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Analysis of the amino terminus of maize branching enzyme II by polymerase chain reaction random mutagenesis.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 2001 Feb 01; 386(1):62-8.AB

Abstract

Maize endosperm branching enzyme II (mBEII) plays a pivotal role in determining the quality of starch by catalyzing the synthesis of the alpha-1,6-branch points. While the central (alpha/beta)8-barrel and the C-terminal domains of mBEII have been analyzed previously, the possible role of its amino terminus in catalysis is still poorly understood. Because the amino terminus of mBEII shares very little sequence homology with other amylolytic enzymes, the Met1-Gly276 region of mBEII was randomly mutagenized under error-prone PCR conditions. Subsequent screening by a heterologous complementation system, utilizing an Escherichia coli strain devoid of the endogenous glycogen branching enzyme (glgB-), led to the recovery of mBEII mutants with altered iodine-staining patterns and reduced branching enzyme activities. The NR-625 mutant enzyme, which lacks the N-terminal 39 residues of mBEII due to a frameshift mutation introduced during the random mutagenesis, retained more than 70% of the wild-type activity. The chain transfer pattern and substrate preference of the truncated enzyme were almost identical to those of the wild-type mBEII. It appears that the N-terminal 39 residues of mBEII are neither required for catalysis nor involved in chain transfer. On the other hand, the Gln-to-Arg substitution at position 270 of mBEII resulted in the loss of more than 90% of branching activity. The Gln270 of mBEII, located at the beginning of the (alpha/beta)8-barrel domain, may be required for maximum enzyme activity.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Biochemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11361001

Citation

Hong, S, et al. "Analysis of the Amino Terminus of Maize Branching Enzyme II By Polymerase Chain Reaction Random Mutagenesis." Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, vol. 386, no. 1, 2001, pp. 62-8.
Hong S, Mikkelsen R, Preiss J. Analysis of the amino terminus of maize branching enzyme II by polymerase chain reaction random mutagenesis. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2001;386(1):62-8.
Hong, S., Mikkelsen, R., & Preiss, J. (2001). Analysis of the amino terminus of maize branching enzyme II by polymerase chain reaction random mutagenesis. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 386(1), 62-8.
Hong S, Mikkelsen R, Preiss J. Analysis of the Amino Terminus of Maize Branching Enzyme II By Polymerase Chain Reaction Random Mutagenesis. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2001 Feb 1;386(1):62-8. PubMed PMID: 11361001.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Analysis of the amino terminus of maize branching enzyme II by polymerase chain reaction random mutagenesis. AU - Hong,S, AU - Mikkelsen,R, AU - Preiss,J, PY - 2001/5/22/pubmed PY - 2001/6/23/medline PY - 2001/5/22/entrez SP - 62 EP - 8 JF - Archives of biochemistry and biophysics JO - Arch Biochem Biophys VL - 386 IS - 1 N2 - Maize endosperm branching enzyme II (mBEII) plays a pivotal role in determining the quality of starch by catalyzing the synthesis of the alpha-1,6-branch points. While the central (alpha/beta)8-barrel and the C-terminal domains of mBEII have been analyzed previously, the possible role of its amino terminus in catalysis is still poorly understood. Because the amino terminus of mBEII shares very little sequence homology with other amylolytic enzymes, the Met1-Gly276 region of mBEII was randomly mutagenized under error-prone PCR conditions. Subsequent screening by a heterologous complementation system, utilizing an Escherichia coli strain devoid of the endogenous glycogen branching enzyme (glgB-), led to the recovery of mBEII mutants with altered iodine-staining patterns and reduced branching enzyme activities. The NR-625 mutant enzyme, which lacks the N-terminal 39 residues of mBEII due to a frameshift mutation introduced during the random mutagenesis, retained more than 70% of the wild-type activity. The chain transfer pattern and substrate preference of the truncated enzyme were almost identical to those of the wild-type mBEII. It appears that the N-terminal 39 residues of mBEII are neither required for catalysis nor involved in chain transfer. On the other hand, the Gln-to-Arg substitution at position 270 of mBEII resulted in the loss of more than 90% of branching activity. The Gln270 of mBEII, located at the beginning of the (alpha/beta)8-barrel domain, may be required for maximum enzyme activity. SN - 0003-9861 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11361001/Analysis_of_the_amino_terminus_of_maize_branching_enzyme_II_by_polymerase_chain_reaction_random_mutagenesis_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -