Glycoside hydrolase family 65 (GH65) comprises glycoside hydrolases (GHs) and glycoside phosphorylases (GPs) that act on α-glucosidic linkages in oligosaccharides. All previously reported bacterial GH65 enzymes are GPs, whereas all eukaryotic GH65 enzymes known are GHs. In addition, to date, no crystal structure of a GH65 GH has yet been reported. In this study, we use biochemical experiments and X-ray crystallography to examine the function and structure of a GH65 enzyme from
Flavobacterium johnsoniae
(FjGH65A) that shows low amino acid sequence homology to reported GH65 enzymes. We found that FjGH65A does not exhibit phosphorolytic activity, but it does hydrolyze kojibiose (α-1,2-glucobiose) and oligosaccharides containing a kojibiosyl moiety without requiring inorganic phosphate. In addition, stereochemical analysis demonstrated that FjGH65A catalyzes this hydrolytic reaction
via
an anomer-inverting mechanism. The three-dimensional structures of FjGH65A in native form and in complex with glucose were determined at resolutions of 1.54 and 1.40 Å resolutions, respectively. The overall structure of FjGH65A resembled those of other GH65 GPs, and the general acid catalyst Glu
472
was conserved. However, the amino acid sequence forming the phosphate-binding site typical of GH65 GPs was not conserved in FjGH65A. Moreover, FjGH65A had the general base catalyst Glu
616
instead, which is required to activate a nucleophilic water molecule. These results indicate that FjGH65A is an α-1,2-glucosidase and is the first bacterial GH found in the GH65 family.
Dextran α-1,2-debranching enzyme (DDE) releases glucose with hydrolyzing α-(1→2)-glucosidic linkages in α-glucans, which are made up of dextran with α-(1→2)-branches and are generated by Leuconostoc bacteria. DDE was isolated from Microbacterium dextranolyticum (formerly known as Flavobacterium sp. M-73) 40 years ago, although the amino acid sequence of the enzyme has not been determined. Herein, we found a gene for this enzyme based on the partial amino acid sequences from native DDE and characterized the recombinant enzyme. DDE had a signal peptide, a glycoside hydrolase family 65 domain, a carbohydrate-binding module family 35 domain, a domain (D-domain) similar to the C-terminal domain of Arthrobacter globiformis glucodextranase, and a transmembrane region at the C-terminus. Recombinant DDE released glucose from α-(1→2)-branched α-glucans produced by Leuconostoc citreum strains B-1299, S-32, and S-64 and showed weak hydrolytic activity with kojibiose and kojitriose. No activity was detected for commercial dextran and Leuconostoc citreum B-1355 α-glucan, which do not contain α-(1→2)-linkages. The removal of the D-domain decreased the affinity for α-(1→2)-branched α-glucans but not for kojioligosaccharides, suggesting that D-domain plays a role in α-glucan binding. Genes for putative dextranases, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, sugar-binding protein, and permease were present in the vicinity of the DDE gene, and as a result these gene products may be necessary for the use of α-(1→2)-branched glucans. Our findings shed new light on how actinobacteria utilize polysaccharides produced by lactic acid bacteria. actinobacteria, dextran, exopolysaccharide, GH65, kojibiose, lactic acid bacteria
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.