amylodextrins and maltodextrin

amylodextrins has been researched along with maltodextrin* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for amylodextrins and maltodextrin

ArticleYear
Starch biosynthesis: the primer nonreducing-end mechanism versus the nonprimer reducing-end two-site insertion mechanism.
    Carbohydrate research, 2005, Feb-07, Volume: 340, Issue:2

    Two mechanisms are recognized for polysaccharide chain elongation: (a) the nonreducing-end, primer-dependent mechanism and (b) the reducing-end, two-site insertion mechanism. We recently demonstrated the latter mechanism for starch biosynthesis by pulsing starch granules with ADP-[14C]Glc and chasing with ADPGlc for eight varieties of starch granules. Others have reported the addition of glucose from ADPGlc to the nonreducing ends of maltose, maltotriose, and maltopentaose and a branched maltopentasaccharide. It was concluded that starch chains are biosynthesized by the addition of glucose to the nonreducing ends of maltodextrin primers. In this study, we reinvestigated the maltodextrin reactions by reacting three kinds of starch granules from maize, wheat, and rice with ADP-[14C]Glc in the absence and presence of maltose (G2), maltotriose (G3), and maltodextrin (d.p.12) and found that they inhibited starch biosynthesis rather than stimulating it, as would be expected for primers. The major product in the presence of G2 was G3 with decreasing amounts of G4-G9 and the major products in the presence of G3 was G4 and G5, with decreasing amounts of G6-G9. It was concluded that maltodextrins are acceptors rather than primers. This was confirmed by pulsing the starch granules with ADP-[14C]Glc and chasing with G2, G3, and G6, which gave release of 14C-label from the pulsed granules in the absence of ADPGlc, further demonstrating that maltodextrins are acceptors that inhibit starch biosynthesis by releasing glucose from starch synthase, rather than acting as primers and stimulating biosynthesis.

    Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate Glucose; Cellobiose; Dextrins; Maltose; Molecular Structure; Oryza; Oxidation-Reduction; Polysaccharides; Starch; Structure-Activity Relationship; Trisaccharides; Triticum; Water; Zea mays

2005
Insights into the conformational equilibria of maltose-binding protein by analysis of high affinity mutants.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2003, Sep-05, Volume: 278, Issue:36

    The affinity of maltose-binding protein (MBP) for maltose and related carbohydrates was greatly increased by removal of groups in the interface opposite the ligand binding cleft. The wild-type protein has a KD of 1200 nM for maltose; mutation of residues Met-321 and Gln-325, both to alanine, resulted in a KD for maltose of 70 nM; deletion of 4 residues, Glu-172, Asn-173, Lys-175, and Tyr-176, which are part of a poorly ordered loop, results in a KD for maltose of 110 nM. Combining the mutations yields an increased affinity for maltodextrins and a KD of 6 nM for maltotriose. Comparison of ligand binding by the mutants, using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, indicates that decreases in the off-rate are responsible for the increased affinity. Small-angle x-ray scattering was used to demonstrate that the mutations do not significantly affect the solution conformation of MBP in either the presence or absence of maltose. The crystal structures of selected mutants showed that the mutations do not cause significant structural changes in either the closed or open conformation of MBP. These studies show that interactions in the interface opposite the ligand binding cleft, which we term the "balancing interface," are responsible for modulating the affinity of MBP for its ligand. Our results are consistent with a model in which the ligand-bound protein alternates between the closed and open conformations, and removal of interactions in the balancing interface decreases the stability of the open conformation, without affecting the closed conformation.

    Topics: Carbohydrates; Carrier Proteins; Crystallography, X-Ray; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Escherichia coli; Kinetics; Ligands; Maltose; Maltose-Binding Proteins; Methionine; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Models, Biological; Models, Molecular; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Mutation; Polysaccharides; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Scattering, Radiation; Surface Plasmon Resonance; Temperature; Time Factors; X-Rays

2003