• Title/Summary/Keyword: acarviosine-glucose

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The Hypoglycemic Effects of Acarviosine-Glucose Modulate Hepatic and Intestinal Glucose Transporters In vivo

  • Chung, Mi-Ja;Lee, Young-Soo;Kim, Byoung-Chul;Lee, Soo-Bok;Moon, Tae-Hwa;Lee, Sung-Joon;Park, Kwan-Hwa
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.15 no.6
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    • pp.851-855
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    • 2006
  • Acarviosine-glucose (AcvGlc) is an ${\alpha}$-glucosidase inhibitor and has similar inhibitory activity to acarbose in vitro. We synthesized AcvGlc by treating acarbose with Bacillus stearothermophilus maltogenic amylase and fed C57BL/6J and db/db mice with diets containing purified AcvGlc and acarbose for 1 week. AcvGlc (50 and 100 mg/100 g diet) significantly reduced plasma glucose and triglyceride levels in db/db mice by 42 and 51 %, respectively (p<0.0001). The hypoglycemic and hypotriglyceridemic effects of AcvGlc were slightly, but significantly, greater than those seen with acarbose treatment (p<0.0001) in C57BL/6J mice. In an oral glucose tolerance test, glucose tolerance was significantly improved at all time points (p<0.01). The expression of two novel glucose transporters (GLUTs), GLUT10 and GLUT12, were examined by Western blot analysis. GLUT10 was markedly increased in the db/db livers. After AcvGlc treatment, the expression of hepatic GLUT10 was decreased whereas intestinal GLUT12 was significantly increased in both strains of mice. Our results show that AcvGlc improves plasma lipid and glucose metabolism slightly more than acarbose. Regulation of hepatic GLUT10 and intestinal GLUT12 may be important in controlling blood glucose levels.

Enzymatic Synthesis of Novel $\alpha$-Amylase Inhibitors via Transglycosylation by Thermotoga maritima Glucosidase

  • Kim, Sung-Hee;Lee, Myoung-Hee;Yang, Sung-Jae;Kim, Jung-Woo;Cha, Hyun-Ju;Cha, Jae-Ho;Nguyen, Van Dao;Park, Kwan-Hwa
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.302-307
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    • 2008
  • Novel amylase inhibitors were synthesized via transglycosylation by Thermotoga maritima glucosidase (TMG). TMG hydrolyzes acarbose, acarviosine-glucose, and maltooligosaccharide by releasing $^{14}C$-labeled glucose from the reducing end of each molecule. When TMG was incubated with acarviosine-glucose (the donor) and glucose (the acceptor), two major transfer products, compounds 1 and 2, were formed via transglycosylation. The structures of the transfer products were determined using thin-layer chromatography (TLC), high-performance ion chromatography (HPIC), and $^{13}C$ nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The results indicate that acarviosine was transferred to glucose at either C-6, to give a $\alpha-(1{\rightarrow}6$) glycosidic linkage, or at C-3, to produce an $\alpha-(1{\rightarrow}3$) glycosidic linkage. The transfer products showed a mixed-type inhibition against porcine pancreatic $\alpha$-amylase; therefore, they may be useful not only as inhibitors but also as acarbose transition-state analogs to study the mechanism of amylase inhibition.

Modulation of Hydrolysis and Transglycosylation Activity of Thermus Maltogenic Amylase by Combinatorial Saturation Mutagenesis

  • Oh, Su-Won;Jang, Myoung-Uoon;Jeong, Chang-Ku;Kang, Hye-Jeong;Park, Jung-Mi;Kim, Tae-Jip
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.18 no.8
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    • pp.1401-1407
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    • 2008
  • The roles of conserved amino acid residues (Va1329-Ala330-Asn331-Glu332), constituting an extra sugar-binding space (ESBS) of Thermus maltogenic amylase (ThMA), were investigated by combinatorial saturation mutagenesis. Various ThMA mutants were firstly screened on the basis of starch hydrolyzing activity and their enzymatic properties were characterized in detail. Most of the ThMA variants showed remarkable decreases in their hydrolyzing activity, but their specificity against various substrates could be altered by mutagenesis. Unexpectedly, mutant H-16 (Gly-Leu-Val-Tyr) showed almost identical hydrolyzing and transglycosylation activities to wild type, whereas K-33 (Ser-Gly-Asp-Glu) showed an extremely low transglycosylation activity. Interestingly, K-33 produced glucose, maltose, and acarviosine from acarbose, whereas ThMA hydrolyzed acarbose to only glucose and acarviosine-glucose. These results propose that the substrate specificity, hydrolysis pattern, and transglycosylation activity of ThMA can be modulated by combinatorial mutations near the ESBS.

Gene Cluster Analysis and Functional Characterization of Cyclomaltodextrinase from Listeria innocua (Listeria innocua 유래 cyclomaltodextrinase의 유전자 클러스터 구조 및 효소 특성)

  • Jang, Myoung-Uoon;Jeong, Chang-Ku;Kang, Hye-Jeong;Kim, Min-Jeong;Lee, Min-Jae;Son, Byung Sam;Kim, Tae-Jip
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.44 no.3
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    • pp.363-369
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    • 2016
  • A putative cyclomaltodextrinase gene (licd) was found from the genome of Listeria innocua ATCC 33090. The licd gene is located in the gene cluster involved in maltose/maltodextrin utilization, which consists of various genes encoding maltose phosphorylase and sugar ABC transporters. The structural gene encodes 591 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 68.6 kDa, which shares less than 58% of amino acid sequence identity with other known CDase family enzymes. The licd gene was cloned, and the dimeric enzyme with C-terminal six-histidines was successfully produced and purified from recombinant Escherichia coli. The enzyme showed the highest activity at pH 7.0 and 37℃. licd could hydrolyze β-cyclodextrin, starch, and maltotriose to mainly maltose, and it cleaved pullulan to panose. It could also catalyze the hydrolysis of acarbose to glucose and acarviosine-glucose. In particular, it showed significantly higher activity towards β-cyclodextrin and maltotriose than towards starch and acarbose. licd also showed transglycosylation activity, producing α-(1,6)- and/or α-(1,3)-linked transfer products from the acarbose donor and α-methyl glucopyranoside acceptor.

Functional expression and enzymatic characterization of cyclomaltodextrinase from Streptococcus pyogenes (Streptococcus pyogenes 유래 cyclomaltodextrinase 유전자의 발현 및 효소 특성)

  • Jang, Myoung-Uoon;Kang, Hye-Jeong;Jeong, Chang-Ku;Oh, Gyo Won;Lee, Eun-Hee;Son, Byung Sam;Kim, Tae-Jip
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.53 no.3
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    • pp.208-215
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    • 2017
  • A cyclomaltodextrinase (SPCD) gene was cloned from Streptococcus pyogenes ATCC 700294. Its open reading frame consists of 567 amino acids (66.8 kDa), which shows less than 37% of amino acid sequence identity with the other CDase-family enzymes. The homo-dimeric SPCD with C-terminal six-histidines was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli. It showed the highest activity at pH 7.5 and $45^{\circ}C$, respectively. SPCD has the broad substrate specificities against ${\beta}$-cyclodextrin, starch, and maltotriose to produce mainly maltose, whereas it hydrolyzes pullulan to panose. It can also catalyze the hydrolysis of acarbose to glucose and acarviosine-glucose. Interestingly, it showed much higher activity on ${\beta}$-cyclodextrin and acarbose than that on starch, pullulan, or maltotriose, which makes SPCD distinguished from common CDase-family enzymes. Although SPCD has significantly high acarbose-hydrolyzing activity, it showed negligible transglycosylation activity.