4.7 Article

Crystal Structure of α-Galactosidase from Lactobacillus acidophilus NCFM: Insight into Tetramer Formation and Substrate Binding

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 412, Issue 3, Pages 466-480

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2011.07.057

Keywords

glycoside hydrolase family 36; crystal structure; quaternary structure; substrate specificity; probiotics

Funding

  1. Danish Strategic Research Council's Program Committee on Health, Food and Welfare
  2. Danish Natural Science Research Council
  3. Center for Advanced Food Studies
  4. Carlsberg Foundation
  5. Danish National Research Council
  6. European Community

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Lactobacillus acidophilus NCFM is a probiotic bacterium known for its beneficial effects on human health. The importance of alpha-galactosidases (alpha-Gals) for growth of probiotic organisms on oligosaccharides of the raffinose family present in many foods is increasingly recognized. Here, the crystal structure of alpha-Gal from L. acidophilus NCFM (LaMel36A) of glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 36 (GH36) is determined by single-wavelength anomalous dispersion. In addition, a 1.58-angstrom-resolution crystallographic complex with alpha-D-galactose at substrate binding subsite -1 was determined. LaMel36A has a large N-terminal twisted beta-sandwich domain, connected by a long alpha-helix to the catalytic (beta/alpha)(8)-barrel domain, and a C-terminal beta-sheet domain. Four identical monomers form a tightly packed tetramer where three monomers contribute to the structural integrity of the active site in each monomer. Structural comparison of LaMel36A with the monomeric Thermotoga maritima alpha-Gal (TmGal36A) reveals that O2 of alpha-D-galactose in LaMel36A interacts with a backbone nitrogen in a glycine-rich loop of the catalytic domain, whereas the corresponding atom in TmGal36A is from a tryptophan side chain belonging to the N-terminal domain. Thus, two distinctly different structural motifs participate in substrate recognition. The tetrameric LaMel36A furthermore has a much deeper active site than the monomeric TmGal36A, which possibly modulates substrate specificity. Sequence analysis of GH36, inspired by the observed structural differences, results in four distinct subgroups having clearly different active-site sequence motifs. This novel subdivision incorporates functional and architectural features and may aid further biochemical and structural analyses within GH36. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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