1w18
From Proteopedia
Crystal Structure of levansucrase from Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus
Structural highlights
FunctionSACB_GLUDI Releases fructooligosaccharides and levan, a high-molecular-mass fructosyl polymer, from sucrose. It acts more as a sucrose hydrolase than as a fructan polymerase. Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe endophytic Gram-negative bacterium Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus SRT4 secretes a constitutively expressed levansucrase (LsdA, EC 2.4.1.10), which converts sucrose into fructooligosaccharides and levan. The enzyme is included in GH (glycoside hydrolase) family 68 of the sequence-based classification of glycosidases. The three-dimensional structure of LsdA has been determined by X-ray crystallography at a resolution of 2.5 A (1 A=0.1 nm). The structure was solved by molecular replacement using the homologous Bacillus subtilis (Bs) levansucrase (Protein Data Bank accession code 1OYG) as a search model. LsdA displays a five-bladed beta-propeller architecture, where the catalytic residues that are responsible for sucrose hydrolysis are perfectly superimposable with the equivalent residues of the Bs homologue. The comparison of both structures, the mutagenesis data and the analysis of GH68 family multiple sequences alignment show a strong conservation of the sucrose hydrolytic machinery among levansucrases and also a structural equivalence of the Bs levansucrase Ca2+-binding site to the LsdA Cys339-Cys395 disulphide bridge, suggesting similar fold-stabilizing roles. Despite the strong conservation of the sucrose-recognition site observed in LsdA, Bs levansucrase and GH32 family Thermotoga maritima invertase, structural differences appear around residues involved in the transfructosylation reaction. Crystal structure of levansucrase from the Gram-negative bacterium Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus.,Martinez-Fleites C, Ortiz-Lombardia M, Pons T, Tarbouriech N, Taylor EJ, Arrieta JG, Hernandez L, Davies GJ Biochem J. 2005 Aug 15;390(Pt 1):19-27. PMID:15869470[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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