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Difference between revisions of "Glycoside Hydrolase Family 82"

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m (Glycoside hydroalse family 82 moved to Glycoside Hydrolase Family 82: inconsistent title and mispelling of title with respect to the others)
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Revision as of 07:03, 24 July 2009


Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH82
Clan none
Mechanism inverting
Active site residues not known
CAZy DB link
http://www.cazy.org/fam/GH82.html

Substrate specificities

The two known members of family 82 enzymes cleave the β-1,4 galactosidic bond of the marine algal polysaccharide iota-carrageenan [1] yielding products of the neocarrabiose series.

Kinetics and Mechanism

Family 82 enzymes are inverting enzymes, as first shown by NMR [1] on the iota-carrageenase from Alteromonas fortis.

Catalytic Residues

Three-dimensional structures

Family Firsts

First sterochemistry determination
GH82 enzymes are inverting as shown by NMR [1].
First catalytic nucleophile identification
First general acid/base residue identification
First 3-D structure

iota-carrageenase from Alteromonas fortis [2]. The structure belongs to the β-helix fold (PDB 1h80 and PDB 1ktw).

References

  1. Barbeyron T, Michel G, Potin P, Henrissat B, and Kloareg B. (2000). iota-Carrageenases constitute a novel family of glycoside hydrolases, unrelated to that of kappa-carrageenases. J Biol Chem. 2000;275(45):35499-505. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M003404200 | PubMed ID:10934194 [1]
  2. Michel G, Chantalat L, Fanchon E, Henrissat B, Kloareg B, and Dideberg O. (2001). The iota-carrageenase of Alteromonas fortis. A beta-helix fold-containing enzyme for the degradation of a highly polyanionic polysaccharide. J Biol Chem. 2001;276(43):40202-9. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M100670200 | PubMed ID:11493601 [2]
  3. Michel G, Helbert W, Kahn R, Dideberg O, and Kloareg B. (2003). The structural bases of the processive degradation of iota-carrageenan, a main cell wall polysaccharide of red algae. J Mol Biol. 2003;334(3):421-33. DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2003.09.056 | PubMed ID:14623184 [3]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed