4.4 Article

Directed in Situ Inhibitor Elongation as a Strategy To Structurally Characterize the Covalent Glycosyl-Enzyme Intermediate of Human Pancreatic α-Amylase

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 48, Issue 45, Pages 10752-10764

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi901400p

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR)
  2. British Columbia Innovation Council (BCIC)
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Scholarship (NSERC)

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While covalent catalytic intermediates of retaining alpha-transglycosylases have been Structurally characterized previously, no Such information for a hydrolytic alpha-amylase has been obtained. This Study presents a new in situ enzymatic elongation methodology that, for the first time, has allowed the isolation and structural characterization of a catalytically competent covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate with human pancreatic alpha-amylase. This has been achieved by the use of a 5-fluoro-beta-L-idosyl fluoride warhead in conjunction with either alpha-maltotriosyl fluoride or 4'-O-methyl-alpha-maltosyl fluoride as elongation agents. This generates an oligosaccharyl-5-fluoroglycosyl fluoride that then reacts with the free enzyme. The resultant covalent intermediates are extremely stable, with hydrolytic half-lives oil the order of 240 11 for the trisaccharide complex. In the presence of maltose, however, they undergo turnover via transglycosylation according to a half-life of less than I h. Structural studies of intermediate complexes unambiguously show the covalent attachment of a 5-fluoro-alpha-L-idosyl moiety in the chair conformation to the side chain of the catalytic nucleophile D197. The elongated portions of the intermediate complexes are found to bind in the high-affinity -2 and -3 binding subsites, forming extensive hydrogen-bonding interactions. Comparative structural analyses with the related noncovalent complex formed by acarbose highlight the Structural rigidity of the enzyme surface during catalysis and the key role that Substrate conformational flexibillty must play In this process. Taken together, the structural data provide atomic details of several key catalytic steps. The scope of this elongation approach to probe the active sites and catalytic mechanisms of alpha-amylases is further demonstrated through preliminary experiments with porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase.

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