2017
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1701130114
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Unusual active site location and catalytic apparatus in a glycoside hydrolase family

Abstract: The human gut microbiota use complex carbohydrates as major nutrients. The requirement for an efficient glycan degrading systems exerts a major selection pressure on this microbial community. Thus, we propose that these bacteria represent a substantial resource for discovering novel carbohydrate active enzymes. To test this hypothesis, we focused on enzymes that hydrolyze rhamnosidic bonds, as cleavage of these linkages is chemically challenging and there is a paucity of information on L-rhamnosidases. Here we… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Instead of being located in the usually conserved active site pocket on the anterior side of the beta-propeller, however, the monosaccharide was bound in a shallow cleft on the posterior side of the enzyme. By site-directed mutagenesis, Munoz-Munoz et al (8) confirmed that this posterior cleft was indeed the active site of this new family of GHs. This result is outstanding, because in the majority of cases, the positions of active sites are conserved within a given fold (9,10).…”
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confidence: 86%
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“…Instead of being located in the usually conserved active site pocket on the anterior side of the beta-propeller, however, the monosaccharide was bound in a shallow cleft on the posterior side of the enzyme. By site-directed mutagenesis, Munoz-Munoz et al (8) confirmed that this posterior cleft was indeed the active site of this new family of GHs. This result is outstanding, because in the majority of cases, the positions of active sites are conserved within a given fold (9,10).…”
mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…A catalytic histidine remains a very uncommon catalytic residue for GHs and has previously been suggested to play a role in members of family GH117 α-1,3-(3,6-anhydro)-L-galactosidases (13,14), where it replaces the catalytic acid base that protonates the oxygen of the glycosidic linkage. In the mechanism proposed by Munoz-Munoz et al (8), however, the histidine residue is the only catalytic residue and abstracts the proton at the O2 position, implying that an epoxy intermediate is formed. This reaction intermediate, to date, is rare in carbohydrates and has been proposed to occur also in family GH99 α-mannosidases (15).…”
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confidence: 93%
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