Abstract

Bacillus circulans T-3040 cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase belongs to the glycoside hydrolase family 66 and catalyzes an intramolecular transglucosylation reaction that produces cycloisomaltooligosaccharides from dextran. The crystal structure of the core fragment from Ser-39 to Met-738 of B. circulans T-3040 cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase, devoid of its N-terminal signal peptide and C-terminal nonconserved regions, was determined. The structural model contained one catalytic (β/α)8-barrel domain and three β-domains. Domain N with an immunoglobulin-like β-sandwich fold was attached to the N terminus; domain C with a Greek key β-sandwich fold was located at the C terminus, and a carbohydrate-binding module family 35 (CBM35) β-jellyroll domain B was inserted between the 7th β-strand and the 7th α-helix of the catalytic domain A. The structures of the inactive catalytic nucleophile mutant enzyme complexed with isomaltohexaose, isomaltoheptaose, isomaltooctaose, and cycloisomaltooctaose revealed that the ligands bound in the catalytic cleft and the sugar-binding site of CBM35. Of these, isomaltooctaose bound in the catalytic site extended to the second sugar-binding site of CBM35, which acted as subsite -8, representing the enzyme·substrate complex when the enzyme produces cycloisomaltooctaose. The isomaltoheptaose and cycloisomaltooctaose bound in the catalytic cleft with a circular structure around Met-310, representing the enzyme·product complex. These structures collectively indicated that CBM35 functions in determining the size of the product, causing the predominant production of cycloisomaltooctaose by the enzyme. The canonical sugar-binding site of CBM35 bound the mid-part of isomaltooligosaccharides, indicating that the original function involved substrate binding required for efficient catalysis.

Highlights

  • Cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase catalyzes an intramolecular transglucosylation reaction and produces cycloisomaltooligosaccharides from dextran

  • Bacillus circulans T-3040 cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase belongs to the glycoside hydrolase family 66 and catalyzes an intramolecular transglucosylation reaction that produces cycloisomaltooligosaccharides from dextran

  • Structural analysis using the ligandbound structures verified the catalytic nucleophile Asp-385 and identified the catalytic acid/base Glu-453. Besides these glycoside hydrolase family 66 (GH66) core structural domains, BcCITase has two extra carbohydrate-binding module family 35 (CBM35) domains; one is inserted in the middle part of the conserved region, and this domain is common in cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase (CITase) (BcCBM35-1); another is in the C-terminal region (BcCBM35-2) [20, 21]

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Summary

Background

Cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase catalyzes an intramolecular transglucosylation reaction and produces cycloisomaltooligosaccharides from dextran. The isomaltoheptaose and cycloisomaltooctaose bound in the catalytic cleft with a circular structure around Met-310, representing the enzyme1⁄7product complex These structures collectively indicated that CBM35 functions in determining the size of the product, causing the predominant production of cycloisomaltooctaose by the enzyme. CIs are produced from dextran via an intramolecular transglycosylation catalyzed by the enzyme cycloisomaltooligosaccharide glucanotransferase (CITase; EC 2.4.1.248). Structural analysis using the ligandbound structures verified the catalytic nucleophile Asp-385 and identified the catalytic acid/base Glu-453 Besides these GH66 core structural domains, BcCITase has two extra carbohydrate-binding module family 35 (CBM35) domains; one is inserted in the middle part of the conserved region, and this domain is common in CITases (BcCBM35-1); another is in the C-terminal region (BcCBM35-2) [20, 21]. The novel function of the inserted domain of CBM35 in the product size determination is addressed

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