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1.
ACS Chem Biol ; 18(12): 2564-2573, 2023 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38051515

ABSTRACT

GH127 and GH146 microorganismal retaining ß-l-arabinofuranosidases, expressed by human gut microbiomes, feature an atypical catalytic domain and an unusual mechanism of action. We recently reported that both Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron BtGH146 and Bifidobacterium longum HypBA1 are inhibited by ß-l-arabinofuranosyl cyclophellitol epoxide, supporting the action of a zinc-coordinated cysteine as a catalytic nucleophile, where in most retaining GH families, an aspartate or glutamate is employed. This work presents a panel of ß-l-arabinofuranosyl cyclophellitol epoxides and aziridines as mechanism-based BtGH146/HypBA1 inhibitors and activity-based probes. The ß-l-arabinofuranosyl cyclophellitol aziridines both inhibit and label ß-l-arabinofuranosidase efficiently (however with different activities), whereas the epoxide-derived probes favor BtGH146 over HypBA1. These findings are accompanied by X-ray structural analysis of the unmodified ß-l-arabinofuranosyl cyclophellitol aziridine in complex with both isozymes, which were shown to react by nucleophilic opening of the aziridine, at the pseudoanomeric carbon, by the active site cysteine nucleophile to form a stable thioether bond. Altogether, our activity-based probes may serve as chemical tools for the detection and identification of low-abundance ß-l-arabinofuranosidases in complex biological samples.


Subject(s)
Aziridines , Cysteine , Humans , Glycoside Hydrolases/chemistry , Aziridines/chemistry , Epoxy Compounds
2.
Org Biomol Chem ; 21(38): 7813-7820, 2023 10 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37724332

ABSTRACT

Acid ß-galactosidase (GLB1) and galactocerebrosidase (GALC) are retaining exo-ß-galactosidases involved in lysosomal glycoconjugate metabolism. Deficiency of GLB1 may result in the lysosomal storage disorders GM1 gangliosidosis, Morquio B syndrome, and galactosialidosis, and deficiency of GALC may result in Krabbe disease. Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) is a powerful technique to assess the activity of retaining glycosidases in relation to health and disease. This work describes the use of fluorescent and biotin-carrying activity-based probes (ABPs) to assess the activity of both GLB1 and GALC in cell lysates, culture media, and tissue extracts. The reported ABPs, which complement the growing list of retaining glycosidase ABPs based on configurational isomers of cyclophellitol, should assist in fundamental and clinical research on various ß-galactosidases, whose inherited deficiencies cause debilitating lysosomal storage disorders.


Subject(s)
Gangliosidosis, GM1 , Leukodystrophy, Globoid Cell , Lysosomal Storage Diseases , Mucopolysaccharidosis IV , Humans , beta-Galactosidase/metabolism , Galactosylceramidase
3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(12): 2306-2314, 2023 Dec 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38161374

ABSTRACT

Bacteria and yeasts grow on biomass polysaccharides by expressing and excreting a complex array of glycoside hydrolase (GH) enzymes. Identification and annotation of such GH pools, which are valuable commodities for sustainable energy and chemistries, by conventional means (genomics, proteomics) are complicated, as primary sequence or secondary structure alignment with known active enzymes is not always predictive for new ones. Here we report a "low-tech", easy-to-use, and sensitive multiplexing activity-based protein-profiling platform to characterize the xyloglucan-degrading GH system excreted by the soil saprophyte, Cellvibrio japonicus, when grown on xyloglucan. A suite of activity-based probes bearing orthogonal fluorophores allows for the visualization of accessory exo-acting glycosidases, which are then identified using biotin-bearing probes. Substrate specificity of xyloglucanases is directly revealed by imbuing xyloglucan structural elements into bespoke activity-based probes. Our ABPP platform provides a highly useful tool to dissect xyloglucan-degrading systems from various sources and to rapidly select potentially useful ones. The observed specificity of the probes moreover bodes well for the study of other biomass polysaccharide-degrading systems, by modeling probe structures to those of desired substrates.

4.
Org Biomol Chem ; 20(4): 877-886, 2022 01 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35015006

ABSTRACT

Exo-ß-mannosidases are a broad class of stereochemically retaining hydrolases that are essential for the breakdown of complex carbohydrate substrates found in all kingdoms of life. Yet the detection of exo-ß-mannosidases in complex biological samples remains challenging, necessitating the development of new methodologies. Cyclophellitol and its analogues selectively label the catalytic nucleophiles of retaining glycoside hydrolases, making them valuable tool compounds. Furthermore, cyclophellitol can be readily redesigned to enable the incorporation of a detection tag, generating activity-based probes (ABPs) that can be used to detect and identify specific glycosidases in complex biological samples. Towards the development of ABPs for exo-ß-mannosidases, we present a concise synthesis of ß-manno-configured cyclophellitol, cyclophellitol aziridine, and N-alkyl cyclophellitol aziridines. We show that these probes covalently label exo-ß-mannosidases from GH families 2, 5, and 164. Structural studies of the resulting complexes support a canonical mechanism-based mode of action in which the active site nucleophile attacks the pseudoanomeric centre to form a stable ester linkage, mimicking the glycosyl enzyme intermediate. Furthermore, we demonstrate activity-based protein profiling using an N-alkyl aziridine derivative by specifically labelling MANBA in mouse kidney tissue. Together, these results show that synthetic manno-configured cyclophellitol analogues hold promise for detecting exo-ß-mannosidases in biological and biomedical research.


Subject(s)
Cyclohexanols/chemistry , Molecular Probes/chemistry , beta-Mannosidase/analysis , Cyclohexanols/chemical synthesis , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Probes/chemical synthesis , beta-Mannosidase/metabolism
5.
Chemistry ; 27(66): 16377-16388, 2021 Nov 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34570911

ABSTRACT

Gaucher disease (GD) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by inherited deficiencies in ß-glucocerebrosidase (GBA). Current treatments require rapid disease diagnosis and a means of monitoring therapeutic efficacy, both of which may be supported by the use of GBA-targeting activity-based probes (ABPs). Here, we report the synthesis and structural analysis of a range of cyclophellitol epoxide and aziridine inhibitors and ABPs for GBA. We demonstrate their covalent mechanism-based mode of action and uncover binding of the new N-functionalised aziridines to the ligand binding cleft. These inhibitors became scaffolds for the development of ABPs; the O6-fluorescent tags of which bind in an allosteric site at the dimer interface. Considering GBA's preference for O6- and N-functionalised reagents, a bi-functional aziridine ABP was synthesized as a potentially more powerful imaging agent. Whilst this ABP binds to two unique active site clefts of GBA, no further benefit in potency was achieved over our first generation ABPs. Nevertheless, such ABPs should serve useful in the study of GBA in relation to GD and inform the design of future probes.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes , Glucosylceramidase , Catalytic Domain , Glucosylceramidase/metabolism
6.
Chemistry ; 27(37): 9519-9523, 2021 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33878235

ABSTRACT

There is a vast genomic resource for enzymes active on carbohydrates. Lagging far behind, however, are functional chemical tools for the rapid characterization of carbohydrate-active enzymes. Activity-based probes (ABPs) offer one chemical solution to these issues with ABPs based upon cyclophellitol epoxide and aziridine covalent and irreversible inhibitors representing a potent and widespread approach. Such inhibitors for enzymes active on polysaccharides are potentially limited by the requirement for several glycosidic bonds, themselves substrates for the enzyme targets. Here, it is shown that non-hydrolysable trisaccharide can be synthesized and applied even to enzymes with challenging subsite requirements. It was found that incorporation of carbasugar moieties, which was accomplished by cuprate-assisted regioselective trans-diaxial epoxide opening of carba-mannal synthesised for this purpose, yields inactivators that act as powerful activity-based inhibitors for α-1,6 endo-mannanases. 3-D structures at 1.35-1.47 Šresolutions confirm the design rationale and binding to the enzymatic nucleophile. Carbasugar oligosaccharide cyclophellitols offer a powerful new approach for the design of robust endoglycosidase inhibitors, while the synthesis procedures presented here should allow adaptation towards activity-based endoglycosidase probes as well as configurational isosteres targeting other endoglycosidase families.


Subject(s)
Carbasugars , Glycoside Hydrolases , Oligosaccharides , Epoxy Compounds
7.
Molecules ; 25(17)2020 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32899288

ABSTRACT

Glycosidase inhibitors have shown great potential as pharmacological chaperones for lysosomal storage diseases. In light of this, a series of new cyclopentanoid ß-galactosidase inhibitors were prepared and their inhibitory and pharmacological chaperoning activities determined and compared with those of lipophilic analogs of the potent ß-d-galactosidase inhibitor 4-epi-isofagomine. Structure-activity relationships were investigated by X-ray crystallography as well as by alterations in the cyclopentane moiety such as deoxygenation and replacement by fluorine of a "strategic" hydroxyl group. New compounds have revealed highly promising activities with a range of ß-galactosidase-compromised human cell lines and may serve as leads towards new pharmacological chaperones for GM1-gangliosidosis and Morquio B disease.


Subject(s)
Cyclopentanes/pharmacology , Galactosidases/metabolism , Imino Pyranoses/pharmacology , Lysosomes/enzymology , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Crystallization , Cyclopentanes/chemical synthesis , Cyclopentanes/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Galactosidases/antagonists & inhibitors , Humans , Imino Pyranoses/chemical synthesis , Imino Pyranoses/chemistry , Ligands , Lysosomes/drug effects , Molecular Conformation , Mutant Proteins/metabolism
8.
Cell Chem Biol ; 27(9): 1199-1206.e5, 2020 09 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32619452

ABSTRACT

Fluorinated sugar-1-phosphates are of emerging importance as intermediates in the chemical and biocatalytic synthesis of modified oligosaccharides, as well as probes for chemical biology. Here we present a systematic study of the activity of a wide range of anomeric sugar kinases (galacto- and N-acetylhexosamine kinases) against a panel of fluorinated monosaccharides, leading to the first examples of polyfluorinated substrates accepted by this class of enzymes. We have discovered four new N-acetylhexosamine kinases with a different substrate scope, thus expanding the number of homologs available in this subclass of kinases. Lastly, we have solved the crystal structure of a galactokinase in complex with 2-deoxy-2-fluorogalactose, giving insight into changes in the active site that may account for the specificity of the enzyme toward certain substrate analogs.


Subject(s)
Fluorine/chemistry , Galactokinase/metabolism , Monosaccharides/metabolism , Phosphotransferases/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Catalytic Domain , Galactokinase/chemistry , Halogenation , Kinetics , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Monosaccharides/chemistry , Phosphorylation , Phosphotransferases/chemistry , Substrate Specificity
9.
Org Biomol Chem ; 17(2): 398, 2019 01 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30520923

ABSTRACT

Correction for 'Synthesis and application of a highly branched, mechanism-based 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-oligosaccharide inhibitor of endo-xyloglucanases' by Namrata Jain et al., Org. Biomol. Chem., 2018, 16, 8732-8741.

10.
Nat Chem Biol ; 14(12): 1109-1117, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30420693

ABSTRACT

The elucidation and prediction of how changes in a protein result in altered activities and selectivities remain a major challenge in chemistry. Two hurdles have prevented accurate family-wide models: obtaining (i) diverse datasets and (ii) suitable parameter frameworks that encapsulate activities in large sets. Here, we show that a relatively small but broad activity dataset is sufficient to train algorithms for functional prediction over the entire glycosyltransferase superfamily 1 (GT1) of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Whereas sequence analysis alone failed for GT1 substrate utilization patterns, our chemical-bioinformatic model, GT-Predict, succeeded by coupling physicochemical features with isozyme-recognition patterns over the family. GT-Predict identified GT1 biocatalysts for novel substrates and enabled functional annotation of uncharacterized GT1s. Finally, analyses of GT-Predict decision pathways revealed structural modulators of substrate recognition, thus providing information on mechanisms. This multifaceted approach to enzyme prediction may guide the streamlined utilization (and design) of biocatalysts and the discovery of other family-wide protein functions.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Computational Biology/methods , Glycosyltransferases/chemistry , Glycosyltransferases/metabolism , Structure-Activity Relationship , Algorithms , Arabidopsis Proteins/chemistry , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Catalytic Domain , Glucosyltransferases/chemistry , Glucosyltransferases/metabolism , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Novobiocin/metabolism , Phylogeny , Resveratrol/metabolism
11.
Org Biomol Chem ; 16(45): 8732-8741, 2018 11 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30387796

ABSTRACT

Xyloglucan (XyG) is a complex polysaccharide that is ubiquitous and often abundant in the cell walls of terrestrial plants. XyG metabolism is therefore a key component of the global carbon cycle, and hence XyG enzymology is of significant fundamental and applied importance in biomass conversion. To facilitate structure-function analyses of XyG-specific endo-glucanases, we have synthesized a 2',4'-dinitrophenyl 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-ß-glycoside mechanism-based inhibitor based on the highly branched XyG repeating motif XXXG (Xyl3Glc4: ([α-d-Xylp-(1→6)]-ß-d-Glcp-(1→4)-[α-d-Xylp-(1→6)]-ß-d-Glcp-(1→4)-[α-d-Xylp-(1→6)]-ß-d-Glcp-(1→4)-d-Glcp. Key steps in the chemo-enzymatic synthesis included selective enzyme hydrolysis of XyG polysaccharide to produce the core heptasaccharide, per-O-acetylation, α-bromination, reductive glycal formation, electrophilic fluorination, SNAr glycosylation, and Zemplen deprotection. The resulting compound, XXXG(2F)-ß-DNP, specifically labelled the active sites of several endo-(xylo)glucanases by accumulation of a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, as revealed by intact protein mass spectrometry. Crystallography of a complex with a Cellvibrio japonicus Glycoside Hydrolase Family 5 (GH5) endo-xyloglucanase corroborated the covalent nature of the intermediate, and further revealed the anticipated specificity for the catalytic nucleophile of this anomeric-configuration-retaining glycosidase. This specificity complements that of an analogous XXXG N-bromoacetylglycosylamine inhibitor, which labelled the catalytic acid-base sidechain in the same enzyme [Attia, et al., Biotechnol. Biofuels, 2018, 11, 45]. We anticipate that these inhibitors may find continued use in mechanistic analyses of endo-(xylo)glucanases from diverse GH families.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(15): 5045-5048, 2018 04 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29601200

ABSTRACT

Gluco-azoles competitively inhibit glucosidases by transition-state mimicry and their ability to interact with catalytic acid residues in glucosidase active sites. We noted that no azole-type inhibitors described, to date, possess a protic nitrogen characteristic for 1 H-imidazoles. Here, we present gluco-1 H-imidazole, a gluco-azole bearing a 1 H-imidazole fused to a glucopyranose-configured cyclitol core, and three close analogues as new glucosidase inhibitors. All compounds inhibit human retaining ß-glucosidase, GBA1, with the most potent ones inhibiting this enzyme (deficient in Gaucher disease) on a par with glucoimidazole. None inhibit glucosylceramide synthase, cytosolic ß-glucosidase GBA2 or α-glucosidase GAA. Structural, physical and computational studies provide first insights into the binding mode of this conceptually new class of retaining ß-glucosidase inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Azoles/pharmacology , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , beta-Glucosidase/antagonists & inhibitors , Azoles/chemical synthesis , Azoles/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemical synthesis , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , beta-Glucosidase/metabolism
13.
Biotechnol Biofuels ; 11: 45, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29467823

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Xyloglucan (XyG) is a ubiquitous and fundamental polysaccharide of plant cell walls. Due to its structural complexity, XyG requires a combination of backbone-cleaving and sidechain-debranching enzymes for complete deconstruction into its component monosaccharides. The soil saprophyte Cellvibrio japonicus has emerged as a genetically tractable model system to study biomass saccharification, in part due to its innate capacity to utilize a wide range of plant polysaccharides for growth. Whereas the downstream debranching enzymes of the xyloglucan utilization system of C. japonicus have been functionally characterized, the requisite backbone-cleaving endo-xyloglucanases were unresolved. RESULTS: Combined bioinformatic and transcriptomic analyses implicated three glycoside hydrolase family 5 subfamily 4 (GH5_4) members, with distinct modular organization, as potential keystone endo-xyloglucanases in C. japonicus. Detailed biochemical and enzymatic characterization of the GH5_4 modules of all three recombinant proteins confirmed particularly high specificities for the XyG polysaccharide versus a panel of other cell wall glycans, including mixed-linkage beta-glucan and cellulose. Moreover, product analysis demonstrated that all three enzymes generated XyG oligosaccharides required for subsequent saccharification by known exo-glycosidases. Crystallographic analysis of GH5D, which was the only GH5_4 member specifically and highly upregulated during growth on XyG, in free, product-complex, and active-site affinity-labelled forms revealed the molecular basis for the exquisite XyG specificity among these GH5_4 enzymes. Strikingly, exhaustive reverse-genetic analysis of all three GH5_4 members and a previously biochemically characterized GH74 member failed to reveal a growth defect, thereby indicating functional compensation in vivo, both among members of this cohort and by other, yet unidentified, xyloglucanases in C. japonicus. Our systems-based analysis indicates distinct substrate-sensing (GH74, GH5E, GH5F) and attack-mounting (GH5D) functions for the endo-xyloglucanases characterized here. CONCLUSIONS: Through a multi-faceted, molecular systems-based approach, this study provides a new insight into the saccharification pathway of xyloglucan utilization system of C. japonicus. The detailed structural-functional characterization of three distinct GH5_4 endo-xyloglucanases will inform future bioinformatic predictions across species, and provides new CAZymes with defined specificity that may be harnessed in industrial and other biotechnological applications.

14.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(93): 12528-12531, 2017 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29116266

ABSTRACT

Activity-based protein profiling has emerged as a powerful tool for visualizing glycosidases in complex biological samples. Several configurational cyclophellitol isomers have been shown to display high selectivity as probes for glycosidases processing substrates featuring the same configuration. Here, a set of deoxygenated cyclophellitols are presented which enable inter-class profiling of ß-glucosidases and ß-galactosidases.

15.
ACS Cent Sci ; 3(7): 784-793, 2017 Jul 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28776021

ABSTRACT

The essential biological roles played by glycosidases, coupled to the diverse therapeutic benefits of pharmacologically targeting these enzymes, provide considerable motivation for the development of new inhibitor classes. Cyclophellitol epoxides and aziridines are recently established covalent glycosidase inactivators. Inspired by the application of cyclic sulfates as electrophilic equivalents of epoxides in organic synthesis, we sought to test whether cyclophellitol cyclosulfates would similarly act as irreversible glycosidase inhibitors. Here we present the synthesis, conformational analysis, and application of novel 1,6-cyclophellitol cyclosulfates. We show that 1,6-epi-cyclophellitol cyclosulfate (α-cyclosulfate) is a rapidly reacting α-glucosidase inhibitor whose 4C1 chair conformation matches that adopted by α-glucosidase Michaelis complexes. The 1,6-cyclophellitol cyclosulfate (ß-cyclosulfate) reacts more slowly, likely reflecting its conformational restrictions. Selective glycosidase inhibitors are invaluable as mechanistic probes and therapeutic agents, and we propose cyclophellitol cyclosulfates as a valuable new class of carbohydrate mimetics for application in these directions.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(19): 6534-6537, 2017 05 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28463498

ABSTRACT

The conformational analysis of glycosidases affords a route to their specific inhibition through transition-state mimicry. Inspired by the rapid reaction rates of cyclophellitol and cyclophellitol aziridine-both covalent retaining ß-glucosidase inhibitors-we postulated that the corresponding carba "cyclopropyl" analogue would be a potent retaining ß-glucosidase inhibitor for those enzymes reacting through the 4H3 transition-state conformation. Ab initio metadynamics simulations of the conformational free energy landscape for the cyclopropyl inhibitors show a strong bias for the 4H3 conformation, and carba-cyclophellitol, with an N-(4-azidobutyl)carboxamide moiety, proved to be a potent inhibitor (Ki = 8.2 nM) of the Thermotoga maritima TmGH1 ß-glucosidase. 3-D structural analysis and comparison with unreacted epoxides show that this compound indeed binds in the 4H3 conformation, suggesting that conformational strain induced through a cyclopropyl unit may add to the armory of tight-binding inhibitor designs.


Subject(s)
Cyclohexanols/pharmacology , Glycoside Hydrolase Inhibitors/pharmacology , alpha-Glucosidases/metabolism , Cyclohexanols/chemistry , Glycoside Hydrolase Inhibitors/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Quantum Theory , Thermotoga maritima/enzymology
17.
Nat Chem Biol ; 13(6): 610-612, 2017 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28346405

ABSTRACT

O-GlcNAc hydrolase (OGA) removes O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) from a myriad of nucleocytoplasmic proteins. Through co-expression and assembly of OGA fragments, we determined the three-dimensional structure of human OGA, revealing an unusual helix-exchanged dimer that lays a structural foundation for an improved understanding of substrate recognition and regulation of OGA. Structures of OGA in complex with a series of inhibitors define a precise blueprint for the design of inhibitors that have clinical value.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/chemistry , Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Binding Sites , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Ligands , Protein Binding , Protein Isoforms/chemistry , Protein Isoforms/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/genetics , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/metabolism
18.
Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ; 72(Pt 2): 254-65, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26894673

ABSTRACT

The industrial conversion of cellulosic plant biomass into useful products such as biofuels is a major societal goal. These technologies harness diverse plant degrading enzymes, classical exo- and endo-acting cellulases and, increasingly, cellulose-active lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases, to deconstruct the recalcitrant ß-D-linked polysaccharide. A major drawback with this process is that the exo-acting cellobiohydrolases suffer from severe inhibition from their cellobiose product. ß-D-Glucosidases are therefore important for liberating glucose from cellobiose and thereby relieving limiting product inhibition. Here, the three-dimensional structures of two industrially important family GH3 ß-D-glucosidases from Aspergillus fumigatus and A. oryzae, solved by molecular replacement and refined at 1.95 Šresolution, are reported. Both enzymes, which share 78% sequence identity, display a three-domain structure with the catalytic domain at the interface, as originally shown for barley ß-D-glucan exohydrolase, the first three-dimensional structure solved from glycoside hydrolase family GH3. Both enzymes show extensive N-glycosylation, with only a few external sites being truncated to a single GlcNAc molecule. Those glycans N-linked to the core of the structure are identified purely as high-mannose trees, and establish multiple hydrogen bonds between their sugar components and adjacent protein side chains. The extensive glycans pose special problems for crystallographic refinement, and new techniques and protocols were developed especially for this work. These protocols ensured that all of the D-pyranosides in the glycosylation trees were modelled in the preferred minimum-energy (4)C1 chair conformation and should be of general application to refinements of other crystal structures containing O- or N-glycosylation. The Aspergillus GH3 structures, in light of other recent three-dimensional structures, provide insight into fungal ß-D-glucosidases and provide a platform on which to inform and inspire new generations of variant enzymes for industrial application.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus/enzymology , Fungal Proteins/chemistry , beta-Glucosidase/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Carbohydrate Conformation , Carbohydrate Sequence , Catalytic Domain , Cellulose/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Glycoproteins/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Substrate Specificity
19.
Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun ; 71(Pt 1): 66-70, 2015 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25615972

ABSTRACT

The enzyme-catalysed degradation of starch is central to many industrial processes, including sugar manufacture and first-generation biofuels. Classical biotechnological platforms involve steam explosion of starch followed by the action of endo-acting glycoside hydrolases termed α-amylases and then exo-acting α-glucosidases (glucoamylases) to yield glucose, which is subsequently processed. A key enzymatic player in this pipeline is the `Termamyl' class of bacterial α-amylases and designed/evolved variants thereof. Here, the three-dimensional structure of one such Termamyl α-amylase variant based upon the parent Geobacillus stearothermophilus α-amylase is presented. The structure has been solved at 1.9 Šresolution, revealing the classical three-domain fold stabilized by Ca2+ and a Ca2+-Na+-Ca2+ triad. As expected, the structure is similar to the G. stearothermophilus α-amylase but with main-chain deviations of up to 3 Šin some regions, reflecting both the mutations and differing crystal-packing environments.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Geobacillus stearothermophilus/enzymology , alpha-Amylases/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Protein Structure, Secondary , Structural Homology, Protein
20.
Biochemistry ; 53(11): 1789-800, 2014 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24559145

ABSTRACT

ß-N-acetylhexosaminidases (HEX) are glycosidases that catalyze the glycosidic linkage hydrolysis of gluco- and galacto-configured N-acetyl-ß-d-hexosaminides. These enzymes are important in human physiology and are candidates for the biocatalytic production of carbohydrates and glycomimetics. In this study, the three-dimensional structure of the wild-type and catalytically impaired E302Q HEX variant from the soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) (ScHEX) were solved in ligand-free forms and in the presence of 6-acetamido-6-deoxy-castanospermine (6-Ac-Cas). The E302Q variant was also trapped as an intermediate with oxazoline bound to the active center. Crystallographic evidence highlights structural variations in the loop 3 environment, suggesting conformational heterogeneity for important active-site residues of this GH20 family member. The enzyme was investigated for its ß-N-acetylhexosaminidase activity toward chitooligomers and pNP-acetyl gluco- and galacto-configured N-acetyl hexosaminides. Kinetic analyses confirm the ß(1-4) glycosidic linkage substrate preference, and HPLC profiles support an exoglycosidase mechanism, where the enzyme cleaves sugars from the nonreducing end of substrates. ScHEX possesses significant activity toward chitooligosaccharides of varying degrees of polymerization, and the final hydrolytic reaction yielded pure GlcNAc without any byproduct, promising high applicability for the enzymatic production of this highly valued chemical. Thermostability and activation assays further suggest efficient conditions applicable to the enzymatic production of GlcNAc from chitooligomers.


Subject(s)
Streptomyces coelicolor/enzymology , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/chemistry , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/metabolism , Catalysis , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Crystallography, X-Ray , Enzyme Activation/genetics , Genetic Variation , Humans , Streptomyces coelicolor/genetics , Streptomyces lividans/enzymology , Structure-Activity Relationship , beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases/genetics
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