| Literature DB >> 28011642 |
Hui-Min Qin1,2, Takuya Miyakawa1, Akira Inoue3, Ryuji Nishiyama3, Akira Nakamura1, Atsuko Asano1, Yoriko Sawano1,4, Takao Ojima3, Masaru Tanokura5.
Abstract
Alginate is an abundant algal polysaccharide, composed of β-d-mannuronate and its C5 epimer α-l-guluronate, that is a useful biomaterial in cell biology and tissue engineering, with applications in cancer and aging research. The alginate lyase (EC 4.2.2.3) from Aplysia kurodai, AkAly30, is a eukaryotic member of the polysaccharide lyase 14 (PL-14) family and degrades alginate by cleaving the glycosidic bond through a β-elimination reaction. Here, we present the structural basis for the substrate specificity, with a preference for polymannuronate, of AkAly30. The crystal structure of AkAly30 at a 1.77 Å resolution and the putative substrate-binding model show that the enzyme adopts a β-jelly roll fold at the core of the structure and that Lys-99, Tyr-140, and Tyr-142 form catalytic residues in the active site. Their arrangements allow the carboxyl group of mannuronate residues at subsite +1 to form ionic bonds with Lys-99. The coupled tyrosine forms a hydrogen bond network with the glycosidic bond, and the hydroxy group of Tyr-140 is located near the C5 atom of the mannuronate residue. These interactions could promote the β-elimination of the mannuronate residue at subsite +1. More interestingly, Gly-118 and the disulfide bond formed by Cys-115 and Cys-124 control the conformation of an active-site loop, which makes the space suitable for substrate entry into subsite -1. The cleavage efficiency of AkAly30 is enhanced relative to that of mutants lacking either Gly-118 or the Cys-115-Cys-124 disulfide bond. The putative binding model and mutagenesis studies provide a novel substrate recognition mode explaining the polymannuronate specificity of PL-14 alginate lyases.Entities:
Keywords: D-mannuronic acid; L-guluronic acid; X-ray crystallography; algae; alginate lyase; glycosidic bond; molecular docking; site-directed mutagenesis; β-jelly roll fold
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28011642 PMCID: PMC5313092 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.749929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157