Specific characterization of substrate and inhibitor binding sites of a glycosyl hydrolase family 11 xylanase from Aspergillus niger 5

Tariq A. Tahir, Jean-Guy Berrin, Ruth Flatman, Alain Roussel, Peter Roepstorff, Gary Williamson, Nathalie Juge

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

71 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The importance of aromatic and charged residues at the surface of the active site of a family 11 xylanase from Aspergillus niger was evaluated using site-directed mutagenesis. Ten mutant proteins were heterologously produced in Pichia pastoris, and their biochemical properties and kinetic parameters were determined. The specific activity of the Y6A, Y10A, Y89A, Y164A, and W172A mutant enzymes was drastically reduced. The low specific activities of Y6A and Y89A were entirely accounted for by a change in k(cat) and K(m), respectively, whereas the lower values of Y10A, Y164A, and W172A were due to a combination of increased K(m) and decreased k(cat). Tyr(6), Tyr(10), Tyr(89), Tyr(164), and Trp(172) are proposed as substrate-binding residues, a finding consistent with structural sequence alignments of family 11 xylanases and with the three-dimensional structure of the A. niger xylanase in complex with the modeled xylobiose. All other variants, D113A, D113N, N117A, E118A, and E118Q, retained full wild- type activity. Only N117A lost its sensitivity to xylanase inhibitor protein I (XIP-I), a protein inhibitor isolated from wheat, and this mutation did not affect the fold of the xylanase as revealed by circular dichroism. The N117A variant showed kinetics, pH stability, hydrolysis products pattern, substrate specificity, and structural properties identical to that of the wild-type xylanase. The loss of inhibition, as measured in activity assays, was due to abolition of the interaction between XIP-I and the mutant enzyme, as demonstrated by surface plasmon resonance and electrophoretic titration. A close inspection of the three-dimensional structure of A. niger xylanase suggests that the binding site of XIP-I is located at the conserved "thumb" hairpin loop of family 11 xylanases.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)44035-44043
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume277
Issue number46
Early online date30 Aug 2002
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2002
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Amino Acid Sequence Asparagine Aspergillus Aspergillus niger BINDING Binding Sites chemistry Chromatography,High Pressure Liquid Circular Dichroism Cloning,Molecular COMPLEXES DNA Mutational Analysis Electrophoresis,Polyacrylamide Gel enzymology Food glycosyl hydrolase Hydrogen-Ion Concentration HYDROLASES Hydrolysis Immunoblotting INHIBITION Kinetics metabolism Models,Molecular Molecular Sequence Data Mutagenesis Mutagenesis,Site-Directed Mutation N-glycosyl Hydrolases Pichia PRODUCTS PROTEIN Protein Binding protein inhibitor Protein Structure,Secondary Protein Structure,Tertiary Proteins Sequence Homology,Amino Acid SPECIFICITY Spectrometry,Mass,Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization Substrate Specificity Support,Non-U.S.Gov't Surface Plasmon Resonance Time Factors Tryptophan Tyrosine Wheat xylanase Xylosidases

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