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


CAZypedia needs your help!

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 See a page that's out-of-date and just needs a touch-up?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.
Scientists at all career stages, including students, are welcome to contribute.
Learn more about CAZypedia's misson here and in this article. Totally new to the CAZy classification? Read this first.

Glycoside Hydrolase Family 72

From CAZypedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Approve icon-50px.png

This page has been approved by the Responsible Curator as essentially complete. CAZypedia is a living document, so further improvement of this page is still possible. If you would like to suggest an addition or correction, please contact the page's Responsible Curator directly by e-mail.


Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH72
Clan none, (βα)8 fold
Mechanism retaining
Active site residues known
CAZy DB link
https://www.cazy.org/GH72.html


Substrate specificities

The GH72 family is formed exclusively by transglycosylases of the fungal kindgom whose activity was firstly characterized in Aspergillus fumigatus [1] and yeasts [2, 3, 4]. These GPI-anchored plasma membrane enzymes elongate and remodel the β-1,3 glucan of the cell wall [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]. This activity is due to their catalytic domain is located in the external part of the plasma membrane. Two sub-families have been described for GH72 family members depending on the presence or absence of a C-terminal cysteine rich domain (carbohydrate binding domain, CBM43) in addition to the catalytic domain [10].

Kinetics and Mechanism

The catalysis by GH72 family enzymes occurs via a classical Koshland retaining mechanism, which leads to net retention of the β-anomeric configuration of the final product. Enzymatic kinetics were determined by HPLC and showed that these enzymes are transglycosylases rather than glycoside hydrolases. These enzymes cleave internally a β-1,3-glucan molecule and transfer the newly generated reducing end to the non-reducing end of a second β-1,3-glucan molecule through a β-1,3-linkage, resulting in the elongation of the chain. The minimum size of the donor and acceptor substrates described in few fungal species are laminaridecaose and laminaripentaose, respectively [1, 11]. Despite that the overall mechanisms of hydrolysis and transglycosylation are well known, it is still unclear how transglycosylases limit or prevent hydrolysis in aqueous media, where the concentration of water is 55 M. By structural studies with different laminarioligosaccharides and enzymatic activity assays, a “base occlusion mechanism”, in which the acceptor sugar blocks the entrance of water molecules, was proposed to explain this phenomenon [12].

Catalytic Residues

Multiple sequence alignments have highlighted conserved amino acid between GH72 family members [13]. Hydrophobic cluster analysis allowed to identify two highly conserved glutamate residues in the region comparable to the C-terminal end of strands β-4 and β-7 of Clostridium cellulolyticum endoglucanase A (a GH5 member) [2]. Site-direct mutagenesis of these two glutamate residues in A. fumigatus Gel1p and S. cerevisiae Gas1p have shown their essentiality for the transglycosidase activity [3, 13] and support that these residues are the acid-base and nucleophilic residues responsible for the catalytic mechanism. The identity of these residues were further confirmed by the resolution of the crystal structure of S. cerevisiae Gas2 (ScGas2)

Figure 1. Figure legend.

(see below) [12].

Three-dimensional structures

The only three-dimensional structure available is that of ScGas2

Figure 1. Figure legend.

. The enzyme folds as a (beta/alpha)8 barrel similar to that prevailing in other families constituting Clan GH-A [12]. The full length enzyme also harbors a CBM43 module at the C-terminus. The crystal structure also showed that both domains share extensive contacts [12].

Family Firsts

First stereochemistry determination

β-1,3-glucanosyltransglycosilase (Gel1p) from Aspergillus fumigatus [1]

First catalytic nucleophile identification

Shown in the β-1,3-glucanosyltransglycosilase (Gel1p) from Aspergillus fumigatus [13]

First general acid/base residue identification

Shown in the β-1,3-glucanosyltransglycosilase (Gel1p) from Aspergillus fumigatus [13]

First 3-D structure
ScGas2 crystal structure [12]

References

Error fetching PMID 8900166:
Error fetching PMID 10809732:
Error fetching PMID 15355340:
Error fetching PMID 18410286:
Error fetching PMID 10809732:
Error fetching PMID 15916615:
Error fetching PMID 20543062:
Error fetching PMID 21124977:
Error fetching PMID 17189486:
Error fetching PMID 17397106:
Error fetching PMID 21651500:
Error fetching PMID 19097997:
Error fetching PMID 10769178:
  1. Error fetching PMID 8900166: [Hartland1996]
  2. Error fetching PMID 10809732: [Mouyna2000]
  3. Error fetching PMID 15355340: [Carotti2004]
  4. Error fetching PMID 18410286: [deMedina-Redondo2008]
  5. Error fetching PMID 10809732: [Mouyna2000a]
  6. Error fetching PMID 15916615: [Mouyna2005]
  7. Error fetching PMID 20543062: [Gastebois2010]
  8. Error fetching PMID 21124977: [deMedina-Redondo2010]
  9. Error fetching PMID 17189486: [Ragni2007a]
  10. Error fetching PMID 17397106: [Ragni2007b]
  11. Error fetching PMID 21651500: [Mazan2011]
  12. Error fetching PMID 19097997: [Hurtado-Guerrero2009]
  13. Error fetching PMID 10769178: [Mouyna2000b]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed