Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6659655 | The Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Enzyme catalyzed hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds is undertaken by glycoside hydrolases (GHs) in nature. In addition to a catalytic domain (CD), GHs often have carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) attached to the CD through a linker. Allosamidin binding to full-length GH18 Serratia marcescens ChiB and the catalytic domain only yield equal changes in reaction free energy (ÎGroâ¯=â¯â38â¯kJ/mol), enthalpy (ÎHroâ¯=â¯18â¯kJ/mol), and entropy (âTÎSroâ¯=â¯â57â¯kJ/mol). Interestingly, the change in heat capacity (ÎCp,r) was 3-fold smaller for full-length vs. the CD alone (â263 vs. â695â¯J/K mol). Allosamidin binding to the full-length isoform and the CD alone of the GH18 human chitotriosidase yielded different ÎGro (â46.9 vs. â38.9â¯kJ/mol) due to differences in ÎHro (â58.2 vs. â50.2â¯kJ/mol), while âTÎSro and (11.3 vs. 11.3â¯kJ/mol) and ÎCp,r (â531 vs. â602â¯kJ/mol) are similar. The results combined show that the nature of the linker region and CBM affect the thermodynamic signatures of active site ligand binding.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Kristine Bistrup Eide, Morten Sørlie,