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Glycoside Hydrolase Family 68

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Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH68
Clan GH-J
Mechanism retaining
Active site residues known
CAZy DB link
https://www.cazy.org/GH68.html


Substrate specificities

Glycoside hydrolase family 68 enzymes include levansucrase (sucrose:2,6-β-D-fructan 6-β-D-fructosyltransferase; EC 2.4.1.10), β-fructofuranosidase (EC 3.2.1.26), and inulosucrase (EC 2.4.1.9). All these enzymes use sucrose as their preferential donor substrate. Many of them can create very long levan-type fructans (catalyzed by levansucrases) or inulin-type of fructans (catalyzed by inulosucrases), as well as fructooligosacharides (FOS). However, some GH68 enzymes can also use fructan as donor substrate (in the abscence of sucrose or at a high fructan/sucrose ratio).

Kinetics and Mechanism

Family GH68 enzymes as well as those included in GH32 are retaining enzymes [1]. The levansucrases from Bacillus subtilis, Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus, and Streptococcus salivarius catalyze transfructosylation via a ping-pong mechanism involving the formation of a transient fructosyl-enzyme intermediate [2, 3, 4, 5]. At low sucrose concentrations levansucrase functions as a hydrolase with water as acceptor, whereas at higher substrate concentrations it adds fructosyl units to a variety of acceptors including glucose, fructan and sucrose [2]. Bacterial levansucrases, whatever their origin, catalyze all these reactions but with different efficiency.

Catalytic Residues

GH68 retaining enzymes catalyze hydrolysis in two steps involving a covalent glycosyl enzyme intermediate. The two invariant residues, responsible for the catalytic reaction in family GH68 enzymes, have first been identified experimentally in bacterial levansucrases as an aspartate located close to the N-terminus acting as the catalytic nucleophile and a glutamate acting as the general acid/base [6, 7]. In addition, a conserved aspartate residue in the "Arg-Asp-Pro (RDP) motif" stabilizes the transition state [5, 7, 8]. The three equivalent acidic residues have been mutated in a β-fructofuranosidase from Arthrobacter globiformis IFO 3062 [9], and in a levansucrase and a inulosucrase from Lactobacillus reuteri 121 [10].

Three-dimensional structures

Currently, only four different three dimensional structures of family GH68 enzymes have been solved. The first crystal structure was reported for the bacterial levansucrase (SacB) from Bacillus subtilis subsp. subtilis str. 168 [6]. The second one corresponds to levansucrase (LdsA) from Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus SRT4 [11], the third corresponds to SacB from Bacillus megaterium [12], and the last one corresponds to inulosucrase (InuJ) from Lactobacillus johnsonii NCC533 [13]. These structures display a 5-fold β-propeller topology, and therefore GH families 68 and 32 have been combined in clan GH-J. On the other hand, a structural relationship of the catalytic core exists to family GH68 and family GH43, as predicted by detailed sequence analysis[14].

Family Firsts

First stereochemistry determination
Bacillus subtilis levansucrase [2].
First catalytic nucleophile identification
Bacillus subtilis levansucrase [6].
First general acid/base residue identification
Zymomonas mobilis levansucrase [7].
First stabilizing transition state residue identification
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus levansucrase [8].
First prediction of a common beta-propeller catalytic domain in GH68 / clan GH-J
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus levansucrase [15, 16].
First 3-D structure
Bacillus subtilis levansucrase [6].

References

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  1. Error fetching PMID 13174523: [Koshland1954]
  2. Error fetching PMID 4206083: [Chambert1974]
  3. Error fetching PMID 7619044: [Hernandez1995]
  4. Error fetching PMID 10393084: [Song1999]
  5. Error fetching PMID 14517548: [Meng2003]
  6. Error fetching PMID 12359071: [Yanase2002]
  7. Error fetching PMID 9895294: [Batista1999]
  8. Error fetching PMID 16233623: [Isono2004]
  9. Error fetching PMID 14988011: [Ozimek2004]
  10. Error fetching PMID 15869470: [MartinezFleites2005]
  11. Error fetching PMID 21454585: [Strube2011]
  12. Error fetching PMID 21801732: [Pijning2011]
  13. Error fetching PMID 11093261: [Naumoff2001]
  14. Error fetching PMID 9829697: [Pons1998]
  15. Error fetching PMID 11305239: [Pons2000]
  16. Error fetching PMID 814002: [Chambert1976]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed