Journal:Acta Cryst D:S2059798318014900

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: ;)
Current revision (12:43, 19 June 2022) (edit) (undo)
 
(28 intermediate revisions not shown.)
Line 1: Line 1:
-
;
+
<StructureSection load='' size='450' side='right' scene='79/799580/Cv1/1' caption=''>
 +
=== Structure of the AmyC GH13 alpha-amylase from ''Alicyclobacillus sp'', reveals accommodation of starch branching points in the alpha-amylase family ===
 +
<big>Jon Agirre, Olga Moroz, Sebastian Meier, Jesper Brask, Astrid Munch, Tine Hoff, Carsten Andersen, Keith S. Wilsona and Gideon J. Davies</big> <ref>doi 10.1107/S2059798318014900</ref>
 +
<hr/>
 +
<b>Molecular Tour</b><br>
 +
The enzymatic degradation of starch has a myriad industrial applications. However, the branched nature of the polysaccharides that compose it poses problems, as branches have to be accommodated within an active centre best suited to linear polysaccharides. Alpha-amylases are glycoside hydrolases that break the α-1,4 bonds in starch and related glycans. The present work provides a rare insight into branch-point acceptance in these industrial catalysts.
 +
 
 +
The complex of α-amylase from ''Alicyclobacillus sp.'' 18711 (AliC) with acarbose was solved by molecular replacement, with two molecules of AliC in the asymmetric unit, at a resolution of 2.1 Å ([[6gxv]]). The fold, as expected, is a canonical <scene name='79/799580/Cv1/5'>three-domain arrangement</scene> with the A, B and C domains defined approximately as <span style="color:deepskyblue;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">A, residues 4–104 and 210–397 (in deepskyblue)</span>, <span style="color:yellow;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">B, residues 105–209 (in yellow)</span>, and <span style="color:white;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">C, residues 398–484 (in white)</span>. A classical Ca<sup>2+</sup>–Na<sup>+</sup>–Ca<sup>2+</sup> <scene name='79/799580/Cv1/4'>triad</scene> <ref name="Machius">PMID:9551551</ref>,<ref name="Brzozowski">PMID:10924103</ref> is found at the A/B-domain interface. The structure of AliC was determined in the presence of the <scene name='79/799580/Cv1/6'>inhibitor acarbose</scene> (<span style="color:lime;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in green</span>). As with many (retaining) α-amylase complexes, the acarbose is observed as a transglycosylated species, here a hexasaccharide which contains two of the acarviosin disaccharide motifs. The <scene name='79/799580/Cv/11'>complex defines six subsites</scene>, -4 to +2, with the expected catalytic GH13 signature triad of Asp234 (nucleophile), Glu265 (acid/base) and <scene name='79/799580/Cv/13'>Asp332 (interacting with O2/O3 of the -1 subsite sugar)</scene> all disposed for catalysis, here around the <sup>2</sup>H<sub>3</sub> half-chair of the unsaturated cyclohexitol moiety. AliC must also be able to accommodate branching in the +2 subsite, which is consistent with the <scene name='79/799580/Cv/14'>glucose moiety seen adjacent to O6 of the +2 sugar</scene>.
 +
*<scene name='79/799580/Cv/12'>Asp234 and Glu265 interactions</scene>.
 +
 
 +
A ‘branched-ligand’ AliC complex was obtained through co-crystallization, with crystals forming in a new space group. This form diffracted poorly and data could only be obtained to 2.95 Å resolution [[6gya]]). Weak density in the -1 subsite, largely diffuse but greater than would be expected for discrete solvent, remained unmodelled. Density was clearer for a panose trisaccharide with an α-1,4-linked disaccharide in subsites +1 and +2 and, crucially, clear density for an α-1,6 branch accommodated in the +1 subsite, providing a structural context for the limit digest analysis of action on amylopectin starch. The <scene name='79/799580/Cv/15'>binding of the branched oligosaccharide in subsites +1, +2 and +1'</scene> (<span style="color:lime;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">oligosaccharide colored in green</span>).
 +
 +
'''PDB references:''' Amylase in complex with acarbose, [[6gxv]]; Amylase in complex with branched ligand, [[6gya]].
 +
 
 +
<b>References</b><br>
 +
<references/>
 +
</StructureSection>
 +
__NOEDITSECTION__

Current revision

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Alexander Berchansky, Jaime Prilusky

This page complements a publication in scientific journals and is one of the Proteopedia's Interactive 3D Complement pages. For aditional details please see I3DC.
Personal tools