Abstract

The glycoside hydrolase family GH57 is known as the second α-amylase family. Its main characteristics are as follows: (i) employing the retaining reaction mechanism; (ii) adopting the (β/α)7-barrel (the incomplete TIM-barrel) with succeeding bundle of α-helices as the catalytic domain; (iii) sharing the five conserved sequence regions (CSRs) exhibiting the sequence fingerprints of the individual enzyme specificities; and (iv) using the catalytic machinery consisting of glutamic acid (the catalytic nucleophile) and aspartic acid (the proton donor) positioned at strands β4 (CSR-3) and β7 (CSR-4) of the (β/α)7-barrel domain, respectively. Several years ago, a group of hypothetical proteins closely related to the specificity of α-amylase was revealed, the so-called α-amylase-like homologues, the members of which lack either one or even both catalytic residues. The novelty of the present study lies in delivering two additional groups of the "like" proteins that are homologues of α-glucan-branching enzyme (GBE) and 4-α-glucanotransferase (4AGT) specificities. Based on a recently published in silico analysis of more than 1600 family GH57 sequences, 13 GBE-like and 18 4AGT-like proteins from unique sources were collected and analyzed in a detail with respect to their taxonomical origin, sequence and structural features as well as evolutionary relationships. This in silico study could accelerate the efforts leading to experimental revealing the real function of the enzymes-like proteins in the α-amylase family GH57.

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