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Glycoside Hydrolase Family 28

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Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH28
Clan GH-N
Mechanism inverting
Active site residues known
CAZy DB link
http://www.cazy.org/fam/GH28.html


Substrate specificities

The overwhelming majority of enzymes in this family are polygalacturonases. They hydrolyse the alpha-1,4 glycosidic linkage between galacturonate residues in polygalacturonic acid. Both endo and exo acting polygalacturonases are represented. Polygalacturonic acid, with varying degrees of C6 methylation and acetylation, forms the smooth homogalacturonan region of pectin. There are also some enzymes in this family active against rhamnogalacturonan which forms the branched part of the pectin molecule. Rhamnogalacturonases cleave the alpha-1,2 linkage between galacturonic acid and rhamnose residues. Two other enzymes rhamnohydrolase and rhamnogalacturonan galacturonohydrolase cleave off single terminal carbohydrate units, rhamnose and galacturonate respectively, from the non-reducing end of rhamnogalacturonan [1].


Kinetics and Mechanism

Family GH28 enzymes are inverting enzymes; they harness a single displacement mechanism as revealed by 1H-NMR spectroscopy of the products of hydrolysis in D2O reaction mixtures [2]. Subsequently, the rhamnogalacturonases were also shown to invert the configuration of the newly formed reducing end of the polysaccharide [3].


Catalytic Residues

The crystal structure of rhamnogalacturonase revealed the cluster of aspartates involved in catalysis [4]. It was subsequently realised that protonation of the glycosidic oxygen and nucleophilic attack at the anomeric carbon may be from the same side of the bond in alpha-linked polysaccharides rather than opposite sides with a resulting shorter separation of carboxylates than standard for cleaving substrates with beta-linkages explaining the short spacing between the conserved carboxylates in the GH28 hydrolases [5]. The clearest assignment of the catalytic residues comes from the work of van Santen et al [6]; Asp201 is proposed to act as the general acid (proton donor), while Asp180 and Asp202 active the catalytic water molecule (numbers are given for Aspergillus niger polygalacturonase).


Three-dimensional structures

Rhamnogalacturonase (RGase A) from Aspergillus aculeatus [4], endopolygalacturonase from Erwinia carotovora [5], endopolygalacturonase II from Aspergillus niger [6], endopolygalacturonase from Stereum purpureum [7], endopolygalacturonase I (a processive enzyme) from Aspergillus niger [8], exopolygalacturonase from Yersinia enterocolitica [9].


Family Firsts

First sterochemistry determination
Endopolygalacturonases from Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus tubingensis [2].
First catalytic acid identification
Aspergillus niger endopolygalacturonase. Asp201 (197) is proposed to act as the catalytic acid (proton donor), while Asp180 (180) and Asp202 (198) active the catalytic water molecule (numbers are given for the Aspergillus niger and in parentheses for Erwinia carotovora polygalacturonase) [6].
First 3-D structure
Rhamnogalacturonase (RGase-A) from Aspergillus aculeatus [4]. First polygalacturonase structure, Erwinia carotovora polygalacturonase [5].
First complexes
Product complex (+1 subsite) and a complex including a furanose isomer (-1) [8]. A product complex in an exo-polygalacturonase illuminates the structural basis for its exo-activity [9].

References

  1. Visser, J. and Voragen, V.D.J., Eds. (1996) Pectin and Pectinases, Elsevier, Amsterdam. ISBN 0-444-82330-1

    [1]
  2. Biely P, Benen J, Heinrichová K, Kester HC, and Visser J. (1996). Inversion of configuration during hydrolysis of alpha-1,4-galacturonidic linkage by three Aspergillus polygalacturonases. FEBS Lett. 1996;382(3):249-55. DOI:10.1016/0014-5793(96)00171-8 | PubMed ID:8605979 [2]
  3. Pitson SM, Mutter M, van den Broek LA, Voragen AG, and Beldman G. (1998). Stereochemical course of hydrolysis catalysed by alpha-L-rhamnosyl and alpha-D-galacturonosyl hydrolases from Aspergillus aculeatus. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 1998;242(3):552-9. DOI:10.1006/bbrc.1997.8009 | PubMed ID:9464254 [3]
  4. Petersen TN, Kauppinen S, and Larsen S. (1997). The crystal structure of rhamnogalacturonase A from Aspergillus aculeatus: a right-handed parallel beta helix. Structure. 1997;5(4):533-44. DOI:10.1016/s0969-2126(97)00209-8 | PubMed ID:9115442 [4]
  5. Pickersgill R, Smith D, Worboys K, and Jenkins J. (1998). Crystal structure of polygalacturonase from Erwinia carotovora ssp. carotovora. J Biol Chem. 1998;273(38):24660-4. DOI:10.1074/jbc.273.38.24660 | PubMed ID:9733763 [5]
  6. van Santen Y, Benen JA, Schröter KH, Kalk KH, Armand S, Visser J, and Dijkstra BW. (1999). 1.68-A crystal structure of endopolygalacturonase II from Aspergillus niger and identification of active site residues by site-directed mutagenesis. J Biol Chem. 1999;274(43):30474-80. DOI:10.1074/jbc.274.43.30474 | PubMed ID:10521427 [6]
  7. Shimizu T, Nakatsu T, Miyairi K, Okuno T, and Kato H. (2002). Active-site architecture of endopolygalacturonase I from Stereum purpureum revealed by crystal structures in native and ligand-bound forms at atomic resolution. Biochemistry. 2002;41(21):6651-9. DOI:10.1021/bi025541a | PubMed ID:12022868 [7]
  8. van Pouderoyen G, Snijder HJ, Benen JA, and Dijkstra BW. (2003). Structural insights into the processivity of endopolygalacturonase I from Aspergillus niger. FEBS Lett. 2003;554(3):462-6. DOI:10.1016/s0014-5793(03)01221-3 | PubMed ID:14623112 [8]
  9. Abbott DW and Boraston AB. (2007). The structural basis for exopolygalacturonase activity in a family 28 glycoside hydrolase. J Mol Biol. 2007;368(5):1215-22. DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2007.02.083 | PubMed ID:17397864 [9]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed