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Springer, Biologia, 9(69), p. 1118-1121, 2014

DOI: 10.2478/s11756-014-0418-0

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Selectivity of the surface binding site (SBS) on barley starch synthase I

Journal article published in 2014 by Casper Wilkens ORCID, Jose A. Cuesta Seijo, Monica Palcic, Birte Svensson
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Starch synthase I (SSI) from various sources has been shown to preferentially elongate branch chains of degree of polymerisation (DP) from 6–7 to produce chains of DP 8–12. In the recently determined crystal structure of barley starch synthase I (HvSSI) a so-called surface binding site (SBS) was seen, which was found by mutational analysis to be essential for the activity of HvSSI on glycogen. We now show in binding studies using surface plasmon resonance that HvSSI has no detectable affinity for malto-triose and -tetraose, but clearly binds maltopentaose, -hexaose, -heptaose (M7) and β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) albeit with a measurable K D for only β-CD and M7. Moreover, an HvSSI SBS mutant F538A lost the ability to bind β-CD and maltooligosaccharides. This behaviour suggests that a chain in the α-glucan molecule (amylopectin) that is undergoing extension attaches itself at the SBS and that the active site itself, likely working on a different end chain, has low affinity for both substrate and product.