Protein-Polysaccharide Interaction
The ability to visualise protein-polysaccharide interactions
has led to the discovery of novel protein-polysaccharide complexes
formed by cell-wall polysaccharides, new insights into the mechanisms
of action of enzymes and novel ways to probe heterogeneity of
polysaccharide structures.
Both sugar beet pectin and water-soluble arabinoxylans are
unusual in their ability to act as emulsifiers. In both cases
this has been attributed to residual protein that is difficult
to remove from the polysaccharide. In both cases AFM studies
have revealed protein attached to the polysaccharide.

For sugar beet pectin complexes the protein is attached at
one end of the carbohydrate chain. The pectin chain can be wound
around the protein or extended, and in the helical form, when
in contact with the substrate.
Water-soluble wheat pentosans contain protein (P)-arabinoxylan
(AX) complexes.
In both cases the role played by these complexes in cell wall
structure or its assembly is still unknown.
Most cell wall polysaccharides are heterogeneous structures.
The fact that proteins can be visualised bound to the chains
provides a means of mapping such structures. Site-directed mutagenesis
can be used to knockout catalytic activity whilst retaining
the binding specificity of enzymes. This has been demonstrated
through detecting the binding of inactivated xylanases to arabinoxylans.
The binding patterns can be analysed mathematically to distinguish
between random and non-random distributions of binding sites
along the molecules.
In
principle the methods could be used to analyse the mode of action
of enzymes. In some cases the complexes formed between enzymes
and polysaccharides provide clues to the mode of action.
A
model of the ring-like complexes formed between amylose, and
the starch-binding domain (SBD) of glucoamylase, has suggested
a novel molecular mechanism for the role of the SBD in enabling
glucoamylase to degrade crystalling starch.
Further Reading:
Kirby AR, Alistair J. MacDougall AJ & Morris VJ
Sugar Beet Pectin – Protein Complexes. Food Biophysics
1 (1) 51-56 (2006).
Morris VJ, Gunning AP, Faulds CB, Williamson G &
Svensson B.
AFM images of complexes between amylose and Aspergillus niger
glucoamylase mutants, native and mutant starch binding domains:
a model for the action of glucoamylase. Starke 57 (2005)
1-7.
Adams EL, Kroon PA, Williamson G, Gilbert HJ &
Morris VJ
Inactivated enzymes as probes of the structure of arabinoxylans
as observed by atomic force microscopy. Carbohydr. Res. 339
(2004) 579-590.
Adams LL, Kroon P, Williamson G & Morris VJ
Characterisation of heterogeneous arabinoxylans by direct imaging
of individual molecules by atomic force microscopy. Carbohydrate
Research 338 (2003) 771-780.
Gunning AP, Giardina TP, Faulds CB, Juge N, Ring SG,
Williamson G & Morris VJ.
Surfactant mediated solubilisation of amylose and visualisation
by atomic force microscopy. Carbohydrate Polymers 51
(2003) 177-182.
Juge N, Le Gal-Coëffet M-F, Furniss CSM, Gunning
AP, Giardina T, Kramhøft, B, Morris VJ, Svensson B &
Williamson G.
The starch binding domain of glucoamylase from Aspergillus niger:
overview of its structure, function, and role in raw starch
hydrolysis. Biologia 57 (2002) 230-245.
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