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Difference between revisions of "Glycoside Hydrolase Family 95"

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* [[Author]]: ^^^Takane Katayama^^^
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* [[Author]]: [[User:Takane Katayama|Takane Katayama]], [[User:Spencer Williams|Spencer Williams]]
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{| {{Prettytable}}  
 
{| {{Prettytable}}  
 
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|{{Hl2}} colspan="2" align="center" |'''Glycoside Hydrolase Family GHnn'''
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|{{Hl2}} colspan="2" align="center" |'''Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH95'''
 
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|'''Clan'''     
 
|'''Clan'''     
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|{{Hl2}} colspan="2" align="center" |'''CAZy DB link'''
 
|{{Hl2}} colspan="2" align="center" |'''CAZy DB link'''
 
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| colspan="2" |http://www.cazy.org/fam/GHnn.html
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| colspan="2" |{{CAZyDBlink}}GH95.html
 
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== Substrate specificities ==
 
== Substrate specificities ==
This family exclusively contains 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidases (EC 3.2.1.63) that hydrolyze Fuc&alpha;1-2Gal linkages attached at the non-reducing ends of glycoconjugates <cite>Katayama2004</cite><cite>Altmann2008</cite>. The disaccharide structures constitute the core of ABO blood group substances of human and are also found as constituents of plant xyloglucan <cite>Altmann2008</cite>. The enzymes cannot hydrolyze the linkage when the Gal residue is modified, i.e. they do not act on blood group A- and B-trisaccharides. 3-Fucosyllactose, Gal&beta;1-4(Fuc&alpha;1-3)Glc, is slightly hydrolyzed by the enzyme, but the other linkages and artificial substrates such as pNP-Fuc are completely resistant.
+
[[Glycoside hydrolases]] of GH95 includes 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidases (EC [{{EClink}}3.2.1.63 3.2.1.63]) that hydrolyze &alpha;-Fuc-1,2-Gal linkages attached at the non-reducing ends of oligosaccharides <cite>Katayama2004 Altmann2008</cite>, and 1,2-&alpha;-L-galactosidases that hydrolyze L-galactoside linkages in arabinoxylans <cite>Rogowski2015</cite>. &alpha;-Fuc-1,2-Gal linkages are found in human milk oligosaccharides (2'-fucosyllactose; Fuc&alpha;1-2Gal&beta;1-4Glc) and blood group glycoconjugates (ABO and Lewis antigens) and are also found as branching residues on the plant polysaccharide xyloglucan (see below) <cite>Altmann2008</cite>. &alpha;-L-Gal-1,2-Xyl linkages are present on side branches on corn glucuronoarabinoxylan <cite>Rogowski2015</cite>. An 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidase from [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/Browser/wwwtax.cgi?id=1681 ''Bifidobacterium bifidum''] (''Bb''AfcA) cannot hydrolyze the fucosyl linkage when the Gal residue is further modified, i.e. the enzyme does not act on blood group A- and B-trisaccharides (see <cite>Liu2007</cite> for structures). 3-Fucosyllactose, Gal&beta;1-4(Fuc&alpha;1-3)Glc, is slightly hydrolyzed by the ''Bb''AfcA.  1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidases from [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/Browser/wwwtax.cgi?id=3702 ''Arabidopsis thaliana''] and [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/Browser/wwwtax.cgi?id=4690''Lilium longiflorum''] (lily) can liberate L-fucose from xyloglucan fragment XXFG [Xyl&alpha;1-6Glc&beta;1-4(Xyl&alpha;1-6)Glc&beta;1-4(Fuc&alpha;1-2Gal&beta;1-2Xyl&alpha;1-6)Glc&beta;1-4Glc] as well as 2'-fucosyllactose, but does not liberate L-fucose from 3-fucosyllactose. Both ''Bb''AfcA and the plant enzymes do not act on other linkages and artificial substrates such as 4'-nitrophenyl-&alpha;-L-fucoside.
 
 
 
  
 
== Kinetics and Mechanism ==
 
== Kinetics and Mechanism ==
Hydrolysis catalyzed by this family of the enzymes proceeds via an inverting mechanism, as first shown by Katayama et al. <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.  
+
Hydrolysis catalyzed by this family of the enzymes proceeds via an [[inverting]] mechanism, as first shown by Katayama et al. using <sup>1</sup>H-NMR <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.  
The most characterized member of this family is 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'' (''Bb''AfcA). The ''k''cat and ''K''m values of ''Bb''AfcA for 2'-fucosyllactose, Fuc&alpha;1-2Gal&beta;1-4Glc, were determined to be 0.091 mM and 160 s-1, respectively <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
+
The best characterized member of this family is the 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'' (''Bb''AfcA). The ''k''<sub>cat</sub> and ''K''<sub>m</sub> values of ''Bb''AfcA for 2'-fucosyllactose, Fuc&alpha;1-2Gal&beta;1-4Glc, were determined to be 0.091 mM and 160 s<sup>-1</sup>, respectively <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
 
 
 
 
  
 
== Catalytic Residues ==
 
== Catalytic Residues ==
GH95 enzymes are considered to employ a unique reaction mechanism, in which Asp-activated Asn acts as a base residue while the role of an acid residue is played by a canonical carboxylic residue Glu. In ''Bb''AfcA, Glu566 and Asn423 are identified to be the general acid and base residues, respectively<cite>Nagae2007</cite>. Glu566 is hydrogen-bonded with Asn421, and this hydrogen bond is thought to be important for the side chain of Glu566 to be suitable oriented towards the oxygen atom (O2) of the leaving Gal. Asn423 is activated by the neighboring Asp766, and consequently activates a nucleophilic water molecule. This model (carboxylic acid-mediated activation of amido group) invokes the substrate-assisted catalysis employed by GH18, 20, and 85.
+
GH95 enzymes are considered to employ a unique reaction mechanism, in which Asp-activated Asn acts as a [[general base]] catalyst while the role of the [[general acid]] catalyst is played by a canonical carboxylic residue, Glu. In ''Bb''AfcA, Glu566 and Asn423 have been identified as the [[general acid]] and [[general base]] residues, respectively <cite>Nagae2007</cite>. Glu566 is hydrogen-bonded with Asn421, and this hydrogen bond is thought to be important in orienting the side chain of Glu566 toward the oxygen atom (O2) of the departing Gal. Asn423 is activated by the neighboring Asp766, and consequently activates a nucleophilic water molecule. This model (carboxylic acid-mediated activation of amido group) bears some analogy to the [[neighboring group participation]] mechanism employed by members of [[GH18]], [[GH20]], [[GH25]], [[GH56]], [[GH84]] and [[GH85]].
The four residues are invariable in the members of this family, and the substitution of alanine or glycine diminished the activities by 1,000- to 10,000-fold<cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
+
These four residues are invariable in the members of this family, and substitution with alanine or glycine diminishes activities by 1,000- to 10,000-fold<cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
  
 
== Three-dimensional structures ==
 
== Three-dimensional structures ==
The first solved 3-D structure was the catalytic domain (aa. 577-1474 of 1959) of ''Bb''AfcA(PDB ID 2eab WT in apo form, PDB ID 2eac WT in compex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, PDB ID 2ead E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, PDB ID 2eae D766A in complex with fucose and lactose)<cite>Nagae2007</cite>. The catalytic domain adopts (&alpha;/&alpha;)<sub>6</sub>-barrel fold that is quite similar to those of clan GH-L (GH15, GH65, and GH125) and GH94. The members of Clan GH-L and GH95 act on &alpha;-linkages, whereas GH94 acts on &beta;-linkage.  
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The first solved 3D structure was of the catalytic domain (aa. 577-1474 of 1959) of ''Bb''AfcA (PDB ID [{{PDBlink}}2eab 2eab] WT in apo form, PDB ID [{{PDBlink}}2eac 2eac] WT in compex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, PDB ID [{{PDBlink}}2ead 2ead] E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, PDB ID [{{PDBlink}}2eae 2eae] D766A in complex with fucose and lactose) <cite>Nagae2007</cite>. The catalytic domain adopts an (&alpha;/&alpha;)<sub>6</sub>-barrel fold that is quite similar to those of [[clan]] GH-L ([[GH15]], [[GH65]], and [[GH125]]) and [[GH94]]. The members of [[clan]] GH-L and GH95 act on &alpha;-linkages, whereas [[GH94]] acts on &beta;-linkage. An X-ray structure of a ''Bacteroides ovatus'' &alpha;-L-galactosidase in complex with L-galactose highlighted Thr370 as a key residue interacting with the 6-hydroxyl group, which is a His residue in 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidases such as ''Bb'', and which may determine specificity for L-galactose versus L-fucose <cite>Rogowski2015</cite>.
 
 
  
 
== Family Firsts ==
 
== Family Firsts ==
;First stereochemistry determination:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', determined by 1H-NMR using 2'-fucosyllactose as a substrate.<cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
+
;First stereochemistry determination:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', determined by <sup>1</sup>H-NMR using 2'-fucosyllactose as a substrate <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
;First molecular cloning:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', by expression cloning using a genomic library conctructed in ''Escherichia coli''<cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
+
;First molecular cloning:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', by expression cloning using a genomic library conctructed in ''Escherichia coli'' <cite>Katayama2004</cite>.
;First catalytic base identification:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', kinetic analysis and chemical rescue of the mutants <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
+
;First [[general base]] residue identification:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', by kinetic analysis and chemical rescue of the mutants <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
;First catalytic acid residue identification:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', kinetic analysis of the mutant <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
+
;First [[general acid]] residue identification:1,2-&alpha;-L-Fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', by kinetic analysis of the mutant <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
;First 3-D structure:The catalytic domain of 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'',wild-type enzyme in apo-form, wild-type enzyme in complex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, D766A in complex with fucose and lactose <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
+
;First 3-D structure:The catalytic domain of 1,2-&alpha;-L-fucosidase from ''Bifidobacterium bifidum'', wild-type enzyme in apo-form, wild-type enzyme in complex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, D766A in complex with fucose and lactose <cite>Nagae2007</cite>.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
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#Altmann2008 pmid=18495185
 
#Altmann2008 pmid=18495185
 
#Nagae2007 pmid=17459873  
 
#Nagae2007 pmid=17459873  
 
+
#Liu2007 pmid=17401360
 +
#Rogowski2015 pmid=26112186
 +
</biblio>
  
 
[[Category:Glycoside Hydrolase Families|GH095]]
 
[[Category:Glycoside Hydrolase Families|GH095]]

Latest revision as of 13:16, 18 December 2021

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Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH95
Clan none, (α/α)6
Mechanism inverting
Active site residues known
CAZy DB link
https://www.cazy.org/GH95.html


Substrate specificities

Glycoside hydrolases of GH95 includes 1,2-α-L-fucosidases (EC 3.2.1.63) that hydrolyze α-Fuc-1,2-Gal linkages attached at the non-reducing ends of oligosaccharides [1, 2], and 1,2-α-L-galactosidases that hydrolyze L-galactoside linkages in arabinoxylans [3]. α-Fuc-1,2-Gal linkages are found in human milk oligosaccharides (2'-fucosyllactose; Fucα1-2Galβ1-4Glc) and blood group glycoconjugates (ABO and Lewis antigens) and are also found as branching residues on the plant polysaccharide xyloglucan (see below) [2]. α-L-Gal-1,2-Xyl linkages are present on side branches on corn glucuronoarabinoxylan [3]. An 1,2-α-L-fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum (BbAfcA) cannot hydrolyze the fucosyl linkage when the Gal residue is further modified, i.e. the enzyme does not act on blood group A- and B-trisaccharides (see [4] for structures). 3-Fucosyllactose, Galβ1-4(Fucα1-3)Glc, is slightly hydrolyzed by the BbAfcA. 1,2-α-L-Fucosidases from Arabidopsis thaliana and Lilium longiflorum (lily) can liberate L-fucose from xyloglucan fragment XXFG [Xylα1-6Glcβ1-4(Xylα1-6)Glcβ1-4(Fucα1-2Galβ1-2Xylα1-6)Glcβ1-4Glc] as well as 2'-fucosyllactose, but does not liberate L-fucose from 3-fucosyllactose. Both BbAfcA and the plant enzymes do not act on other linkages and artificial substrates such as 4'-nitrophenyl-α-L-fucoside.

Kinetics and Mechanism

Hydrolysis catalyzed by this family of the enzymes proceeds via an inverting mechanism, as first shown by Katayama et al. using 1H-NMR [1]. The best characterized member of this family is the 1,2-α-L-fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum (BbAfcA). The kcat and Km values of BbAfcA for 2'-fucosyllactose, Fucα1-2Galβ1-4Glc, were determined to be 0.091 mM and 160 s-1, respectively [1].

Catalytic Residues

GH95 enzymes are considered to employ a unique reaction mechanism, in which Asp-activated Asn acts as a general base catalyst while the role of the general acid catalyst is played by a canonical carboxylic residue, Glu. In BbAfcA, Glu566 and Asn423 have been identified as the general acid and general base residues, respectively [5]. Glu566 is hydrogen-bonded with Asn421, and this hydrogen bond is thought to be important in orienting the side chain of Glu566 toward the oxygen atom (O2) of the departing Gal. Asn423 is activated by the neighboring Asp766, and consequently activates a nucleophilic water molecule. This model (carboxylic acid-mediated activation of amido group) bears some analogy to the neighboring group participation mechanism employed by members of GH18, GH20, GH25, GH56, GH84 and GH85. These four residues are invariable in the members of this family, and substitution with alanine or glycine diminishes activities by 1,000- to 10,000-fold[5].

Three-dimensional structures

The first solved 3D structure was of the catalytic domain (aa. 577-1474 of 1959) of BbAfcA (PDB ID 2eab WT in apo form, PDB ID 2eac WT in compex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, PDB ID 2ead E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, PDB ID 2eae D766A in complex with fucose and lactose) [5]. The catalytic domain adopts an (α/α)6-barrel fold that is quite similar to those of clan GH-L (GH15, GH65, and GH125) and GH94. The members of clan GH-L and GH95 act on α-linkages, whereas GH94 acts on β-linkage. An X-ray structure of a Bacteroides ovatus α-L-galactosidase in complex with L-galactose highlighted Thr370 as a key residue interacting with the 6-hydroxyl group, which is a His residue in 1,2-α-L-fucosidases such as Bb, and which may determine specificity for L-galactose versus L-fucose [3].

Family Firsts

First stereochemistry determination
1,2-α-L-Fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum, determined by 1H-NMR using 2'-fucosyllactose as a substrate [1].
First molecular cloning
1,2-α-L-Fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum, by expression cloning using a genomic library conctructed in Escherichia coli [1].
First general base residue identification
1,2-α-L-Fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum, by kinetic analysis and chemical rescue of the mutants [5].
First general acid residue identification
1,2-α-L-Fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum, by kinetic analysis of the mutant [5].
First 3-D structure
The catalytic domain of 1,2-α-L-fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum, wild-type enzyme in apo-form, wild-type enzyme in complex with deoxyfuconojirimycin, E566A in complex with 2'-fucosyllactose, D766A in complex with fucose and lactose [5].

References

  1. Katayama T, Sakuma A, Kimura T, Makimura Y, Hiratake J, Sakata K, Yamanoi T, Kumagai H, and Yamamoto K. (2004). Molecular cloning and characterization of Bifidobacterium bifidum 1,2-alpha-L-fucosidase (AfcA), a novel inverting glycosidase (glycoside hydrolase family 95). J Bacteriol. 2004;186(15):4885-93. DOI:10.1128/JB.186.15.4885-4893.2004 | PubMed ID:15262925 [Katayama2004]
  2. Léonard R, Pabst M, Bondili JS, Chambat G, Veit C, Strasser R, and Altmann F. (2008). Identification of an Arabidopsis gene encoding a GH95 alpha1,2-fucosidase active on xyloglucan oligo- and polysaccharides. Phytochemistry. 2008;69(10):1983-8. DOI:10.1016/j.phytochem.2008.03.024 | PubMed ID:18495185 [Altmann2008]
  3. Rogowski A, Briggs JA, Mortimer JC, Tryfona T, Terrapon N, Lowe EC, Baslé A, Morland C, Day AM, Zheng H, Rogers TE, Thompson P, Hawkins AR, Yadav MP, Henrissat B, Martens EC, Dupree P, Gilbert HJ, and Bolam DN. (2015). Glycan complexity dictates microbial resource allocation in the large intestine. Nat Commun. 2015;6:7481. DOI:10.1038/ncomms8481 | PubMed ID:26112186 [Rogowski2015]
  4. Liu QP, Sulzenbacher G, Yuan H, Bennett EP, Pietz G, Saunders K, Spence J, Nudelman E, Levery SB, White T, Neveu JM, Lane WS, Bourne Y, Olsson ML, Henrissat B, and Clausen H. (2007). Bacterial glycosidases for the production of universal red blood cells. Nat Biotechnol. 2007;25(4):454-64. DOI:10.1038/nbt1298 | PubMed ID:17401360 [Liu2007]
  5. Nagae M, Tsuchiya A, Katayama T, Yamamoto K, Wakatsuki S, and Kato R. (2007). Structural basis of the catalytic reaction mechanism of novel 1,2-alpha-L-fucosidase from Bifidobacterium bifidum. J Biol Chem. 2007;282(25):18497-18509. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M702246200 | PubMed ID:17459873 [Nagae2007]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed