CAZypedia celebrates the life of Senior Curator Emeritus Harry Gilbert, a true giant in the field, who passed away in September 2025.


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We have many unassigned pages in need of Authors and Responsible Curators. See a page that's out-of-date and just needs a touch-up? - You are also welcome to become a CAZypedian. Here's how.
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Learn more about CAZypedia's misson here and in this article. Totally new to the CAZy classification? Read this first.

Difference between revisions of "Template:News"

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'''21 Jun 2012:''' ''A new home!'' ''CAZypedia'' has physically moved a few thousand kilometers around the globe, and is now been served to you from the [http://www.msl.ubc.ca/ Michael Smith Laboratories] at the [http://www.ubc.ca/ University of British Columbia] in VancouverIn conjunction with the move, we are extremely happy to report that [[User:Karen Eddy|Karen Eddy]], a summer project student at the MSL, has [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:BiblioPlus re-coded the buggy Biblio extension], so that now ALL literature references from PubMed are properly inserted into ''CAZypedia'' pagesPlease do [[Special:Contact|let us know]] if you experience any problems with ''CAZypedia'' following the move.
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'''23 January 2026:''' ''An oldie, but a goodie:''  As our first page of the new year, the '''[[Glycoside Hydrolase Family 71]]''' page, written by '''[[User:Antonielle Vieira Monclaro|Antonielle Vieira Monclaro]]''', was [[Curator Approved]] by '''[[User:Johan Larsbrink|Johan Larsbrink]]''' today. '''[[GH71]]''' is a family of mostly fungal alpha-1,3-glucanases that was established and subjected to mechanistic characterization in the early 2000sMore recently in 2025, the Yano and [[User:Johan Larsbrink|Larsbrink]] groups independently presented the first crystal structures of '''[[GH71]]''' members (from ''Schizosaccharomyces'' and ''Aspergillus'', respectively)''[[User:Antonielle Vieira Monclaro|Antonielle]] wrote an excellent overview of '''[[GH71]]''', which you should definitely check out '''[[GH71|here]]'''.''
 
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'''30 Apr 2012:''' ''A new cellulase fold:'' On April 27, '''[[User:Harry Gilbert|Harry Gilbert]]''' completed the '''[[Glycoside Hydrolase Family 124]]''' page here on ''CAZypedia.''  '''[[GH124]]''' is a comparatively new, but tiny, family in the CAZy classification.  This family is currently comprised of only three members (2 near-identical sequences from 2 ''Clostridium'' spp. and 1 from ''Ruminococcus albus''), but was defined as a GH family based on the demonstration of cellulase activity in one of the Clostridial membersRemarkably, this enzyme was also shown to have a ''α''<sub>8</sub> superhelical fold, which has not been previously observed in cellulases, but is rather found in diverse lysozymes and lytic transglycosylases of [[GH23]] active on bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan.
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'''8 December 2025:''' ''Just in time for the holidays:'' The '''[[Glycosyltransferase Family 138]]''' page by [[Author]] '''[[User:Wei Peng|Wei Peng]]''' and [[Responsible Curator]] '''[[User:Kim Orth|Kim Orth]]''' was [[Curator Approved]] today. '''[[GT138]]''' is small family of plant-associated bacterial members. The archetype from ''Pseudomonas syringae'', AvrB, is a rhamnosyl transferase that glycosylates the plant host protein RIN4 to effect programmed cell death (hypersensitive response)Also notable, AvrB has an unusual protein fold among [[glycosyltransferases]], based upon a "Fido" domain. '''''[[GT138]]''' represents one of a small, but hopefully growing, number of [[Glycosyltransferases|GT]] pages in ''CAZypedia'', whose unique features you should read more about '''[[GT138|here]]'''.''
 
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'''09 Mar 2012:''' ''β-glucuronidases!:'' Hot on the heels of their recent seminal structural and biochemical characterization of a '''[[Glycoside Hydrolase Family 79]]''' β-glucuronidase, '''[[User:Hitomi Ichinose|Hitomi Ichinose]]''' and '''[[User:Satoshi Kaneko|Satoshi Kaneko]]''' have just completed the '''[[GH79]]''' page in ''CAZypedia''. '''[[GH79]]''' is currently a rather small family comprised of enzymes from bacteria, fungi, plants, and mammals, which remove glucuronic acid (GlcA) or 4-''O''-methyl glucuronic acid from a diversity of substrates, ranging from secondary metabolites to structural biomolecules such as proteoglycans and arabinogalactan proteinsClick [[Glycoside Hydrolase Family 79|here]] to learn more about this interesting family!
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'''31 October 2025:''' ''A spooktacular addition to the CAZypedia family!'' Come and say 'Boo!' to the frighteningly well written '''[[CBM13]]''' ''CAZypedia'' page.  The '''[[CBM13]]''' family is a '''[[Carbohydrate-binding_modules#Blurred Lines: CBMs, Lectins and Outliers|lectin-like CBM family]]'''. Its first characterized members were lectins, including the B chain from the highly toxic [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricin ricin] toxin from ''Ricinus communis''.  This spine tingling read was authored by '''[[User:Scott Mazurkewich|Scott Mazurkewich]]''' and '''[[User:Lauren McKee|Lauren McKee]]''' who also acted as responsible curator. ''Come and visit the scariest of ''CAZypedia'' CBM pages, '''[[CBM13|here!]]'''...  if you dare...'' 
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'''29 July 2025:'''  ''[[CBM91]] is in the news!''  The xylan binding '''[[CBM91]]''' family ''CAZypedia'' page is up and runningAppended to mainly [[GH43]] xylanases this [[CBM91]] family drives interaction with substrate. The [[CBM91]] page was authored by '''[[User:Daichi Ito|Daichi Ito]]''' who also discovered the initial xylan-binding function which resulted in the creation of the [[CBM91]] CAZy family. ''Read up on this industrially interesting '''[[CBM91]]''' family '''[[CBM91|here]]'''.''
 
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Latest revision as of 07:14, 26 January 2026

23 January 2026: An oldie, but a goodie: As our first page of the new year, the Glycoside Hydrolase Family 71 page, written by Antonielle Vieira Monclaro, was Curator Approved by Johan Larsbrink today. GH71 is a family of mostly fungal alpha-1,3-glucanases that was established and subjected to mechanistic characterization in the early 2000s. More recently in 2025, the Yano and Larsbrink groups independently presented the first crystal structures of GH71 members (from Schizosaccharomyces and Aspergillus, respectively). Antonielle wrote an excellent overview of GH71, which you should definitely check out here.


8 December 2025: Just in time for the holidays: The Glycosyltransferase Family 138 page by Author Wei Peng and Responsible Curator Kim Orth was Curator Approved today. GT138 is small family of plant-associated bacterial members. The archetype from Pseudomonas syringae, AvrB, is a rhamnosyl transferase that glycosylates the plant host protein RIN4 to effect programmed cell death (hypersensitive response). Also notable, AvrB has an unusual protein fold among glycosyltransferases, based upon a "Fido" domain. GT138 represents one of a small, but hopefully growing, number of GT pages in CAZypedia, whose unique features you should read more about here.


31 October 2025: A spooktacular addition to the CAZypedia family! Come and say 'Boo!' to the frighteningly well written CBM13 CAZypedia page. The CBM13 family is a lectin-like CBM family. Its first characterized members were lectins, including the B chain from the highly toxic ricin toxin from Ricinus communis. This spine tingling read was authored by Scott Mazurkewich and Lauren McKee who also acted as responsible curator. Come and visit the scariest of CAZypedia CBM pages, here!... if you dare...


29 July 2025: CBM91 is in the news! The xylan binding CBM91 family CAZypedia page is up and running. Appended to mainly GH43 xylanases this CBM91 family drives interaction with substrate. The CBM91 page was authored by Daichi Ito who also discovered the initial xylan-binding function which resulted in the creation of the CBM91 CAZy family. Read up on this industrially interesting CBM91 family here.