Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 2009-01-01

Aminoalcohols as probes of the two-subsite active site of beta-D-xylosidase from Selenomonas ruminantium.

Douglas B Jordan, Jeffrey A Mertens, Jay D Braker

Index: Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1794(1) , 144-58, (2009)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Catalysis and inhibitor binding by the GH43 beta-xylosidase are governed by the protonation states of catalytic base (D14, pK(a) 5.0) and catalytic acid (E186, pK(a) 7.2) which reside in subsite -1 of the two-subsite active site. Cationic aminoalcohols are shown to bind exclusively to subsite -1 of the catalytically-inactive, dianionic enzyme (D14(-)E186(-)). Enzyme (E) and aminoalcohols (A) form E-A with the affinity progression: triethanolamine>diethanolamine>ethanolamine. E186A mutation raises the K(i)(triethanolamine) 1000-fold. By occupying subsite -1 with aminoalcohols, affinity of monosaccharide inhibitors (I) for subsite +1 is demonstrated. The single access route for ligands into the active site dictates ordered formation of E-A followed by E-A-I. E-A-I forms with the affinity progression: ethanolamine>diethanolamine>triethanolamine. The latter affinity progression is seen in formation of E-A-substrate complexes with substrate 4-nitrophenyl-beta-d-xylopyranoside (4NPX). Inhibition patterns of aminoalcohols versus 4NPX appear competitive, noncompetitive, and uncompetitive depending on the strength of E-A-4NPX. E-A-substrate complexes form weakly with substrate 4-nitrophenyl-alpha-l-arabinofuranoside (4NPA), and inhibition patterns appear competitive. Biphasic inhibition by triethanolamine reveals minor (<0.03%) contamination of E186A preparations (including a His-Tagged form) by wild-type-like enzyme, likely originating from translational misreading. Aminoalcohols are useful in probing glycoside hydrolases; they cause artifacts when used unwarily as buffer components.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

One-proton catalysis by the alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase III of Monilinia fructigena.

1988-09-15

[Biochem. J. 254 , 899, (1988)]

Differential expression of α-L-arabinofuranosidases during maize (Zea mays L.) root elongation.

2015-05-01

[Planta 241(5) , 1159-72, (2015)]

Leaf-cutting ant fungi produce cell wall degrading pectinase complexes reminiscent of phytopathogenic fungi.

2010-01-01

[BMC Biol. 8 , 156, (2010)]

Visualizing and quantifying Fusarium oxysporum in the plant host.

2012-12-01

[Mol. Plant Microbe Interact. 25(12) , 1531-41, (2012)]

Novel bifunctional alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase/xylobiohydrolase (ABF3) from Penicillium purpurogenum.

2010-08-01

[Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76(15) , 5247-53, (2010)]

More Articles...