4.3 Article

Endopolygalacturonases reveal molecular features for processivity pattern and tolerance towards acetylated pectin

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2008.09.004

Keywords

Acetylated homogalacturonan; Tolerance profile; Processivity pattern; Oligogalacturonates docking; Normal mode analysis

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Endopolygalacturonases (EndoPGs) hydrolyse the 1-4 linkages between two -D-galacturonic acids (GalA) of the smooth homogalacturonan regions of pectin. GalA may be methyl-esterified oil the carboxylic group and acetyl-esterified oil the hydroxylic groups. EndoPG activity most often decreases with such increasing degree of substitution. [it this paper, We used bioinformatics and molecular modelling technics to explain the tolerance profile at the molecular scale and processivity scheme of three endoPGs with respect to acetylated pectin Substrate: the first two enzymes originate front Aspergillus niger (AnPGI and AnPGII) and the third from Fusarium moniliforme (FmPG). Partly acetylated and methylated homogalacturonan fragments in complex with the three PGs were Successively modelled in silico. The amino acid residues involved in Substrate binding were identified for each enzyme. Similarly. the docking pattern of the differently decorated oligomers in the catalytic groove was individually characterized for each enzyme. This work shows full agreement with out previous extensive mass spectrometry analysis of the hydrolytic products that established distinct tolerance profiles for the three endoPGs and earlier work that ascertained processivity, specifically for AnPGI. In out, previous work, AnPGI was shown to be the most powerful enzyme among the three enzymes with an enhanced tolerance towards O2- and O3-acetylated substrates. We report here amino acids of AnPGI that are unique in binding the pectin backbone and that are identified as possibly crucial for its specificity. namely S191(AnPGI)/D240(AnPGI). Similarly, topologically equivalent residues in AnPGII and NOG were identified that could impede such binding; S234(AnPGII)/S91(AnPGII) and S245(FmPG)/V89(FmPG). In addition, we report here, from normal mode analysis computed oil AnPGI, a shear bending motion of 15 A of amplitude that fully accredits the processive action pattern for this enzyme, with D240(AnPGI) and R96(AnPGI) working as crampons to favour the slitting of the substrate. Conversely, the same method clearly evidences a hinge binding motion for AnPGII and FmPG that should only authorize one hydrolytic event per enzyme/substrate encounter. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available