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Glycoside Hydrolase Family 75

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This page is currently under construction. This means that the Responsible Curator has deemed that the page's content is not quite up to CAZypedia's standards for full public consumption. All information should be considered to be under revision and may be subject to major changes.


Glycoside Hydrolase Family GH75
Clan Not assigned
Mechanism Inverting
Active site residues Inferred
CAZy DB link
http://www.cazy.org/GH75.html


Substrate specificities

Glycoside hydrolases of family 75 include both eukaryotic (essentially fungal) and prokaryotic proteins. They have so far been characterized only from filamentous fungi. They are primarily of beta-1,4-chitosanases with endo-splitting activity [1, 2]. The analysis of the final product of hydrolysis of partially N-deacetylated chitosan by the GH75 chitosanase from Aspergillus fumigatus suggests that this enzyme cleaves preferentially GlcN-GlcN and GlcNAc-GlcN links in the polysaccharide chain [3].

Kinetics and Mechanism

Family GH46 enzymes are classified as inverting enzymes. This has been shown by 1H NMR for the enzyme from Aspergillus fumigatus using chitosan as substrate [3].


Catalytic Residues

A site-directed mutagenesis study performed on the enzyme from Aspergillus fumigatus expressed as a recombinant protein in Escherichia coli showed that Asp160 and Glu169 are essential for catalysis [3]. Both residues are strictly conserved among eukaryotic and prokaryotic GH75 family members


Three-dimensional structures

No three-dimensional structure has been solved for this family.


Family Firsts

First primary structure determination
Chitosanase from Fusarium solani f. sp. phaseoli [4].
First stereochemistry determination
Chitosanase from Aspergillus fumigatus [3].
First catalytic nucleophile identification
Not yet identified.
First general acid/base residue identification
Not yet identified.
First 3-D structure
Not yet determined.

References

  1. Shimosaka M, Nogawa M, Ohno Y, and Okazaki M. Chitosanase from the pathogenic fungus, Fusarium solani f.sp. phaseoli - purification and some properties. Biosci. Biotech. Biochem. 1993 57, 231-235.

    [Shimosaka1993]
  2. Cheng CY and Li YK. (2000). An Aspergillus chitosanase with potential for large-scale preparation of chitosan oligosaccharides. Biotechnol Appl Biochem. 2000;32(3):197-203. DOI:10.1042/ba20000063 | PubMed ID:11115392 [Cheng2000]
  3. Cheng CY, Chang CH, Wu YJ, and Li YK. (2006). Exploration of glycosyl hydrolase family 75, a chitosanase from Aspergillus fumigatus. J Biol Chem. 2006;281(6):3137-44. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M512506200 | PubMed ID:16330537 [Cheng2006]
  4. Shimosaka M, Kumehara M, Zhang X-Y, Nogawa M, and Okazaki M. Cloning and characterization of a chitosanase gene from the plant pathogenic fungus Fusarium solani. J. Ferment. Bioeng. 1996 82, 426-431.

    [Shimosaka1996]

All Medline abstracts: PubMed