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Identifying critical unrecognized sugar–protein interactions in GH 10 xylanases from G eobacillus stearothermophilus using STD NMR
Author(s) -
Balazs Yael S.,
Lisitsin Elina,
Carmiel Oshrat,
Shoham Gil,
Shoham Yuval,
Schmidt Asher
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/febs.12437
Subject(s) - xylobiose , chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , xylanase , stereochemistry , two dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , binding site , crystallography , biochemistry , enzyme
1 H solution NMR spectroscopy is used synergistically with 3D crystallographic structures to map experimentally significant hydrophobic interactions upon substrate binding in solution under thermodynamic equilibrium. Using saturation transfer difference spectroscopy ( STD NMR ), a comparison is made between wild‐type xylanase XT 6 and its acid/base catalytic mutant E159Q – a non‐active, single‐heteroatom alteration that has been previously utilized to measure binding thermodynamics across a series of xylooligosaccharide–xylanase complexes [Zolotnitsky et al . (2004) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101 , 11275–11280). In this study, performing STD NMR of one substrate screens binding interactions to two proteins, avoiding many disadvantages inherent to the technique and clearly revealing subtle changes in binding induced upon mutation of the catalytic Glu. To visualize and compare the binding epitopes of xylobiose–xylanase complexes, a ‘ SASSY ’ plot (saturation difference transfer spectroscopy) is used. Two extraordinarily strong, but previously unrecognized, non‐covalent interactions with H 2 –5 of xylobiose were observed in the wild‐type enzyme but not in the E159Q mutant. Based on the crystal structure, these interactions were assigned to tryptophan residues at the −1 subsite. The mutant selectively binds only the β–xylobiose anomer. The 1 H solution NMR spectrum of a xylotriose–E159Q complex displays non‐uniform broadening of the NMR signals. Differential broadening provides a unique subsite assignment tool based on structural knowledge of face‐to‐face stacking with a conserved tyrosine residue at the +1 subsite. The results obtained herein by substrate‐observed NMR spectroscopy are discussed further in terms of methodological contributions and mechanistic understanding of substrate‐binding adjustments upon a charge change in the E159Q construct.