Literature DB >> 7532585

Substrate specificity and detailed characterization of a bifunctional amylase-pullulanase enzyme from Bacillus circulans F-2 having two different active sites on one polypeptide.

C H Kim1, Y S Kim.   

Abstract

Bacillus circulans F-2 amylase-pullulanase enzyme (APE) displayed dual activity with respect to glycosidic bond cleavage. The enzyme was active on alpha-1,6 bonds in pullulan, amylopectin, and glycogen, while it showed alpha-1,4 activity against malto-oligosaccharides, amylose, amylopectin, and soluble starch, but not pullulan. Kinetic analysis of the purified enzyme in a system which contained both pullulan and amylose as two competing substrates was used to distinguish the dual specificity of the enzyme from the single-substrate specificity known for pullulanases and alpha-amylases. Enzyme activities were inhibited by some metal ions, and by metal-chelating agents with a different mode. The enzyme-inhibitory results of amylase and pullulanase with Hg2+ and Co2+ ions were different, indicating that the activation mechanisms of both enzyme activities are different. Cyclomaltoheptaose inhibited both alpha-amylase and pullulanase activities with inhibition constants (Ki) of 0.029 and 0.06 mg/ml, respectively. Modification with 1-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-3-ethylcarbodiimide confirmed a carboxy group at the active sites of both enzymes. The N-terminal sequence of the enzyme was: Ala-Asp-Ala-Lys-Lys-Thr-Pro- Gln-Gln-Gln-Phe- Asp-Ala-Leu-Trp-Ala-Ala-Gly-Ile-Val-Thr-Gly-Thr-Pro-Asp-Gly-Phe. The purified enzyme displayed Michaelis constant (Km) values of 0.55 mg/ml for amylose, and 0.71 mg/ml for pullulan. When both amylose and pullulan were simultaneously present, the observed rate of product formation closely fitted a kinetic model in which the two substrates are hydrolyzed at different active sites. These results suggest that amylopullulanases, which possess both alpha-1,6 and alpha-1,4 cleavage activities at the same active site, should be distinguished from APEs, which contain both activities at different active sites on the same polypeptide. Also, it is proposed that the Enzyme Commission use the term 'amylase-pullulanase enzyme' to refer to enzymes which act on starch and cleave both alpha-1,6-bonds in pullulan and alpha-1,4 bonds in amylose at different active sites.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7532585     DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1995.tb20189.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Biochem        ISSN: 0014-2956


  7 in total

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6.  Characterization of ApuB, an extracellular type II amylopullulanase from Bifidobacterium breve UCC2003.

Authors:  Mary O'Connell Motherway; Gerald F Fitzgerald; Sabine Neirynck; Sinead Ryan; Lothar Steidler; Douwe van Sinderen
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7.  Inositol Monophosphatase: A Bifunctional Enzyme in Mycobacterium smegmatis.

Authors:  Rajendra Goswami; Jasper Marc G Bondoc; Paul R Wheeler; Alireza Jafari; Trinidad Gonzalez; Shahila Mehboob; Farahnaz Movahedzadeh
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  7 in total

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