Abstract (EN):
Carbohydrates perform a wide range of crucial functions in biological systems and
are of great interest for the food and pharmaceutical industries. -Galactosidase from Escherichia
coli catalyzes both the hydrolytic breaking of the very stable glycosidic bond of lactose and a
series of transglycosylation reactions. These reactions are crucial for the development of new
carbohydrate molecules, as well as the optimization of their syntheses. In this work we have
used computational methods to study the catalytic mechanism of hydrolysis and a set of distinct
transglycosylation reactions of a retaining galactosidase, with atomic detail, with lactose as the
natural substrate. The ONIOM method (BB1K:AMBER//B3LYP:AMBER calculations) was
employed to address such a large enzymatic system. Such a methodology can efficiently account
for the stereochemistry of the reactive residues, as well as the long-range enzyme-substrate
interactions. The possible importance of the magnesium ion in the catalytic reaction was
investigated, and it was found that, indeed, the magnesium ion catalyzes the transformation,
lowering the activation barrier by 14.9 kcal/mol. The calculations indicate that the formation of
(1-3) glycosidic linkages is thermodynamically very unfavorable. In contrast, the formation of
(1-6) glycosidic bonds is the most favored, in complete agreement with the enantioselectivity
observed experimentally. The data also clearly show the importance of the enzyme scaffold
beyond the first-shell amino acids in the stabilization of the transition states. It is fundamental
to include the enzyme explicitly in computational studies.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Contact:
mjramos@fc.up.pt