Published July 22, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

On the donor substrate dependence of group transfer reactions by hydrolytic enzymes: insight from kinetic analysis of sucrose phosphorylase-catalyzed transglycosylation

  • 1. Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, Graz University of Technology, NAWI Graz, Petersgasse 10-12/I, A-8010 Graz, Austria
  • 2. Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, Graz University of Technology, NAWI Graz, Petersgasse 10-12/I, A-8010 Graz, Austria and Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology (acib), Krenngasse 37, A-8010 Graz, Austria

Description

We provide here the underlying data of the publication "On the donor substrate dependence of group transfer reactions by hydrolytic enzymes: insight from kinetic analysis of sucrose phosphorylase-catalyzed transglycosylation". Please find the abstract below.

Chemical group-transfer reactions by hydrolytic enzymes have considerable importance in biocatalytic synthesis and are exploited broadly in commercial-scale chemical production. Mechanistically, these reactions have in common the involvement of a covalent enzyme intermediate which is formed upon enzyme reaction with the donor substrate and is subsequently intercepted by a suitable acceptor. Here, we studied the glycosylation of glycerol from sucrose by sucrose phosphorylase (SucP) to clarify a peculiar, yet generally important characteristic of this reaction: partitioning between glycosylation of glycerol and hydrolysis depends on the type and the concentration of the donor substrate used (here: sucrose, α-D-glucose 1-phosphate (G1P)). We develop a kinetic framework to analyze the effect and provide evidence that, when G1P is used as donor substrate, hydrolysis occurs not only from the β-glucosyl-enzyme intermediate (E-Glc), but additionally from a noncovalent complex of E-Glc and substrate which unlike E-Glc is unreactive to glycerol. Depending on the relative rates of hydrolysis of free and substrate-bound E-Glc, inhibition (Leuconostoc mesenteroides SucP) or apparent activation (Bifidobacterium adolescentis SucP) is observed at high donor substrate concentration. At a G1P concentration that excludes the substrate-bound E-Glc, the transfer/hydrolysis ratio changes to a value consistent with reaction exclusively through E-Glc, independent of the donor substrate used. Collectively, these results give explanation for a kinetic behavior of SucP not previously accounted for, provide essential basis for design and optimization of the synthetic reaction, and establish a theoretical framework for the analysis of kinetically analogous group transfer reactions by hydrolytic enzymes.

Files

Files (54.2 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:86d70b3ba69fd8a228d641cda285664f
27.0 kB Download
md5:51cb0a1c7d0e0c4509d2c7688f046852
27.2 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
Journal article: 10.1002/bit.27471 (DOI)

Funding

European Commission
CARBAFIN – Carbohydrate-based fine chemicals: Development of a glycosylation platform cell factory and optimization of downstream processing for the sustainable production of glycosides. 761030