Asp176, Glu179 and Glu180 of Aspergillus awamori glucoamylase appeared by differential labeling to be in the active site. To test their functions, they were replaced by mutagenesis with Asn, Gln and Gln respectively, and kinetic parameters and pH dependencies of all enzyme forms were determined. Glu179----Gln glucoamylase was not active on maltose or isomaltose, while the kcat for maltoheptaose hydrolysis decreased almost 2000-fold and the KM was essentially unchanged from wild-type glucoamylase. The The Glu180----Gln mutation drastically increased the KM and moderately decreased the kcat with maltose and maltoheptaose, but affected isomaltose hydrolysis less. Difference in substrate activation energies between Glu180----Gln and wild-type glucoamylases indicate that Glu180 binds D-glucosyl residues in subsite 2. The Asp176----Asn substitution gave moderate increases and decreases in KM and kcat respectively, and therefore similar increases in activation energies for the three substrates. This and the differences in subsite binding energies between Asp176----Asn and wild-type glucoamylases suggest that Asp176 is near subsite 1, where it stabilizes the transition state and interacts with Trp120 at subsite 4. Glu179 and Asp176 are thus proposed as the general catalytic acid and base of pKa 5.9 and 2.7 respectively. The charged Glu180 contributes to the high pKa value of Glu179.
Trp120 of Aspergillus awamori glucoamylase has previously been shown by chemical modification to be essential for activity and tentatively to be located near subsite 4 of the active site. To further test its role, restriction sites were inserted in the cloned A.awamori gene around the Trp120 coding region, and cassette mutagenesis was used to replace it with His, Leu, Phe and Tyr. All four mutants displayed 2% or less of the maximal activity (kcat) of wild-type glucoamylase towards maltose and maltoheptaose. Michaelis constants (KM) of mutants decreased 2- to 3-fold for maltose and were essentially unchanged for maltoheptaose compared with the wild type, except for a greater than 3-fold decrease for maltoheptaose with the Trp120----Tyr mutant. This mutant also bound isomaltose more strongly and had more selectivity for its hydrolysis than wild-type glucoamylase. A subsite map generated from malto-oligosaccharide substrates having 2-7 D-glucosyl residues indicated that subsites 1 and 2 had greater affinity for D-glucosyl residues in the Trp120----Tyr mutant than in wild-type glucoamylase. These results suggest that Trp120 from a distant subsite is crucial for the stabilization of the transition-state complex in subsites 1 and 2.
Quality protein maize (QPM) was created by selecting genetic modifiers that convert the starchy endosperm of an opaque2 (o2) mutant to a hard, vitreous phenotype. Genetic analysis has shown that there are multiple, unlinked o2 modifiers (Opm), but their identity and mode of action are unknown. Using two independently developed QPM lines, we mapped several major Opm QTLs to chromosomes 1, 7 and 9. A microarray hybridization performed with RNA obtained from true breeding o2 progeny with vitreous and opaque kernel phenotypes identified a small group of differentially expressed genes, some of which map at or near the Opm QTLs. Several of the genes are associated with ethylene and ABA signaling and suggest a potential linkage of o2 endosperm modification with programmed cell death.
Aspergillus awamori glucoamylase is a secreted glycoprotein containing N-linked carbohydrate recognition sites at Asn-171, Asn-182 and Asn-395. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed at Asn-182 and Asn-395 to determine whether these residues were N-glycosylated by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, to investigate the function of any glycans linked to them, and to determine the effect of their deamidation on glucoamylase thermostability. Asn-171 and Asn-395, but not Asn-182, were N-glycosylated. Deletion of the glycan N-linked to Asn-395 did not affect specific activity, but greatly decreased enzyme secretion and thermostability. The mutant lacking the N-glycan linked to Asn-395 was synthesized very slowly, and was more associated with cell membrane components and susceptible to proteinase degradation than were wild-type or other mutant glucoamylases. Its secreted form was 30-fold less thermostable than wild-type enzyme at pH 4.5. Replacement of Asn-182 by Gln to eliminate deamidation at this site did not change glucoamylase specific activity or thermostability, while replacement by Asp decreased specific activity about 25%, but increased thermostability moderately at pH 4.5 below 70 degrees C. Both mutations of Asn-182 increased glucoamylase production.
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