TY - JOUR
T1 - Analysis of surface binding sites (SBSs) in carbohydrate active enzymes with focus on glycoside hydrolase families 13 and 77 - a mini-review
AU - Cockburn, Darrell
AU - Wilkens, Casper
AU - Ruzanski, Christian
AU - Andersen, Susan
AU - Willum Nielsen, Jonas
AU - Smith, Alison M.
AU - Field, Robert A.
AU - Willemoës, Martin
AU - Abou Hachem, Maher
AU - Svensson, Birte
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is supported by project and instrument grants from the Danish Council for Independent Research | Natural Sciences (FNU), an HC Ørsted post-doctoral fellowship from the Technical University of Denmark (to DC) and a joint PhD stipend from the Technical University of Denmark and the FNU grant (to CW).
PY - 2014/6
Y1 - 2014/6
N2 - Surface binding sites (SBSs) interact with carbohydrates outside of the enzyme active site. They are frequently situated on catalytic domains and are distinct from carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs). SBSs are found in a variety of enzymes and often seen in crystal structures. Notably about half of the > 45 enzymes (in 17 GH and two GT families) with an identified SBS are from GH13 and a few from GH77, both belonging to clan GH-H of carbohydrate active enzymes. The many enzymes of GH13 with SBSs provide an opportunity to analyse their distribution within this very large and diverse family. SBS containing enzymes in GH13 are spread among 15 subfamilies (two were not assigned a subfamily). Comparison of these SBSs reveals a complex evolutionary history with evidence of conservation of key residues and/or structural location between some SBSs, while others are found at entirely distinct structural locations, suggesting convergent evolution. An array of investigations of the two SBSs in barley α-amylase demonstrated they play different functional roles in binding and degradation of polysaccharides. MalQ from Escherichia coli is an α-1,4-glucanotransferase of GH77, a family that is known to have at least one member that contains an SBS. Whereas MalQ is a single domain enzyme lacking CBMs, its plant orthologue DPE2 contains two N-terminal CBM20s. Surface plasmon resonance binding studies showed that MalQ and DPE2 have a similar affinity for β-cyclodextrin and that MalQ binds malto-oligosaccharides of >DP4 at a second site in competition with β-cyclodextrin yielding a stoichiometry >1. This suggests that MalQ may have an SBS, though its structural location remains unknown.
AB - Surface binding sites (SBSs) interact with carbohydrates outside of the enzyme active site. They are frequently situated on catalytic domains and are distinct from carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs). SBSs are found in a variety of enzymes and often seen in crystal structures. Notably about half of the > 45 enzymes (in 17 GH and two GT families) with an identified SBS are from GH13 and a few from GH77, both belonging to clan GH-H of carbohydrate active enzymes. The many enzymes of GH13 with SBSs provide an opportunity to analyse their distribution within this very large and diverse family. SBS containing enzymes in GH13 are spread among 15 subfamilies (two were not assigned a subfamily). Comparison of these SBSs reveals a complex evolutionary history with evidence of conservation of key residues and/or structural location between some SBSs, while others are found at entirely distinct structural locations, suggesting convergent evolution. An array of investigations of the two SBSs in barley α-amylase demonstrated they play different functional roles in binding and degradation of polysaccharides. MalQ from Escherichia coli is an α-1,4-glucanotransferase of GH77, a family that is known to have at least one member that contains an SBS. Whereas MalQ is a single domain enzyme lacking CBMs, its plant orthologue DPE2 contains two N-terminal CBM20s. Surface plasmon resonance binding studies showed that MalQ and DPE2 have a similar affinity for β-cyclodextrin and that MalQ binds malto-oligosaccharides of >DP4 at a second site in competition with β-cyclodextrin yielding a stoichiometry >1. This suggests that MalQ may have an SBS, though its structural location remains unknown.
KW - affinity gel electrophoresis
KW - amylopectin hydrolysis kinetics
KW - carbohydrate binding modules
KW - crystal structures
KW - GH13 subfamilies
KW - secondary binding sites
KW - surface plasmon resonance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84899860464&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2478/s11756-014-0373-9
DO - 10.2478/s11756-014-0373-9
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:84899860464
VL - 69
SP - 705
EP - 712
JO - Biologia (Poland)
JF - Biologia (Poland)
SN - 0006-3088
IS - 6
ER -