces. BLIP acts as a potent inhibitor of beta-lactamases such as TEM-1, which is the most widespread resistance enzyme to penicillin antibiotics. BLIP binds competitively the surface of TEM-1 and inserting residues into the active site to make direct contacts with catalytic residues. BLIP is able to inhibit a variety of class A beta-lactamases, possibly through flexibility of its two domains. The two tandemly repeated domains of BLIP have an α24 structure, the β-hairpin loop from domain 1 inserting into the active site of beta-lactamase.[1] BLIP shows no sequence similarity with BLIP-II, even though both bind to and inhibit TEM-1.[2]

Beta-lactamase Inhibitory Protein (white) complexed with beta-lactamase (grey) with key interaction residues highlighted (red). (PDB: 3C7V​)

References

  1. "A potent new mode of beta-lactamase inhibition revealed by the 1.7 A X-ray crystallographic structure of the TEM-1-BLIP complex". Nat. Struct. Biol. 3 (3): 290–7. March 1996. doi:10.1038/nsb0396-290. PMID 8605632. 
  2. "Crystal structure and kinetic analysis of beta-lactamase inhibitor protein-II in complex with TEM-1 beta-lactamase". Nat. Struct. Biol. 8 (10): 848–52. October 2001. doi:10.1038/nsb1001-848. PMID 11573088. 
This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro: IPR009099