File:G6PD active site labeled 2.png|left|thumb|300x300px|Substrate binding site of G6PD bound to G6P (shown in cream), from 2BHL. Phosphorus is shown in orange. Oxygen atoms of crystallographic waters are shown as red spheres. The conserved nine-peptide sequence of G6PD, and the partially conserved five-residue sequence of G6PD are shown in cyan and magenta respectively. All other amino acids from G6PD are shown in black. Hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions are shown by green dashed lines. All green dashes represent distances of less than 3.7 Å. G6PD is generally found as a
dimer of two identical monomers (see main thumbnail). Depending on conditions, such as
pH, these dimers can themselves dimerize to form
tetramers. Each monomer in the complex has a substrate
binding site that binds to G6P, and a catalytic coenzyme binding site that binds to NADP+/NADPH using the
Rossman fold. For some higher organisms, such as humans, G6PD contains an additional NADP+ binding site, called the NADP+ structural site, that does not seem to participate directly in the reaction catalyzed by G6PD. The evolutionary purpose of the NADP+ structural site is unknown. As for size, each monomer is approximately 500 amino acids long (514 amino acids for humans). Functional and structural conservation between human G6PD and
Leuconostoc mesenteroides G6PD points to three widely
conserved regions on the enzyme: a nine-residue peptide in the substrate binding site, RIDHYLGKE (residues 198–206 on human G6PD), a nucleotide-binding fingerprint, GxxGDLA (residues 38–44 on human G6PD), and a partially conserved sequence EKPxG near the substrate binding site (residues 170–174 on human G6PD), where we have use "x" to denote a variable amino acid. The crystal structure of G6PD reveals an extensive network of electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bonding involving G6P, three water molecules, three
lysine residues, one
arginine, two
histidines, two
glutamic acids, and other polar amino acids. The
proline at position 172 is thought to play a crucial role in positioning Lys171 correctly with respect to the substrate, G6P. In the two crystal structures of normal human G6P, Pro172 is seen exclusively in the
cis conformation, while in the crystal structure of one disease causing mutant (variant Canton R459L), Pro172 is seen almost exclusively in the trans conformation. With access to crystal structures, some scientists have tried to model the structures of other mutants. For example, in German ancestry, where
enzymopathy due to G6PD deficiency is rare, mutation sites on G6PD have been shown to lie near the NADP+ binding site, the G6P binding site, and near the interface between the two monomers. Thus, mutations in these critical areas are possible without completely disrupting the function of G6PD. In fact, it has been shown that most disease causing mutations of G6PD occur near the NADP+ structural site. == NADP+ structural site ==