α-Glucan Recognition by a New Family of Carbohydrate-Binding Modules Found Primarily in Bacterial Pathogens
- 12 November 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 43 (49) , 15633-15642
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi048215z
Abstract
TmPul13, a family 13 glycoside hydrolase from Thermotoga maritima, is a four-module protein having pullulanase activity; the three N-terminal modules are of unknown function while the large C-terminal module is likely the catalytic module. Dissection of the functions of the three unknown modules revealed that the 100 amino acid module at the extreme N-terminus of TmPul13 comprises a new family of carbohydrate-binding modules (CBM) that a bioinformatic analysis shows are most frequently found in pullulanase-like sequences from bacterial pathogens. Detailed binding studies of this isolated CBM, here called TmCBM41, reveals a preference for α-(1,4)-linked glucans, but occasional α-(1,6)-linked glucose residues, such as those found in pullulan, are tolerated. UV difference, isothermal titration calorimetry, and analytical ultracentrifugation binding studies suggest that maltooligosaccharides longer than four glucose residues are able to bind two TmCBM41 molecules per oligosaccharide when sugar concentrations are below the CBM concentration. This is explained in terms of an equilibrium expression involving the formation of both a 1 to 1 sugar to CBM complex and a 1 to 2 sugar to CBM complex (i.e., a CBM dimer ligated by an oligosaccharide). The presence of an α-(1−6) linkage in the oligosaccharide appears to prevent this phenomenon.Keywords
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