Literature DB >> 18356321

Luminal starch substrate "brake" on maltase-glucoamylase activity is located within the glucoamylase subunit.

Roberto Quezada-Calvillo1, Lyann Sim, Zihua Ao, Bruce R Hamaker, Andrea Quaroni, Gary D Brayer, Erwin E Sterchi, Claudia C Robayo-Torres, David R Rose, Buford L Nichols.   

Abstract

The detailed mechanistic aspects for the final starch digestion process leading to effective alpha-glucogenesis by the 2 mucosal alpha-glucosidases, human sucrase-isomaltase complex (SI) and human maltase-glucoamylase (MGAM), are poorly understood. This is due to the structural complexity and vast variety of starches and their intermediate digestion products, the poorly understood enzyme-substrate interactions occurring during the digestive process, and the limited knowledge of the structure-function properties of SI and MGAM. Here we analyzed the basic catalytic properties of the N-terminal subunit of MGAM (ntMGAM) on the hydrolysis of glucan substrates and compared it with those of human native MGAM isolated by immunochemical methods. In relation to native MGAM, ntMGAM displayed slower activity against maltose to maltopentose (G5) series glucose oligomers, as well as maltodextrins and alpha-limit dextrins, and failed to show the strong substrate inhibitory "brake" effect caused by maltotriose, maltotetrose, and G5 on the native enzyme. In addition, the inhibitory constant for acarbose was 2 orders of magnitude higher for ntMGAM than for native MGAM, suggesting lower affinity and/or fewer binding configurations of the active site in the recombinant enzyme. The results strongly suggested that the C-terminal subunit of MGAM has a greater catalytic efficiency due to a higher affinity for glucan substrates and larger number of binding configurations to its active site. Our results show for the first time, to our knowledge, that the C-terminal subunit of MGAM is responsible for the MGAM peptide's "glucoamylase" activity and is the location of the substrate inhibitory brake. In contrast, the membrane-bound ntMGAM subunit contains the poorly inhibitable "maltase" activity of the internally duplicated enzyme.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18356321     DOI: 10.1093/jn/138.4.685

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr        ISSN: 0022-3166            Impact factor:   4.798


  15 in total

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2.  Structural basis for substrate selectivity in human maltase-glucoamylase and sucrase-isomaltase N-terminal domains.

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9.  Modulation of starch digestion for slow glucose release through "toggling" of activities of mucosal α-glucosidases.

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10.  Enzyme-synthesized highly branched maltodextrins have slow glucose generation at the mucosal α-glucosidase level and are slowly digestible in vivo.

Authors:  Byung-Hoo Lee; Like Yan; Robert J Phillips; Bradley L Reuhs; Kyra Jones; David R Rose; Buford L Nichols; Roberto Quezada-Calvillo; Sang-Ho Yoo; Bruce R Hamaker
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