Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.4.1.18 (
branching enzyme
)
628
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The transglycosylation reaction catalyzed by
neopullulanase
was analyzed. Radioactive oligosaccharides were produced when the enzyme acted on maltotriose in the presence of [U-14C]glucose. Some of the radioactive oligosaccharides had only alpha-(1----4)-glucosidic linkages, but others were suggested to have alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkages. The existence of alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkages in the products from maltotriose with
neopullulanase
was proven by proton NMR spectroscopy and methylation analysis. We previously reported that the one active center of
neopullulanase
catalyzes the hydrolysis of alpha-(1----4)- and alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkages (Kuriki, T., Takata, H., Okada, S., and Imanaka, T. (1991) J. Bacteriol. 173,6147-6152). These facts proved that
neopullulanase
catalyzed all four types of reactions: hydrolysis of alpha-(1----4)-glucosidic linkage, hydrolysis of alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkage, transglycosylation to form alpha-(1----4)-glucosidic linkage, and transglycosylation to form alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkage. The four reactions are typically catalyzed by alpha-amylase, pullulanase, cyclomaltodextrin glucanotransferase, and 1,4-alpha-D-glucan
branching enzyme
, respectively. These four enzymes have some structural similarities to one other, but reactions catalyzed by the enzymes are considered to be distinctive: the four reactions are individually catalyzed by each of the enzymes. The experimental results obtained from the analysis of the reaction of the
neopullulanase
exhibited that the four reactions can be catalyzed in the same mechanism.
...
PMID:Action of neopullulanase. Neopullulanase catalyzes both hydrolysis and transglycosylation at alpha-(1----4)- and alpha-(1----6)-glucosidic linkages. 138 53
Most starch hydrolases and related enzymes belong to the alpha-amylase family which contains a characteristic catalytic (beta/alpha)8-barrel domain. Currently known primary structures that have sequence similarities represent 18 different specificities, including
starch branching enzyme
. Crystal structures have been reported in three of these enzyme classes: the alpha-amylases, the cyclodextrin glucanotransferases, and the oligo-1,6-glucosidases. Throughout the alpha-amylase family, only eight amino acid residues are invariant, seven at the active site and a glycine in a short turn. However, comparison of three-dimensional models with a multiple sequence alignment suggests that the diversity in specificity arises by variation in substrate binding at the beta-->alpha loops. Designed mutations thus have enhanced transferase activity and altered the oligosaccharide product patterns of alpha-amylases, changed the distribution of alpha-, beta- and gamma-cyclodextrin production by cyclodextrin glucanotransferases, and shifted the relative alpha-1,4:alpha-1,6 dual-bond specificity of
neopullulanase
. Barley alpha-amylase isozyme hybrids and Bacillus alpha-amylases demonstrate the impact of a small domain B protruding from the (beta/alpha)8-scaffold on the function and stability. Prospects for rational engineering in this family include important members of plant origin, such as alpha-amylase, starch branching and debranching enzymes, and amylomaltase.
...
PMID:Protein engineering in the alpha-amylase family: catalytic mechanism, substrate specificity, and stability. 801 65
Sequence alignment and structure prediction are used to locate catalytic alpha-amylase-type (beta/alpha)8-barrel domains and the positions of their beta-strands and alpha-helices in isoamylase, pullulanase,
neopullulanase
, alpha-amylase-pullulanase, dextran glucosidase,
branching enzyme
, and glycogen branching enzymes--all enzymes involved in hydrolysis or synthesis of alpha-1,6-glucosidic linkages in starch and related polysaccharides. This has allowed identification of the transferase active site of the glycogen debranching enzyme and the locations of beta-->alpha loops making up the active sites of all enzymes studied. Activity and specificity of the enzymes are discussed in terms of conserved amino acid residues and loop variations. An evolutionary distance tree of 47 amylolytic and related enzymes is built on 37 residues representing the four best conserved beta-strands of the barrel. It exhibits clusters of enzymes close in specificity, with the branching and glycogen debranching enzymes being the most distantly related.
...
PMID:Starch- and glycogen-debranching and branching enzymes: prediction of structural features of the catalytic (beta/alpha)8-barrel domain and evolutionary relationship to other amylolytic enzymes. 813 30
An extracellular enzyme (RMEBE) possessing alpha- (1-->4)-(1-->6)-transferring activity was purified to homogeneity from Rhodothermus marinus by combination of ammonium sulfate precipitation, Q-Sepharose ion-exchange, and Superdex- 200 gel filtration chromatographies, and preparative native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified enzyme had an optimum pH of 6.0 and was highly thermostable with a maximal activity at 80 degrees . Its half-life was determined to be 73.7 and 16.7 min at 80 and 85 degrees , respectively. The enzyme was also halophilic and highly halotolerant up to about 2 M NaCl, with a maximal activity at 0.5M. The substrate specificity of RMEBE suggested that it possesses partial characteristics of both glucan
branching enzyme
and
neopullulanase
. RMEBE clearly produced branched glucans from amylose, with partial alpha-(1-->4)-hydrolysis of amylose and starch. At the same time, it hydrolyzed pullulan partly to panose, and exhibited alpha-(1-->4)-(1-->6)-transferase activity for small maltooligosaccharides, producing disproportionated alpha-(1-->6)-branched maltooligosaccharides. The enzyme preferred maltopentaose and maltohexaose to smaller maltooligosaccharides for production of longer branched products. Thus, the results suggest that RMEBE might be applied for production of branched oligosaccharides from small maltodextrins at high temperature or even at high salinity.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of branching specificity of a novel extracellular amylolytic enzyme from marine hyperthermophilic Rhodothermus marinus. 1838 62