Structure and function of cereal and related higher plant (1→4)-β-xylan endohyrolases

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2003

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Simpson, D.
Fincher, G.
Huang, A.
Cameron-Mills, V.

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Journal of Cereal Science, 2003; 37(2):111-127

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David J. Simpson, Geoffrey B. Fincher, Anthony H. C. Huang and Verena Cameron-Mills

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Abstract

(1→4)-β-Xylan endohydrolases (EC 3.2.1.8) are key enzymes in the metabolism of heteroxylans, which are particularly abundant polymers in the cell wall matrix of cereals. They hydrolyse the internal(1→4)-β-xylosidic linkages of the xylan backbone of arabinoxylan, and together with other endo- and exohydrolases contribute to the degradation and re-modelling of plant cell walls. Their catalytic mechanism and substrate binding properties are largely deduced from (1→4)-β-xylan endohydrolases of fungal and saprophytic bacterial origin, since relatively few of plant origin have been studied. Recent advances in our understanding of the structure-function properties of a barley (1→4)-β-xylan endohydrolase has prompted us to re-examine the sequence data of four related cereal enzymes and to assemble a comprehensive comparison of their primary structure and predicted functional domains. The common structural motifs in these cereal enzymes are further compared with those of 11 related (1→4)-β-xylan endohydrolases, whose sequence was deduced from the Arabidopsis genome. Our structural analyses predict a role for several conserved residues and domains in either the carbohydrate-binding, catalytic activity, or sub-cellular localisation of these plant enzymes, whose future investigation could enhance our understanding of cell wall metabolism.

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