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Difference between revisions of "Glycoside Hydrolase Family 105"

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Authors may get an idea of what to put in each field from ''Curator Approved'' [[Glycoside Hydrolase Families]]. ''(TIP: Right click with your mouse and open this link in a new browser window...)''
 
Authors may get an idea of what to put in each field from ''Curator Approved'' [[Glycoside Hydrolase Families]]. ''(TIP: Right click with your mouse and open this link in a new browser window...)''
  
In the meantime, please see these references for an essential introduction to the CAZy classification system: <cite>DaviesSinnott2008 Cantarel2009</cite>
+
In the meantime, please see these references for an essential introduction to the CAZy classification system: <cite)DaviesSinnott2008 Cantarel2009</cite>
  
 
== Kinetics and Mechanism ==
 
== Kinetics and Mechanism ==

Revision as of 13:44, 18 July 2019


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Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH105
Clan GH-x
Mechanism retaining/inverting
Active site residues known/not known
CAZy DB link
https://www.cazy.org/GH105.html


Substrate specificities

GH105 enzymes are a class of unsaturated glucuronyl/galacturonyl hydrolases found mainly in bacteria, but a few fungial and a handful of archaeal enzymes have also been annotated [1]. Much like the glycoside hydrolase family 88, enzymes from GH105 perform hydrolysis via a hydration of the double bond between the C-4 and C-5 carbons of the terminal monosaccharide of their substrates [2, 3]. Enzymes from GH105 have been organized into three subgroups: unsaturated rhamnogalacturonidases, d-4,5-unsaturated β-glucuronyl hydrolases, and d-4,5-unsaturated α-galacturonidases. The unifying feature shared between these substrates is the presence of the non-reducing monosaccharide 4-deoxy-L-threo-hex-4-enopyranuronosyl that binds at the -1 active site of the enzymes, and is linked to the +1 sugar via its anomeric C-1 carbon. The 4-deoxy-L-threo-hex-4-enopyranuronosyl saccharide is defined as ΔGal or ΔGlc depending on whether it assumes an α- or β- configuration, respectively. In degradable substrates, the sugar present at the +1 position can be linked via its C-2, C-4, or C-6 carbon, given the substrate preference of individual enzymes [2, 4]. Some of the various carbohydrate sources targeted by GH105 enzymes include: rhamnogalacturonan-I, ulvan, and the arabinogalactan decoration on certain cell wall proteins [2, 5, 6, 7].

Authors may get an idea of what to put in each field from Curator Approved Glycoside Hydrolase Families. (TIP: Right click with your mouse and open this link in a new browser window...)

In the meantime, please see these references for an essential introduction to the CAZy classification system: <cite)DaviesSinnott2008 Cantarel2009

Kinetics and Mechanism

GH105 enzymes do not act via a typical Koshland retaining or inverting mechanism [8], rather the current proposed mechanism of action for these enzymes is hydrolysis through syn-hydration of the double bond between the C-4 and C-5 carbons of the enopyranuronosyl residue of their substrate [5]. This hydration reaction forms a hemiketal that undergoes spontaneous rearrangement to form an intermediate hemiacetyl, which undergoes another rearrangement resulting in the breakage of the bond to the neighbouring saccharide(at the +1 subsite of the enzyme) of the polymer. This mechanism was initially theorized based on the oligosaccharide and amino acid arrangement in a substrate-bound crystal structure [6], but has been confirmed through kinetic isotope effects and NMR analysis in the highly related unsaturated glucuronyl hydrolase GH88 family [3, 9]

Catalytic Residues

Content is to be added here.

Three-dimensional structures

Content is to be added here.

Family Firsts

First stereochemistry determination
Content is to be added here.
First catalytic nucleophile identification
Content is to be added here.
First general acid/base residue identification
Content is to be added here.
First 3-D structure
Content is to be added here.

References

  1. Cantarel2009 pmid=18838391
  2. Munoz-Munoz2017 pmid=28637865
  3. Jongkees2011 pmid=22047074
  4. Zhang2009 pmid=15906318
  5. Itoh2006 pmid=16870154
  6. Itoh2006-1 pmid=16781735
  7. Colle2014 pmid=24407291
  8. Koshland1953 Koshland, D.E. (1953) Stereochemistry and the Mechanism of Enzymatic Reactions. Biological Reviews, vol. 28, no. 4., pp. 416-436. [1].
  9. Jongkees2014 pmid=24573682
  10. Rye2000 pmid=11006547
  11. Pettersen2004 pmid=15264254
  12. JCSG2009 JointCenterforStructuralGenomics(JCSG) (2009) Crystal structure of Putative glycosyl hydrolase (NP_813087.1) from BACTEROIDES THETAIOTAOMICRON VPI-5482 at 1.80 A resolution. RCSB Protein Data Bank. [2].
  13. Osipiuk2014 Osipiuk, J., Li, H., Endres, M., Joachimiak, A. (2014) Glycosyl hydrolase family 88 from Bacteroides vulgatus. RCSB Protein Data Bank. [3].
  14. Germane2015 pmid=26239707
  15. Tan2010 Tan, K., Hatzos-Skintges, C., Bearden, J., Joachimiak, A. (2010) The crystal structure of a possible member of GH105 family from Klebsiella pneumoniae subsp. pneumoniae MGH 78578. RCSB Protein Data Bank. [4].
  16. Tan2011 Tan, K., Hatzos-Skintges, C., Bearden, J., Joachimiak, A. (2011) The crystal structure of a possible member of GH105 family from Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Paratyphi A str. ATCC 9150. RCSB Protein Data Bank. [5].
  17. Stogios2015 Stogios, P.J., Xu, X., Cui, H., Yim, V., Savchenko, A. (2015) Crystal structure of a glycoside hydrolase family 105 (GH105) enzyme from Thielavia terrestris. RCSB Protein Data Bank. [6].
  18. DaviesSinnott2008 Davies, G.J. and Sinnott, M.L. (2008) Sorting the diverse: the sequence-based classifications of carbohydrate-active enzymes. The Biochemist, vol. 30, no. 4., pp. 26-32. Download PDF version.