Organization of glycoside hydrolase (GH) families into clans expands the utility of information on catalytic mechanisms of member enzymes. This issue was examined for GH27 and GH36 through biochemical analysis of GH36 alpha-galactosidase from Thermotoga maritima (TmGalA). Catalytic residues in TmGalA were inferred through structural homology with GH27 members to facilitate design of site-directed mutants. Product analysis confirmed that the wild type (WT) acted with retention of anomeric stereochemistry, analogous to GH27 enzymes. Conserved acidic residues were confirmed through kinetic analysis of D327G and D387G mutant enzymes, azide rescue, and determination of azide rescue products. Mutation of Asp327 to Gly resulted in a mutant that had a 200-800-fold lower catalytic rate on aryl galactosides relative to the WT enzyme. Azide rescue experiments using the D327G enzyme showed a 30-fold higher catalytic rate compared to without azide. Addition of azide to the reaction resulted in formation of azide beta-d-galactopyranoside, confirming Asp327 as the nucleophilic residue. The Asp387Gly mutation was 1500-fold catalytically slower than the WT enzyme on p-nitrophenyl alpha-d-galactopyranoside. Analysis at different pH values produced a bell-shaped curve of the WT enzyme, but D387G exhibited higher activity with increasing pH. Catalyzed reactions with the D387G mutant in the presence of azide resulted in formation of azide alpha-d-galactopryanoside as the product of a retaining mechanism. These results confirm that Asp387 is the acid/base residue of TmGalA. Furthermore, they show that the biochemical characteristics of GH36 TmGalA are closely related to GH27 enzymes, confirming the mechanistic commonality of clan GH-D members.
The ascomycete Geotrichum candidum is a versatile and efficient decay fungus that is involved, for example, in biodeterioration of compact discs; notably, the 3C strain was previously shown to degrade filter paper and cotton more efficiently than several industrial enzyme preparations. Glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 7 cellobiohydrolases (CBHs) are the primary constituents of industrial cellulase cocktails employed in biomass conversion, and feature tunnel-enclosed active sites that enable processive hydrolytic cleavage of cellulose chains. Understanding the structure-function relationships defining the activity and stability of GH7 CBHs is thus of keen interest. Accordingly, we report the comprehensive characterization of the GH7 CBH secreted by G. candidum (GcaCel7A). The bimodular cellulase consists of a family 1 cellulosebinding module (CBM) and linker connected to a GH7 catalytic domain that shares 64% sequence identity with the archetypal industrial GH7 CBH of Hypocrea jecorina (HjeCel7A). GcaCel7A shows activity on Avicel cellulose similar to HjeCel7A, with less product inhibition, but has a lower temperature optimum (50°C versus 60-65°C, respectively). Five crystal structures, with and without bound thio-oligosaccharides, show conformational diversity of tunnel-enclosing loops, including a form with partial tunnel collapse at subsite -4 not reported previously in GH7. Also, the first O-glycosylation site in a GH7 crystal structure is reported -on a loop where the glycan probably influences loop contacts across the active site and interactions with the cellulose surface. The GcaCel7A structures indicate higher loop flexibility than HjeCel7A, in accordance with sequence modifications. However, GcaCel7A retains small fluctuations in molecular simulations, suggesting high processivity and low endo-initiation probability, similar to HjeCel7A.
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