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Plant Physiol, December 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 1515-1519
SCIENTIFIC CORRESPONDENCE
Glycoside Hydrolases and Glycosyltransferases. Families, Modules,
and Implications for Genomics1
Bernard
Henrissat* and
Gideon J.
Davies
Architecture et Fonction des Macromolécules Biologiques,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité Mixte de
Recherche 6098, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille
cedex 20, France (B.H.); and Department of Chemistry, Structural
Biology Laboratory, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD,
United Kingdom (G.J.D.)
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ARTICLE |
One of the first insights into the
modular nature of carbohydrate-active enzymes was provided by the
dissection of a plant cell wall-degrading enzyme into two functional
modules (van Tilbeurgh et al., 1986 ). The general
architecture deduced for this protein featured two independent globular
modules: a cellulase catalytic domain, responsible for the hydrolysis
reaction itself, and a cellulose-binding module, devoid of catalytic
activity but promoting adsorption of the enzyme onto insoluble
crystalline cellulose. Similar observations were made for other
polysaccharide-degrading enzymes such as plant chitinases (Lucas et
al., 1985 ; Shinshi et al., 1990 ; Lerner and Raikhel, 1992 ). In the
early 1990s it was shown that this modular structure could be deduced
from sequence examination alone (Gilkes et al., 1991 ). It is now clear
that the two major classes of carbohydrate-active enzymes, glycoside hydrolases and glycosyltransferases, frequently display a modular structure (Figs. 1 and
2). In the genomic era, this modularity is of particular importance for correct open reading frame (ORF) annotation and functional prediction.

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Figure 1.
Top, Examples of modular glycoside
hydrolases and related proteins. The yellow boxes represent the
catalytic domain with the glycoside hydrolase family number indicated
after GH. The function of the protein is indicated in parentheses where
it was experimentally determined. Carbohydrate-binding modules are
shown in blue with the family number appearing after CBM, gray boxes
labeled UNK represent regions of unknown function, black boxes labeled
TM represent transmembrane segments, other modules are indicated by
their function (esterase) or name (dockerin; FN3, fibronectin type
III-like), and pink boxes labeled X8 represent a newly identified
module family found in plants (see text). When two consecutive modules
are separated by a clearly identifiable linker peptide, the
peptide is indicated by a horizontal line. Bottom, Multiple
sequence alignment of Chrk1 with selected family GH18 members:
chitinase V of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum; Q43591);
Serratia marcescens chitinase A (P07254); Hevea
brasiliensis chitinase (hevamine; P23472); and concanavalin B of
Canavalia ensiformis (P49347). Similarities are outlined in
gray; the secondary structure (b for strand, a for helix) found in the
three-dimensional structures of the chitinases from S. marcescens, H. brasiliensis, and concanavalin B are
indicated under each sequence. The catalytic residue of chitinases is
noted in white on a black background.
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Figure 2.
Examples of modular glycosyltransferases
and related proteins. Pale-green boxes represent the catalytic domain
with the glycosyltransferase family number indicated after GT,
carbohydrate-binding modules are shown in blue with the family number
appearing after CBM, gray boxes labeled UNK represent regions of
unknown function, the yellow box represent a module belonging to
glycoside hydrolase family GH17, and the pink boxes on the last line
represent tetratricopeptide repeats. Other modules are indicated by
their putative function (myosin motor and esterase). Several chitin
synthases bear an N-terminal myosin motor protein and this strongly
suggests that chitin synthesis may be guided by association with
cytoskeletal structures (Fujiwara et al., 1997 ).
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A classification system of the catalytic domains of glycoside
hydrolases and transglycosylases into families based on amino acid
similarities was introduced a decade ago (Henrissat, 1991 ) and updated
regularly (Henrissat and Bairoch, 1993 , 1996 ). In marked contrast to
the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
enzyme nomenclature, the new classification scheme was designed to
integrate both structural and mechanistic features of these enzymes.
It is striking that the system based on sequence similarities
(hence also reflecting similar structural features) often grouped
enzymes of different substrate specificity in a single
"poly-specific" family. This classification system was later
extended to glycosyltransferases (Campbell et al., 1997 ). Over the
years the number of families of glycoside hydrolases and
glycosyltransferases has grown steadily and currently there are 82 and
47 families, respectively. These families, as well as others featuring
polysaccharide lyases and carbohydrate esterases, are available on
the continuously updated carbohydrate active enzymes
(CAZy) web server at
http://afmb.cnrs-mrs.fr/~pedro/CAZY/db.html.
It soon became clear that ancillary, non-catalytic modules were
frequently borne by polysaccharide-degrading enzymes (Svensson et al.,
1989 ; Gilkes et al., 1991 ; Raikhel et al., 1993 ). The first function
reported for these modules was the binding of insoluble polysaccharides
such as cellulose, chitin, and starch. Warren and his colleagues showed
that, like the families of catalytic domains, the
polysaccharide-binding modules also formed a number of distinct
families (Coutinho et al., 1993 ; Tomme et al., 1995 ; Warren, 1996 ).
Today, 24 families of carbohydrate-binding modules are known and
characterized, but the role of many families of ancillary modules that
could be detected by careful sequence comparisons remains unknown
(Coutinho and Henrissat, 1999a ). We have already detected over 60 such
modules of unknown function (termed "X" modules) by systematic
sequence analysis of a number of carbohydrate-active enzymes (P.M.
Coutinho and B. Henrissat, unpublished data). A further
complication is that with the present deluge of sequence data, modular
enzymes with more than one catalytic domain are discovered. Figures 1
and 2 show a few examples of modular glycoside hydrolases and
glycosyltransferases, many of which have particular relevance to plant science.
The classifications of carbohydrate-active enzymes and their associated
modules were shown to be of major importance for "pregenomic" applications. Three-dimensional structure is conserved within the
families (Davies and Henrissat, 1995 ; Henrissat and Davies, 1997 ). This
means that once the structure has been established for any
family member it may direct and inform strategies for investigation of
other members, including their structure solution by molecular
replacement and the homology modeling of related sequences.
Family-specific sequences have been used to design degenerate
oligodeoxyribonucleotide probes to isolate cDNA coding for other
members of the family (Sheppard et al., 1994 ). This approach has found
widespread application for functional cloning. Many families were shown
to be poly-specific. This is an example of divergent evolution to
acquire new substrate specificity (nature's protein engineering). In
contrast, many enzymes displaying identical substrate
specificity are found in different families displaying totally
unrelated three-dimensional folds (Davies and Henrissat, 1995 ). At the
catalytic level, for the enzymes performing reactions at sugar anomeric
carbon, the reaction can proceed either with net retention or inversion
of the anomeric configuration. Mechanism is dictated by the
location of functional residues within the three-dimensional structure
and hence by the sequence. Once the stereochemical mechanism is
established for one member of a family, it may be safely extended to
other members of that family (Gebler et al., 1992 ), i.e. catalytic
mechanism is conserved within each family.
Furthermore, because the catalytic residues are conserved within a
family once they have been identified in both position and function for
one member of a family, they can easily be inferred for all members of
the family. The absence of a catalytic residue in a member of unknown
function (if not a sequence error) generally indicates an interesting
alteration of the molecular mechanism or a lack of catalytic
activity. An example of this is the plant enzyme myrosinase involved in
the hydrolysis of anionic thio-glycosides named glucosinolates.
The crystal structure of myrosinase showed that one of the two
catalytic glutamates of the otherwise highly homologous
-glucosidases of family GH1 is absent and is instead replaced
by a Gln (Burmeister et al., 1997 ). Recent crystallographic work shows
that myrosinase has evolved to use ascorbate to replace the missing Glu
(Burmeister et al., 2000 ). Another example allows us to predict a
putative plant chito-oligosaccharide-signaling receptor. GenBank
accession number AF088885 encodes a 739-amino-acid protein from
tobacco, Chrk1. This ORF shows significant similarities with family
GH-18 chitinases. The similarity is, however, restricted to the first
345 residues of Chrk1. Furthermore, the C-terminal 390 residues of this
protein bear strong similarities to a large number of protein kinases,
the best scores being with a number of plant Ser/Thr kinases. The two
domains of Chrk1 are separated by a central, most likely
membrane-spanning, region (Figs. 1 and 3). Contrary to "classical" retaining
glycosidases where two catalytic residues perform the catalytic
reaction, family GH-18 chitinases use only one catalytic amino acid
together with "anchimeric" assistance from the substrate
(Terwisscha van Scheltinga et al., 1995 ). A close inspection of the
alignment around the catalytic region of family 18 chitinases (Fig. 1)
shows that Chrk1 lacks this catalytic amino acid, as does concanavalin
B from C. ensiformis (Hennig et al., 1995 ). No enzymatic
activity has been detected for concanavalin B and we therefore conclude
that the N-terminal domain of Chrk1 has also lost its catalytic
function. It may instead act as a carbohydrate-binding protein
separated from a protein kinase signaling domain via a transmembrane
helix. Although the similarity with chitinases makes it tempting to
suggest the receptor may bind chito-oligosaccharides or their
derivatives but the precise molecule that is recognized cannot be
inferred from sequence analysis alone. Our predictions are consistent
with the emerging picture of the modular structure of plant receptors,
with a recruitment of different extracellular domains, which are
fused onto intracellular protein kinases via a membrane-spanning
region. In this respect, Chrk1 has a modular organization reminiscent
of that of the brassinosteroid receptor or the human insulin
receptor.

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Figure 3.
A, Modeled structure of ORF T27I1.7 from
Arabidopsis (O80596), which consists of four repeats of a CBM22 module
(homologs are implicated in xylan binding; Charnock et al., 2000 ),
together with a family GH10 xylanase catalytic domain (Fig. 1). B,
Modeled structure for a putative plant oligosaccharide receptor. ORF
Chrk1 from tobacco (Q9SWX8) displays an extracellular domain with
homology to family GH-18 chitinases, but lacks the essential catalytic
acid residue. This domain is linked via a transmembrane segment to a
Ser/Thr kinase domain. This allows us to propose a model for
oligosaccharide signaling events in plants. These figures were drawn
with the MOLSCRIPT program (Kraulis, 1991 ) using Protein Data
Bank entries with accession numbers 1DYO and 1EOW (A) and 1CTN
and 3LCK (B).
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In the genomic era, the families and modular description of
carbohydrate-active enzymes have further advantages. The availability of a number of completely sequenced genomes allows us to search and
list all the carbohydrate-active enzymes possessed by the organism, as
was recently performed for Arabidopsis (Henrissat et al., 2001 ).
Furthermore, one can compare the carbohydrate-active enzymes content of
different genomes and derive information on the evolution of
carbohydrate metabolism such as the transfer of genes between species
(Coutinho and Henrissat, 1999b ).
One limitation with the family classifications is that a family can be
defined only when one of its members is characterized biochemically.
For example, the majority of -linked polysaccharides in plants are
synthesized by glycosyltransferase family 2 (GT-2) enzymes, but several
fungal and plant sequences, demonstrably not family GT-2 members and
thus potentially forming a separate glycosyltransferase family, are
annotated in sequence databanks as potential -1,3 glucan synthases.
The lack of direct experimental evidence for the UDP-glucose
glucosyltransferase activity of these proteins has prevented their
assignment to a glycosyltransferase family until a very recent report
demonstrated this activity unequivocally (Kottom and Limper, 2000 ). The
-1,3-glucan synthases now form family GT-48.
The plurimodular structure of carbohydrate-active enzymes has major
implications for genomic annotations and discovery of gene function. A
large number of annotations are incorrect because they reflect a hit
with a non-catalytic module only. A vivid example is with the proteins
carrying an approximately 100-amino-acid module termed "X8" (in
pink in Fig. 1). In a significant number of these proteins, the X8
module is found at the C terminus of a family GH-17 -1,3-glucanase,
suggesting -1,3-glucan-binding function. This module, however, is
also found fused to proteins that are not glycoside hydrolases and even
appears in isolation (Fig. 1). However, because the first occurrence of
a protein containing this X8 module was in a -1,3-glucanase, several
of the X8 proteins are misleadingly annotated as
" -1,3-glucanase-like" or as displaying "similarity to
-1,3-glucanase," even when the X8 module is not attached to a
catalytic entity. This family of modules, present in plant sequences
only, must have great significance as no less than 38 copies are found
in the Arabidopsis genome. The fact that this domain is found fused to
catalytic domains, in isolation, and linked to a transmembrane segment
points to a spectrum of different cellular functions. In addition to
the problems caused by modularity, further genomic annotation errors
occur because of the poly-specific nature of the sequence families.
This leads to both over-prediction, such as "putative cellulose
synthase" (when it is known that family GT-2 contains a vast spectrum
of substrate specificities from the synthesis of cellulose through complex cell surface glycolipid formation), and under-prediction, such
as "putative sugar hydrolase."
The modularity of carbohydrate-active enzymes is of a significance
that goes beyond plant science. With the rapidly growing number of
genomes being sequenced, great care must be taken to "dissect"
the various modules from single polypeptides or ORFs during
sequence comparisons. To aid this process, the modular description of
all carbohydrate-active enzymes is currently being undertaken in our laboratories.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
The help of Dr. Pedro M. Coutinho is gratefully acknowledged.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received September 8, 2000; accepted September 19, 2000.
1
This work was funded in part by the European
Commission (grant no. BIO4-97-2303). The Marseille and York
laboratories are supported by the Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research
Council, and the Wellcome Trust. G.J.D. is a Royal Society
University Research Fellow.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail bernie{at}afmb.cnrs-mrs.fr; fax
33-4-91164536,
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E.-K. Lim, C. J. Doucet, Y. Li, L. Elias, D. Worrall, S. P. Spencer, J. Ross, and D. J. Bowles
The Activity of Arabidopsis Glycosyltransferases toward Salicylic Acid, 4-Hydroxybenzoic Acid, and Other Benzoates
J. Biol. Chem.,
January 4, 2002;
277(1):
586 - 592.
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R. Sarria, T. A. Wagner, M. A. O'Neill, A. Faik, C. G. Wilkerson, K. Keegstra, and N. V. Raikhel
Characterization of a Family of Arabidopsis Genes Related to Xyloglucan Fucosyltransferase1
Plant Physiology,
December 1, 2001;
127(4):
1595 - 1606.
[Abstract]
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S. J. Charnock, B. Henrissat, and G. J. Davies
Three-Dimensional Structures of UDP-Sugar Glycosyltransferases Illuminate the Biosynthesis of Plant Polysaccharides
Plant Physiology,
February 1, 2001;
125(2):
527 - 531.
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A. A. Kelly and P. Dormann
DGD2, an Arabidopsis Gene Encoding a UDP-Galactose-dependent Digalactosyldiacylglycerol Synthase Is Expressed during Growth under Phosphate-limiting Conditions
J. Biol. Chem.,
January 4, 2002;
277(2):
1166 - 1173.
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