1 research outputs found
Human Chitotriosidase-Catalyzed Hydrolysis of Chitosan
Chitotriosidase (HCHT) is one of two family 18 chitinases
produced
by humans, the other being acidic mammalian chitinase (AMCase). The
enzyme is thought to be part of the human defense mechanism against
fungal parasites, but its precise role and the details of its enzymatic
properties have not yet been fully unraveled. We have studied the
properties of HCHT by analyzing how the enzyme acts on high-molecular
weight chitosans, soluble copolymers of β-1,4-linked <i>N</i>-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc, A), and glucosamine (GlcN,
D). Using methods for in-depth studies of the chitinolytic machinery
of bacterial family 18 enzymes, we show that HCHT degrades chitosan
primarily via an endoprocessive mechanism, as would be expected on
the basis of the structural features of its substrate-binding cleft.
The preferences of HCHT subsites for acetylated versus nonacetylated
sugars were assessed by sequence analysis of obtained oligomeric products
showing a very strong, absolute, and a relative weak preference for
an acetylated unit in the −2, −1, and +1 subsites, respectively.
The latter information is important for the design of inhibitors that
are specific for the human chitinases and also provides insight into
what kind of products may be formed in vivo upon administration of
chitosan-containing medicines or food products