
Crystal structure of β-L-arabinobiosidase belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 121
Author(s) -
Keita Saito,
Alexander Holm Viborg,
Shiho Sakamoto,
T. Arakawa,
Chihaya Yamada,
Kiyotaka Fujita,
Shinya Fushinobu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0231513
Subject(s) - glycoside hydrolase , hydrolase , disaccharide , biochemistry , chemistry , stereochemistry , enzyme
Enzymes acting on α-L-arabinofuranosides have been extensively studied; however, the structures and functions of β-L-arabinofuranosidases are not fully understood. Three enzymes and an ABC transporter in a gene cluster of Bifidobacterium longum JCM 1217 constitute a degradation and import system of β-L-arabinooligosaccharides on plant hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins. An extracellular β-L-arabinobiosidase (HypBA2) belonging to the glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 121 plays a key role in the degradation pathway by releasing β-1,2-linked arabinofuranose disaccharide (β-Ara 2 ) for the specific sugar importer. Here, we present the crystal structure of the catalytic region of HypBA2 as the first three-dimensional structure of GH121 at 1.85 Å resolution. The HypBA2 structure consists of a central catalytic (α/α) 6 barrel domain and two flanking (N- and C-terminal) β-sandwich domains. A pocket in the catalytic domain appears to be suitable for accommodating the β-Ara 2 disaccharide. Three acidic residues Glu383, Asp515, and Glu713, located in this pocket, are completely conserved among all members of GH121; site-directed mutagenesis analysis showed that they are essential for catalytic activity. The active site of HypBA2 was compared with those of structural homologs in other GH families: GH63 α-glycosidase, GH94 chitobiose phosphorylase, GH142 β- L -arabinofuranosidase, GH78 α- L -rhamnosidase, and GH37 α,α-trehalase. Based on these analyses, we concluded that the three conserved residues are essential for catalysis and substrate binding. β- L -Arabinobiosidase genes in GH121 are mainly found in the genomes of bifidobacteria and Xanthomonas species, suggesting that the cleavage and specific import system for the β-Ara 2 disaccharide on plant hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins are shared in animal gut symbionts and plant pathogens.