Glycerol dehydrogenase is a homooctamer composed of eight identical
monomer subunits made up of a single polypeptide chain of 370
amino acids (molecular weight 42,000 Da). Each subunit contains 9 beta sheets and 14 alpha helices within two distinct domains (N-terminal, residues 1-162 and C-terminal, residues 163–370). The deep cleft formed between these two domains serves as the enzyme's active site. This active site consists of one bound metal ion, one NAD+ nicotinamide ring binding site, and a
substrate binding site. Research into the structure of
B. stearothermophilus shows that the active site contains a divalent cation—
zinc ion, Zn2+. This zinc ion forms tetrahedral
dipole interactions between the amino acid residues Asp173, His256, and His274 as well as a water molecule. The NAD+ binding site, resembling the
Rossmann fold within the N-terminal domain, extends from the surface of the enzyme to the cleft containing the active site. The nicotinamide ring (the active region of NAD+) binds in a pocket of the cleft consisting of the residues Asp100, Asp123, Ala124, Ser127, Leu129, Val131, Asp173, His174, and Phe247. Finally, the substrate binding site consists of the residues Asp123, His256, His274 as well as a water molecule. ==Function==