Species | Mediterraneibacter faecis | |||||||||||
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Lineage | Bacteria; Firmicutes_A; Clostridia; Lachnospirales; Lachnospiraceae; Mediterraneibacter; Mediterraneibacter faecis | |||||||||||
CAZyme ID | MGYG000000249_00901 | |||||||||||
CAZy Family | GH13 | |||||||||||
CAZyme Description | Amylosucrase | |||||||||||
CAZyme Property |
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Genome Property |
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Gene Location | Start: 118208; End: 120058 Strand: - |
Cdd ID | Domain | E-Value | qStart | qEnd | sStart | sEnd | Domain Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cd11324 | AmyAc_Amylosucrase | 0.0 | 12 | 539 | 5 | 536 | Alpha amylase catalytic domain found in Amylosucrase. Amylosucrase is a glucosyltransferase that catalyzes the transfer of a D-glucopyranosyl moiety from sucrose onto an acceptor molecule. When the acceptor is another saccharide, only alpha-1,4 linkages are produced. Unlike most amylopolysaccharide synthases, it does not require any alpha-D-glucosyl nucleoside diphosphate substrate. In the presence of glycogen it catalyzes the transfer of a D-glucose moiety onto a glycogen branch, but in its absence, it hydrolyzes sucrose and synthesizes polymers, smaller maltosaccharides, and sucrose isoforms. The Alpha-amylase family comprises the largest family of glycoside hydrolases (GH), with the majority of enzymes acting on starch, glycogen, and related oligo- and polysaccharides. These proteins catalyze the transformation of alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 glucosidic linkages with retention of the anomeric center. The protein is described as having 3 domains: A, B, C. A is a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel; B is a loop between the beta 3 strand and alpha 3 helix of A; C is the C-terminal extension characterized by a Greek key. The majority of the enzymes have an active site cleft found between domains A and B where a triad of catalytic residues (Asp, Glu and Asp) performs catalysis. Other members of this family have lost the catalytic activity as in the case of the human 4F2hc, or only have 2 residues that serve as the catalytic nucleophile and the acid/base, such as Thermus A4 beta-galactosidase with 2 Glu residues (GH42) and human alpha-galactosidase with 2 Asp residues (GH31). The family members are quite extensive and include: alpha amylase, maltosyltransferase, cyclodextrin glycotransferase, maltogenic amylase, neopullulanase, isoamylase, 1,4-alpha-D-glucan maltotetrahydrolase, 4-alpha-glucotransferase, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, amylosucrase, sucrose phosphorylase, and amylomaltase. |
cd11334 | AmyAc_TreS | 2.47e-70 | 86 | 479 | 24 | 374 | Alpha amylase catalytic domain found in Trehalose synthetase. Trehalose synthetase (TreS) catalyzes the reversible interconversion of trehalose and maltose. The enzyme catalyzes the reaction in both directions, but the preferred substrate is maltose. Glucose is formed as a by-product of this reaction. It is believed that the catalytic mechanism may involve the cutting of the incoming disaccharide and transfer of a glucose to an enzyme-bound glucose. This enzyme also catalyzes production of a glucosamine disaccharide from maltose and glucosamine. The Alpha-amylase family comprises the largest family of glycoside hydrolases (GH), with the majority of enzymes acting on starch, glycogen, and related oligo- and polysaccharides. These proteins catalyze the transformation of alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 glucosidic linkages with retention of the anomeric center. The protein is described as having 3 domains: A, B, C. A is a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel; B is a loop between the beta 3 strand and alpha 3 helix of A; C is the C-terminal extension characterized by a Greek key. The majority of the enzymes have an active site cleft found between domains A and B where a triad of catalytic residues (Asp, Glu and Asp) performs catalysis. Other members of this family have lost the catalytic activity as in the case of the human 4F2hc, or only have 2 residues that serve as the catalytic nucleophile and the acid/base, such as Thermus A4 beta-galactosidase with 2 Glu residues (GH42) and human alpha-galactosidase with 2 Asp residues (GH31). The family members are quite extensive and include: alpha amylase, maltosyltransferase, cyclodextrin glycotransferase, maltogenic amylase, neopullulanase, isoamylase, 1,4-alpha-D-glucan maltotetrahydrolase, 4-alpha-glucotransferase, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, amylosucrase, sucrose phosphorylase, and amylomaltase. |
cd11356 | AmyAc_Sucrose_phosphorylase-like_1 | 8.10e-62 | 97 | 553 | 33 | 456 | Alpha amylase catalytic domain found in sucrose phosphorylase-like proteins (also called sucrose glucosyltransferase, disaccharide glucosyltransferase, and sucrose-phosphate alpha-D glucosyltransferase). Sucrose phosphorylase is a bacterial enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorolysis of sucrose to yield glucose-1-phosphate and fructose. These enzymes do not have the conserved calcium ion present in other alpha amylase family enzymes. The Alpha-amylase family comprises the largest family of glycoside hydrolases (GH), with the majority of enzymes acting on starch, glycogen, and related oligo- and polysaccharides. These proteins catalyze the transformation of alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 glucosidic linkages with retention of the anomeric center. The protein is described as having 3 domains: A, B, C. A is a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel; B is a loop between the beta 3 strand and alpha 3 helix of A; C is the C-terminal extension characterized by a Greek key. The majority of the enzymes have an active site cleft found between domains A and B where a triad of catalytic residues (Asp, Glu and Asp) performs catalysis. Other members of this family have lost the catalytic activity as in the case of the human 4F2hc or only have 2 residues that serve as the catalytic nucleophile and the acid/base, such as Thermus A4 beta-galactosidase with 2 Glu residues (GH42) and human alpha-galactosidase with 2 Asp residues (GH31). The family members are quite extensive and include: alpha amylase, maltosyltransferase, cyclodextrin glycotransferase, maltogenic amylase, neopullulanase, isoamylase, 1,4-alpha-D-glucan maltotetrahydrolase, 4-alpha-glucotransferase, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, amylosucrase, sucrose phosphorylase, and amylomaltase. |
cd11343 | AmyAc_Sucrose_phosphorylase-like | 2.99e-57 | 97 | 545 | 31 | 445 | Alpha amylase catalytic domain found in sucrose phosphorylase (also called sucrose glucosyltransferase, disaccharide glucosyltransferase, and sucrose-phosphate alpha-D glucosyltransferase). Sucrose phosphorylase is a bacterial enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorolysis of sucrose to yield glucose-1-phosphate and fructose. These enzymes do not have the conserved calcium ion present in other alpha amylase family enzymes. The Alpha-amylase family comprises the largest family of glycoside hydrolases (GH), with the majority of enzymes acting on starch, glycogen, and related oligo- and polysaccharides. These proteins catalyze the transformation of alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 glucosidic linkages with retention of the anomeric center. The protein is described as having 3 domains: A, B, C. A is a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel; B is a loop between the beta 3 strand and alpha 3 helix of A; C is the C-terminal extension characterized by a Greek key. The majority of the enzymes have an active site cleft found between domains A and B where a triad of catalytic residues (Asp, Glu and Asp) performs catalysis. Other members of this family have lost the catalytic activity as in the case of the human 4F2hc, or only have 2 residues that serve as the catalytic nucleophile and the acid/base, such as Thermus A4 beta-galactosidase with 2 Glu residues (GH42) and human alpha-galactosidase with 2 Asp residues (GH31). The family members are quite extensive and include: alpha amylase, maltosyltransferase, cyclodextrin glycotransferase, maltogenic amylase, neopullulanase, isoamylase, 1,4-alpha-D-glucan maltotetrahydrolase, 4-alpha-glucotransferase, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, amylosucrase, sucrose phosphorylase, and amylomaltase. |
cd11316 | AmyAc_bac2_AmyA | 1.17e-42 | 86 | 319 | 20 | 239 | Alpha amylase catalytic domain found in bacterial Alpha-amylases (also called 1,4-alpha-D-glucan-4-glucanohydrolase). AmyA (EC 3.2.1.1) catalyzes the hydrolysis of alpha-(1,4) glycosidic linkages of glycogen, starch, related polysaccharides, and some oligosaccharides. This group includes Chloroflexi, Dictyoglomi, and Fusobacteria. The Alpha-amylase family comprises the largest family of glycoside hydrolases (GH), with the majority of enzymes acting on starch, glycogen, and related oligo- and polysaccharides. These proteins catalyze the transformation of alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 glucosidic linkages with retention of the anomeric center. The protein is described as having 3 domains: A, B, C. A is a (beta/alpha) 8-barrel; B is a loop between the beta 3 strand and alpha 3 helix of A; C is the C-terminal extension characterized by a Greek key. The majority of the enzymes have an active site cleft found between domains A and B where a triad of catalytic residues (Asp, Glu and Asp) performs catalysis. Other members of this family have lost the catalytic activity as in the case of the human 4F2hc, or only have 2 residues that serve as the catalytic nucleophile and the acid/base, such as Thermus A4 beta-galactosidase with 2 Glu residues (GH42) and human alpha-galactosidase with 2 Asp residues (GH31). The family members are quite extensive and include: alpha amylase, maltosyltransferase, cyclodextrin glycotransferase, maltogenic amylase, neopullulanase, isoamylase, 1,4-alpha-D-glucan maltotetrahydrolase, 4-alpha-glucotransferase, oligo-1,6-glucosidase, amylosucrase, sucrose phosphorylase, and amylomaltase. |
Hit ID | E-Value | Query Start | Query End | Hit Start | Hit End |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CBL26996.1 | 0.0 | 1 | 613 | 5 | 617 |
AWY96820.1 | 0.0 | 12 | 613 | 10 | 611 |
QEK18306.1 | 0.0 | 4 | 613 | 2 | 611 |
CBL20810.1 | 0.0 | 77 | 613 | 1 | 537 |
QCU03906.1 | 0.0 | 77 | 613 | 1 | 537 |
Hit ID | E-Value | Query Start | Query End | Hit Start | Hit End | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7ESH_A | 6.11e-148 | 10 | 612 | 31 | 644 | ChainA, amylosucrase [Calidithermus timidus DSM 17022],7ESH_B Chain B, amylosucrase [Calidithermus timidus DSM 17022],7ESH_C Chain C, amylosucrase [Calidithermus timidus DSM 17022],7ESH_D Chain D, amylosucrase [Calidithermus timidus DSM 17022] |
5N7J_A | 2.89e-141 | 10 | 613 | 30 | 626 | Crystalstructure of Neisseria polysaccharea amylosucrase mutant efficient for the synthesis of controlled size maltooligosaccharides [Neisseria polysaccharea] |
4FLR_A | 1.62e-140 | 10 | 613 | 30 | 626 | Crystalstructure of Amylosucrase double mutant A289P-F290L from Neisseria polysaccharea [Neisseria polysaccharea] |
4FLQ_A | 1.62e-140 | 10 | 613 | 30 | 626 | Crystalstructure of Amylosucrase double mutant A289P-F290I from Neisseria polysaccharea. [Neisseria polysaccharea] |
4FLO_A | 2.29e-140 | 10 | 613 | 30 | 626 | Crystalstructure of Amylosucrase double mutant A289P-F290C from Neisseria polysaccharea [Neisseria polysaccharea] |
Hit ID | E-Value | Query Start | Query End | Hit Start | Hit End | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Q9ZEU2 | 4.49e-139 | 10 | 613 | 38 | 634 | Amylosucrase OS=Neisseria polysaccharea OX=489 GN=ams PE=1 SV=1 |
Q84HD6 | 6.34e-139 | 10 | 613 | 38 | 634 | Amylosucrase OS=Neisseria meningitidis OX=487 GN=ams PE=3 SV=1 |
A0R6E0 | 7.47e-45 | 67 | 375 | 34 | 344 | Trehalose synthase/amylase TreS OS=Mycolicibacterium smegmatis (strain ATCC 700084 / mc(2)155) OX=246196 GN=treS PE=1 SV=1 |
P72235 | 1.45e-44 | 66 | 388 | 13 | 344 | Trehalose synthase OS=Pimelobacter sp. (strain R48) OX=51662 GN=treS PE=3 SV=1 |
G0GBS4 | 1.40e-42 | 106 | 612 | 92 | 580 | Glucosylglycerate phosphorylase OS=Spirochaeta thermophila (strain ATCC 700085 / DSM 6578 / Z-1203) OX=869211 GN=Spith_0877 PE=1 SV=1 |
Other | SP_Sec_SPI | LIPO_Sec_SPII | TAT_Tat_SPI | TATLIP_Sec_SPII | PILIN_Sec_SPIII |
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1.000035 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 | 0.000000 |
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