4.7 Review

Occurrence, characteristics, and applications of fructosyl amine oxidases (amadoriases)

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 86, Issue 6, Pages 1613-1619

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-010-2523-5

Keywords

Fructosyl amine oxidase; Amadoriase; Occurrence; Characteristics; Applications; Substrate specificity

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Amadori compounds, formed by the Maillard reaction between reducing sugars (e.g., glucose) and amines (e.g., lysine residues in proteins), are ubiquitous in nature and have been implicated in aging and several chronic diseases. Fructosyl amine oxidases (FAOXs) are a relatively new class of enzymes that cleave amadori compounds and have been found in fungi, yeast, and bacteria. This mini-review summarizes over a dozen of FAOXs with different substrate specificities have been isolated, characterized, and engineered to date. All known FAOX sequences except one have the consensus motif for the ADP-binding beta I +/- I-2-fold common to all FAD and NAD enzymes, and a recently solved crystal structure provides important clues for this class of enzymes. FAOXs have been explored for applications in diabetes diagnosis, detergents, and food processing. Given that naturally occurring FAOXs can only react directly with small glycated amino acids or short peptides, it is of great interest to engineer and expand the accessibility of the substrate binding sites of these enzymes.

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