Galactomyces geotrichum (Geotrichum candidum) (Oospora lactis) (Dipodascus geotrichum) (Geotrichum sp. DTQ-26.3) protein for triacylglycerol lipase I
Comment
Dipodascus geotrichum From Bertolini et al: Characterization of different lipase isoforms from various G candidum strains is difficult. Each strain contains two genes similar to the previously identified lipase I and lipase II: Lipase I :(PIR S59958 CBS178.71 , PIR S41090 ATCC 34614 , PIR S41091 NRCC 205002, PIR S41092 NRRL Y-552 and PIR S41093 NRRL Y 553) q1zzv0 from Galactomyces geotrichum BT107, A0FLP5 from Geotrichum sp. DTQ-26.3 Dipodascus geotrichum
(Below N is a link to NCBI taxonomic web page and E link to ESTHER at designed phylum.) > cellular organisms: NE > Eukaryota: NE > Opisthokonta: NE > Fungi: NE > Dikarya: NE > Ascomycota: NE > saccharomyceta: NE > Saccharomycotina: NE > Saccharomycetes: NE > Saccharomycetales: NE > Dipodascaceae: NE > Galactomyces: NE > Galactomyces candidum: NE
Fungal_carboxylesterase_lipase : geoca-2lipa Galactomyces geotrichum (Geotrichum candidum) Trichosporon fermentans (Geotrichum fermentans) WU-C12 Geotrichum candidum (Oospora lactis) (Dipodascus geotrichum) lipase I. protein for triacylglycerol lipase
Warning: This entry is a compilation of different species or line or strain with more than 90% amino acid identity. You can retrieve all strain data
(Below N is a link to NCBI taxonomic web page and E link to ESTHER at designed phylum.) Geotrichum sp. DTQ-26.3: N, E.
Geotrichum candidum: N, E.
Galactomyces candidum: N, E.
LegendThis sequence has been compared to family alignement (MSA) red => minority aminoacid blue => majority aminoacid color intensity => conservation rate title => sequence position(MSA position)aminoacid rate Catalytic site Catalytic site in the MSA QAPTAVLNGNEVISGVLEGKVDTFKGIPFADPPVGDLRFKHPQPFTGSYQ GLKANDFSSACMQLDPGNAISLLDKVVGLGNILPDNLRGPLYDMAQGTVS MSEDCLYLNVFRPAGTKPGDKLPVMVWIYGGAFVFGSSASYPGNGYVKES VEMGQPVVFVSINYRTGPYGFLGGDAITAEGNTNSGLHDQRKGLEWVSDN IANFGGDPDKVMIFGESAGAMSVAHQLIAYGGDNTYNGKQLFHSAILQSG GPLPYFDSTSVGPESAYSRFAQYAGCDTSVSDNDTLACLRSKSSDVLHSA QNSYDLKDLFGLLPQFLGFGPRPDGNIIPDAAYDLYRSGRYAKVPYITGN QEDEGTILAPVAINATTTPHVKKWLKYICSQASYASLDRVLSLYPGSWSE GAPFRTGILNALTPQFKRIAAIFTDLLFQSPRRVMLNATKDVNRWTYLAT QLHNLVPFLGTFHGSDLLFQYYVDLGPSSAYRRYFISFANHHDPNVGTNL QQWDMYTDAGKEMLQIHMIGNSMRTDDFRIEGISNFESDVTLFG
References
7 moreTitle: Molecular characterization of a Galactomyces geotrichum lipase, another member of the cholinesterase/lipase family Phillips A, Pretorius GH, van Rensburg HG Ref: Biochimica & Biophysica Acta, 1252:305, 1995 : PubMed
Geotrichum candidum secretes several lipase isoenzymes, differing in their selectively towards esters of long chain fatty acids with a cis-9 double bond. One group shows an absolute selectively towards these fatty acid esters, the other group has a more relaxed specificity and will also hydrolyze other long chain fatty acid esters. Galactomyces geotrichum secrets a lipase that has the same specificity as the latter group. The corresponding lipase gene was cloned from Galactomyces geotrichum. From an alignment of our enzymes' primary structure with those of different strains of Geotrichum candidum, remarkable conservation is evident and it is not yet possible to identify residues/structures responsible for differences in fatty acid specificity. Comparison of the GCL/GGL family with a variety of lipases from other sources, indicated that they are more related to mammalian than microbial lipases.
The fungus Geotrichum candidum produces extracellular lipases. Purification and characterization of different lipase isoforms from various G. candidum strains is difficult due to the close physical and biochemical properties of the isoforms. Consequently, the characterization of these enzymes and their substrate specificities has been difficult. We have determined the lipase genes present in four strains of G. candidum (ATCC 34614, NRCC 205002, NRRL Y-552 and NRRL Y-553) by molecular cloning and DNA sequencing. Each strain contains two genes similar to the previously identified lipase I and lipase II cDNAs. Our data suggest that no other related lipase genes are present in these strains. Each lipase-gene family shows sequence variation (polymorphism) that is confirmed by Southern-blot analysis. This polymorphism and the sequence differences between lipase I and lipase II have been localized within the previously determined three-dimensional structure of lipase II. Although most of the amino acid substitutions are located on the protein surface, some are present in structural features possibly involved in determining substrate specificity.
        
Title: 1.8 A refined structure of the lipase from Geotrichum candidum Schrag JD, Cygler M Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 230:575, 1993 : PubMed
A lipase from the fungus Geotrichum candidum is one of only three interfacially activated lipases whose structures have been reported to date. We have previously reported the partially refined 2.2 A structure of this enzyme. We have subsequently extended the resolution and here report the fully refined 1.8 A structure of this lipase. The structure observed in the crystal is apparently not the lipolytic conformation, as the active site is not accessible from the surface of the molecule. A single large cavity is found in the interior of the molecule and extends from the catalytic Ser to two surface helices, suggesting that this face may be the region that interacts with the lipid interface. The mobility of local segments on this face is indicated by temperature factors larger than elsewhere in the molecule and by the observation of several residues whose side-chains are discretely disordered. These observations strongly suggest that this portion of the molecule is involved in interfacial and substrate binding, but the exact nature of the conformational changes induced by binding to the lipid interface can not be determined.
Despite tremendous progress in the elucidation of three-dimensional structures of lipases, the molecular basis for their observed substrate preference is not well understood. In an effort to correlate the lipase structure with its substrate preference and to clarify the contradicting reports in the literature, we have compared the enzymic characteristics of two closely related recombinant lipases from the fungus Geotrichum candidum. These enzymes were expressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as fusions with an N-terminal poly(His) tag and were purified in a single step by metal-affinity chromatography. Their specific activities against a series of triacylglycerol substrates were compared using a titrimetric assay. The substrates varied in fatty acyl chain length, number of double bonds and their position along the chain. G. candidum lipases I and II (GCL I and GLC II) are markedly different with respect to their substrate preferences. For unsaturated substrates having long fatty acyl chains (C18:2 cis-9, cis-12 and C18:3 cis-9, cis-12, cis-15), GCL I showed higher specific activity than GCL II, whereas GCL II showed higher specific activity against saturated substrates having short fatty acid chains (C8, C10, C12 and C14). We have constructed a hybrid molecule containing the N-terminal portion of GCL I (including the flap covering the active site) linked to the C-terminal portion of GCL II. The hybrid molecule showed a substrate preference pattern identical to that of GCL II. These results indicate that sequence variation within the N-terminal 194 amino acids of G. candidum lipases do not contribute to the observed variation in efficiency by which the lipases hydrolyze their substrates. Moreover, it also shows that the flap region in GCL is not directly involved in substrate differentiation, even though this region is thought to be involved in recognition of the interface and in the activation of the enzyme.
        
Title: Molecular characterization of a Galactomyces geotrichum lipase, another member of the cholinesterase/lipase family Phillips A, Pretorius GH, van Rensburg HG Ref: Biochimica & Biophysica Acta, 1252:305, 1995 : PubMed
Geotrichum candidum secretes several lipase isoenzymes, differing in their selectively towards esters of long chain fatty acids with a cis-9 double bond. One group shows an absolute selectively towards these fatty acid esters, the other group has a more relaxed specificity and will also hydrolyze other long chain fatty acid esters. Galactomyces geotrichum secrets a lipase that has the same specificity as the latter group. The corresponding lipase gene was cloned from Galactomyces geotrichum. From an alignment of our enzymes' primary structure with those of different strains of Geotrichum candidum, remarkable conservation is evident and it is not yet possible to identify residues/structures responsible for differences in fatty acid specificity. Comparison of the GCL/GGL family with a variety of lipases from other sources, indicated that they are more related to mammalian than microbial lipases.
The fungus Geotrichum candidum produces extracellular lipases. Purification and characterization of different lipase isoforms from various G. candidum strains is difficult due to the close physical and biochemical properties of the isoforms. Consequently, the characterization of these enzymes and their substrate specificities has been difficult. We have determined the lipase genes present in four strains of G. candidum (ATCC 34614, NRCC 205002, NRRL Y-552 and NRRL Y-553) by molecular cloning and DNA sequencing. Each strain contains two genes similar to the previously identified lipase I and lipase II cDNAs. Our data suggest that no other related lipase genes are present in these strains. Each lipase-gene family shows sequence variation (polymorphism) that is confirmed by Southern-blot analysis. This polymorphism and the sequence differences between lipase I and lipase II have been localized within the previously determined three-dimensional structure of lipase II. Although most of the amino acid substitutions are located on the protein surface, some are present in structural features possibly involved in determining substrate specificity.
The structure of the Candida rugosa lipase determined at 2.06-A resolution reveals a conformation with a solvent-accessible active site. Comparison with the crystal structure of the homologous lipase from Geotrichum candidum, in which the active site is covered by surface loops and is inaccessible from the solvent, shows that the largest structural differences occur in the vicinity of the active site. Three loops in this region differ significantly in conformation, and the interfacial activation of these lipases is likely to be associated with conformational rearrangements of these loops. The "open" structure provides a new image of the substrate binding region and active site access, which is different from that inferred from the structure of the "closed" form of the G. candidum lipase.
        
Title: Cloning and sequencing of two chromosomal lipase genes from Geotrichum candidum Nagao T, Shimada Y, Sugihara A, Tominaga Y Ref: J Biochem, 113:776, 1993 : PubMed
Two chromosomal lipase genes (lip1 and lip2 encoding lipases I and II, respectively) were cloned from Geotrichum candidum by colony hybridization using lipase cDNAs as probes, and their nucleotide sequences were determined. Both genes contained 5'- and 3'-flanking regions in addition to their coding regions. The coding regions contained no intron, and there was 86% homology between their nucleotide sequences. However, no homology was observed between the flanking regions. The primer extension analysis showed that four transcription initiation sites were localized around 100-bp upstream from the ATG start codon of the lip2 gene. The putative promoter sequences of eukaryotic genes, CCAAT-----TATAAA, were found in the 5'-flanking regions of two lipase genes. These sequences might participate in the lipase induction by long-chain fatty acid. There were two inverted repeat sequences and a pyrimidine-rich sequence in the 5'-flanking region of lip2, but not in the 5'-flanking region of lip1. This specific structure of lip2 might reflect the higher transcriptional efficiency.
        
Title: 1.8 A refined structure of the lipase from Geotrichum candidum Schrag JD, Cygler M Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 230:575, 1993 : PubMed
A lipase from the fungus Geotrichum candidum is one of only three interfacially activated lipases whose structures have been reported to date. We have previously reported the partially refined 2.2 A structure of this enzyme. We have subsequently extended the resolution and here report the fully refined 1.8 A structure of this lipase. The structure observed in the crystal is apparently not the lipolytic conformation, as the active site is not accessible from the surface of the molecule. A single large cavity is found in the interior of the molecule and extends from the catalytic Ser to two surface helices, suggesting that this face may be the region that interacts with the lipid interface. The mobility of local segments on this face is indicated by temperature factors larger than elsewhere in the molecule and by the observation of several residues whose side-chains are discretely disordered. These observations strongly suggest that this portion of the molecule is involved in interfacial and substrate binding, but the exact nature of the conformational changes induced by binding to the lipid interface can not be determined.
        
Title: Pancreatic lipases: evolutionary intermediates in a positional change of catalytic carboxylates? Schrag JD, Winkler FK, Cygler M Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 267:4300, 1992 : PubMed
Comparison of the fold of lipases from Geotrichum candidum and from human pancreas identified a high degree of similarity which was not expected on the basis of their amino acid sequences. Although both enzymes utilize a serine protease-like catalytic triad, they differ in the topological position of the acid. We speculate that these proteins are evolutionarily related and that the pancreatic lipase is an evolutionary intermediate in the pathway of migration of the catalytic acid to a new position within the fold.
        
Title: Ser-His-Glu triad forms the catalytic site of the lipase from Geotrichum candidum Schrag JD, Li YG, Wu S, Cygler M Ref: Nature, 351:761, 1991 : PubMed
The Ser-His-Asp triad is a well known structural feature of the serine proteases. It has also been directly observed in the catalytic sites of two lipases, whose high-resolution three-dimensional structures have been determined 1,2. Lipases show a wide variety of sizes, substrate and positional specificities, and catalytic rates 3. They achieve maximal catalytic rates at oil-water interfaces. The fungus Geotrichum candidum produces several different forms of lipases, two of which have been purified to homogeneity 4,5. Two lipase genes have been identified, cloned and sequenced 6,7. Both code for proteins of 544 amino acids with a total relative molecular mass of about 60,000 (Mr 60K). The two forms are 86% identical. Their isoelectric points differ slightly, being between 4.3 and 4.6. About 7% of the total Mr is carbohydrate. Until now, only a low resolution structure of GCL has been reported 8, but no high resolution structure has followed. We now report the three-dimensional structure of a lipase from G. candidum (GCL) at 2.2 A resolution. Unlike the other lipases and serine proteases, the catalytic triad of GCL is Ser-His-Glu, with glutamic acid replacing the usual aspartate. Although the sequence similarity with the other two lipases is limited to the region near the active-site serine, there is some similarity in their three-dimensional structures. The GCL is also an alpha/beta protein with a central mixed beta sheet whose topology is similar to that of the N-terminal domain of human pancreatic lipase. As in the other lipases 1,2, the catalytic site is buried under surface loops. Sequence comparisons with proteins from the cholinesterase family suggest that they also contain the Ser-His-Glu triad.
        
Title: Does sequence similarity of human choline esterase, Torpedo acetylcholine esterase and Geotrichum candidum lipase reveal the active site serine residue? Slabas AR, Windust J, Sidebottom CM Ref: Biochemical Journal, 269:279, 1990 : PubMed
The cDNA clone of Geotrichum candidum (Geo.) lipase was isolated from the Geo. cDNA library by colony hybridization using 32P-labeled oligonucleotides corresponding to a partial amino acid sequence of this enzyme. The nucleotide sequence of the cDNA determined by the dideoxy chain terminating method included some partial amino acid sequences determined by Edman degradation, and the overall amino acid composition deduced from the cDNA coincided with that from amino acid analysis of this protein. The cloned cDNA coded a protein of 554 amino acids and a hydrophobic signal sequence of 19 amino acids. Geo. lipase contained the -Gly-X-Ser-X-Gly- sequence which is believed to form part of the interfacial lipid recognition site.