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Glucoamylase: structure/function relationships, and protein engineering

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DOI: 10.1016/S0167-4838(00)00232-6

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catalytic base; binding loop; O-glycosylated linker; site-directed mutagenesis; sequence replacement variant; mass spectrometry; bifunctional inhibitor; isothermal titration calorimetry; molecular recognition; pre-steady-state kinetics; three-dimensional structure

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Glucoamylases are inverting exo-acting starch hydrolases releasing beta -glucose from the non-reducing ends of starch and related substrates. The majority of glucoamylases are multidomain enzymes consisting of a catalytic domain connected to a starch-binding domain by an O-glycosylated linker region. Three-dimensional structures have been determined of free and inhibitor complexed glucoamylases from Aspergillus awamori var. X100, Aspergillus niger, and Saccharomycopsis fibuligera. The catalytic domain folds as a twisted (alpha/alpha)(6)-barrel with a central funnel-shaped active site, while the starch-binding domain folds as an antiparallel beta -barrel and has two binding sites for starch or beta -cyclodextrin. Certain glucoamylases are widely applied industrially in the manufacture of glucose and fructose syrups. For more than a decade mutational investigations of glucoamylase have addressed fundamental structure/function relationships in the binding and catalytic mechanisms. In parallel, issues of relevance for application have been pursued using protein engineering to improve the industrial properties. The present review focuses on recent findings on the catalytic site, mechanism of action, substrate recognition, the linker region, the multidomain architecture, the engineering of specificity and stability, and roles of individual substrate binding subsites. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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