Abstract

TnBgl1A from the thermophile Thermotoga neapolitana is a dimeric β-glucosidase that belongs to glycoside hydrolase family 1 (GH1), with hydrolytic activity through the retaining mechanism, and a broad substrate specificity acting on β-1,4-, β-1,3- and β-1,6-linkages over a range of glyco-oligosaccharides. Three variants of the enzyme (TnBgl1A_E349G, TnBgl1A_E349A and TnBgl1A_E349S), mutated at the catalytic nucleophile, were constructed to evaluate their glycosynthase activity towards oligosaccharide synthesis. Two approaches were used for the synthesis reactions, both of which utilized 4-nitrophenyl β-d-glucopyranoside (4NPGlc) as an acceptor molecule: the first using an α-glucosyl fluoride donor at low temperature (35 °C) in a classical glycosynthase reaction, and the second by in situ generation of the glycosyl donor with (4NPGlc), where formate served as the exogenous nucleophile under higher temperature (70 °C). Using the first approach, TnBgl1A_E349G and TnBgl1A_E349A synthesized disaccharides with β-1,3-linkages in good yields (up to 61%) after long incubations (15 h). However, the GH1 glycosynthase Bgl3_E383A from a mesophilic Streptomyces sp., used as reference enzyme, generated a higher yield at the same temperature with both a shorter reaction time and a lower enzyme concentration. The second approach yielded disaccharides for all three mutants with predominantly β-1,3-linkages (up to 45%) but also β-1,4-linkages (up to 12.5%), after 7 h reaction time. The TnBgl1A glycosynthases were also used for glycosylation of flavonoids, using the two described approaches. Quercetin-3-glycoside was tested as an acceptor molecule and the resultant product was quercetin-3,4′-diglycosides in significantly lower yields, indicating that TnBgl1A preferentially selects 4NPGlc as the acceptor.

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