Abstract
α-Glucan debranching enzymes hydrolyse α-1,6-linkages in starch/glycogen, thereby, playing a central role in energy metabolism in all living organisms. They belong to glycoside hydrolase families GH13 and GH57 and several of these enzymes are industrially important. Nine GH13 subfamilies include α-glucan debranching enzymes; isoamylase and glycogen debranching enzymes (GH13_11); pullulanase type I/limit dextrinase (GH13_12–14); pullulan hydrolase (GH13_20); bifunctional glycogen debranching enzyme (GH13_25); oligo-1 and glucan-1,6-α-glucosidases (GH13_31); pullulanase type II (GH13_39); and α-amylase domains (GH13_41) in two-domain amylase–pullulanases. GH57 harbours type II pullulanases. Specificity differences, domain organisation, carbohydrate binding modules, sequence motifs, three-dimensional structures and specificity determinants are discussed. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that GH13_39 enzymes could represent a “missing link” between the strictly α-1,6-specific debranching enzymes and the enzymes with dual specificity and α-1,4-linkage preference.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2619-2641 |
Number of pages | 23 |
Journal | Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences |
Volume | 73 |
Issue number | 14 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2016 Jul 1 |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Cell and Molecular Biology
Free keywords
- Carbohydrate binding modules
- Domain architecture
- Glycoside hydrolase family 13 subfamilies
- Multi-domain three-dimensional structure
- Phylogeny
- Sequence motifs and determinants
- Structure–function relationship
- Substrate specificity