Abstract

Carbohydrate active enzymes, such as those involved in plant cell wall and storage polysaccharide biosynthesis and deconstruction, often contain repeating noncatalytic carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) to compensate for low-affinity binding typical of protein–carbohydrate interactions. The bacterium Saccharophagus degradans produces an endo-β-mannanase of glycoside hydrolase family 5 subfamily 8 with three phylogenetically distinct family 10 CBMs located C-terminally from the catalytic domain (SdGH5_8-CBM10x3). However, the functional roles and cooperativity of these CBM domains in polysaccharide binding are not clear. To learn more, we studied the full-length enzyme, three stepwise CBM family 10 (CBM10) truncations, and GFP fusions of the individual CBM10s and all three domains together by pull-down assays, affinity gel electrophoresis, and activity assays. Only the C-terminal CBM10-3 was found to bind strongly to microcrystalline cellulose (dissociation constant, Kd = 1.48 μM). CBM10-3 and CBM10-2 bound galactomannan with similar affinity (Kd = 0.2–0.4 mg/ml), but CBM10-1 had 20-fold lower affinity for this substrate. CBM10 truncations barely affected specific activity on carob galactomannan and konjac glucomannan. Full-length SdGH5_8-CBM10x3 was twofold more active on the highly galactose-decorated viscous guar gum galactomannan and crystalline ivory nut mannan at high enzyme concentrations, but the specific activity was fourfold to ninefold reduced at low enzyme and substrate concentrations compared with the enzyme lacking CBM10-2 and CBM10-3. Comparison of activity and binding data for the different enzyme forms indicates unproductive and productive polysaccharide binding to occur. We conclude that the C-terminal-most CBM10-3 secures firm binding, with contribution from CBM10-2, which with CBM10-1 also provides spatial flexibility.

Highlights

  • Synthesis and degradation, microbe–host interplay, and synthesis and mobilization of storage polysaccharides

  • The BaGH5CBM10 in the Bifidobacterium mannanase, which was needed for binding to galactomannan, but did not confer binding to cellulose or ivory nut mannan (INM), had the following distinct features: (i) substitution of the first tyrosine of the three aromatic residues critical for Avicel binding as demonstrated for C. japonicus CjGH10CBM10 [16], (ii) lack of two cysteines that form one of the two disulphide bridges, and (iii) a five-residue long insertion (Figs. 4 and S1)

  • The innermost SdGH5CBM10-1 linked to the catalytic domain (CD) of the S. degradans mannanase (Fig. 2) was found in the phylogenetic tree at a distance of characterized carbohydratebinding modules (CBMs) family 10 (CBM10)

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Summary

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Functional diversity of three tandem C-terminal carbohydrate-binding modules of a β-mannanase. Marie Sofie Møller1,* , Souad El Bouaballati, Bernard Henrissat2,3 , and Birte Svensson From the 1Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark; 2Architecture et Fonction des Macromolécules Biologiques, CNRS, Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille, France; and 3Department of Biological Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

Edited by Gerald Hart
Modular organization
Disulphide bridges
Results and discussion
Protein form
Conclusion and perspectives
Experimental procedures
Gene constructs
Protein production
Protein purification
Substrate specificity
Kinetic analysis
Rmi Rmo
Full Text
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