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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Yeast trehalases: Two enzymes, one catalytic mission

José P. Guirao-abadSergi MaicasJuan-carlos Argüelles

subject

0301 basic medicineCytoplasm030106 microbiologyBiophysicsCatabolite repressionTrehalase activitySaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyBiochemistryCatalysis03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundCell WallTrehalaseTrehalaseMolecular BiologyPeptide sequencechemistry.chemical_classificationHydrolysisTrehaloseTrehaloseYeastCytosol030104 developmental biologyEnzymechemistryBiochemistry

description

Abstract Background Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide highly conserved throughout evolution. In yeasts, trehalose hydrolysis is confined to the enzyme trehalase, an α-glucosidase specific for trehalose as sole substrate. Two kinds of trehalase activity exist in yeasts: neutral and acid enzymes. Scope of the review This review makes a comparative survey of the main biochemical and genetic parameters, regulatory systems, tridimensional structure and catalytic mechanism of the two yeast trehalases. Major conclusions The yeast neutral and acid trehalases display sharp differences in biochemical features (optimum pH, Mr or amino acid sequence) physiological roles, subcellular location (cytosol vs vacuoles or cell wall) and regulatory control (phosphorylation vs catabolite repression). However, their identical specificity for trehalose is based on the presence of an (α/α)6 toroid folding structure in the active centre and a catalytic mechanism of anomeric inversion. General significance This review expands our knowledge of the homology, functional features and catalytic mechanisms of α-glucosidases in yeasts. It provides a further analysis of the correlation between structures and predicted biological roles of macromolecules.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbagen.2016.04.020