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Molecular mechanisms of processive glycoside hydrolases underline catalytic pragmatism

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BST20230136

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This article discusses the difference between processive and distributive catalysis in enzyme conversion. It focuses on the processive catalysis in glycoside hydrolases, particularly the substrate-product-assisted processive catalysis in the GH3 family enzymes. The study of GH3 enzymes provides valuable insights for theoretical and practical applications in bioengineering.
Processive and distributive catalysis defines the conversion continuum, thus underpin-ning the transformation of oligo-and polymeric substrates by enzymes. Distributive catalysis follows an association-transformation-dissociation pattern during the formation of enzyme-reactant complexes, whereas during processive catalysis, enzymes partner with substrates and complete multiple catalytic events before dissociation from an enzyme-substrate complex. Here, we focus on processive catalysis in glycoside hydro-lases (GHs), which ensures efficient conversions of substrates with high precision, and has the advantage over distributive catalysis in efficiency. The work presented here exam-ines a recent discovery of substrate-product-assisted processive catalysis in the GH3 family enzymes with enclosed pocket-shaped active sites. We detail how GH3 j3-D-glucan glucohydrolases exploit a transiently formed lateral pocket for product displacement and reactants sliding (or translocation motion) through the catalytic site without dissociation, including movements during nanoscale binding/unbinding and sliding. The phylogenetic tree of putative 550 Archaean, bacterial, fungal, Viridiplantae, and Metazoan GH3 entries resolved seven lineages that corresponded to major substrate specificity groups. This analysis indicates that two tryptophan residues in plant j3-D-glucan glucohydrolases that delineate the catalytic pocket, and infer broad specificity, high catalytic efficiency, and substrate-product-assisted processivity, have evolved through a complex evolutionary process, including horizontal transfer and neo-functionalisation. We conclude that the definition of thermodynamic and mechano-structural properties of processive enzymes is fundamentally important for theoretical and practical applications in bioengineering applicable in various biotechnologies.

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