
Stability and structural analysis of α‐amylase from the antarctic psychrophile Alteromonas haloplanctis A23
Author(s) -
FELLER Georges,
PAYAN Françoise,
THEYS Fabienne,
QIAN Minxie,
HASER Richard,
GERDAY Charles
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1994.tb18883.x
Subject(s) - psychrophile , enzyme kinetics , amino acid , chemistry , alanine , alteromonas , alpha amylase , homology modeling , amylase , stereochemistry , peptide sequence , active site , enzyme , crystallography , biochemistry , biology , bacteria , genetics , gene
The α‐amylase secreted by the antarctic bacterium Alteromonas haloplanctis displays 66% amino acid sequence similarity with porcine pancreatic α‐amylase. The psychrophilic α‐amylase is however characterized by a sevenfold higher k cat and k cat / K m values at 4°C and a lower conformational stability estimated as 10 kJ · mol −1 with respect to the porcine enzyme. It is proposed that both properties arise from an increase in molecular flexibility required to compensate for the reduction of reaction rates at low temperatures. This is supported by the fast denaturation rates induced by temperature, urea or guanidinium chloride and by the shift towards low temperatures of the apparent optimal temperature of activity. When compared with the known three‐dimensional structure of porcine pancreatic α‐amylase, homology modelling of the psychrophilic α‐amylase reveals several features which may be assumed to be responsible for a more flexible, heat‐labile conformation: the lack of several surface salt bridges in the (β/α) 8 domain, the reduction of the number of weakly polar interactions involving an aromatic side chain, a lower hydrophobicity associated with the increased flexibility index of amino acids forming the hydrophobic clusters and by substitutions of proline for alanine residues in loops connecting secondary structures. The weaker affinity of the enzyme for Ca 2+ ( K d = 44 nM) and for Cl − ( K d = 1.2 mM at 4°C) can result from single amino acid substitutions in the Ca 2+ ‐binding and Cl − ‐binding sites and can also affect the compactness of α‐amylase.