Journal Article10.1080/07388550903136076
Microbial glucoamylases: characteristics and applications
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TL;DR: The present review focuses attention on the recent advances in molecular biology and protein engineering of glucoamylase to improve its production and functional properties including the so far success achieved in isolating mutants with enhanced thermostability and selectivity, higher pH optimum and improved catalytic activity.
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Abstract: Glucoamylase is one of the oldest and widely used biocatalysts in food industry. The major application of glucoamylase is the saccharification of partially processed starch/dextrin to glucose, which is an essential substrate for numerous fermentation processes and a range of food and beverage industries. Glucoamylase for commercial purposes has traditionally been produced employing filamentous fungi, although a diverse group of microorganisms is reported to produce glucoamylase, since they secrete large quantities of the enzyme extracellularly. The commercially used fungal glucoamylases have certain limitations such as moderate thermostability, acidic pH requirement, and slow catalytic activity that increase the process cost. Consequently, the search for newer glucoamylases and protein engineering to improve pH and temperature optima leading to amelioration in catalytic efficiency of existing enzymes have been the major areas of research over the years. The present review focuses attention on the recent advances in molecular biology and protein engineering of glucoamylase to improve its production and functional properties including the so far success achieved in isolating mutants with enhanced thermostability and selectivity, higher pH optimum and improved catalytic activity. A comprehensive account is included on the diversity, regulation of production, classification, purification and properties, and potential applications of microbial glucoamylases to provide an overview on all the important aspects of the enzyme.
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References
Identification and characterization of glucoamylase from the fungus Thermomyces lanuginosus
TL;DR: It was concluded that alternative mRNA splicing as it might occur in Aspergillus niger glucoamylase is not responsible for the occurrence of different glucosylase isoforms in Thermomyces lanuginosus.
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Characteristics and Function of Raw-starch-affinity Site on Aspergillus awamori var. kawachi Glucoamylase I Molecule
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the water-cluster-dissociating model for the hypothetical mechanism of raw-starch-affinity site essential for raw starch-digestion.
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Effect on thermostability and catalytic activity of introducing disulfide bonds into Aspergillus awamori glucoamylase.
TL;DR: The disulfide bond between positions 20 and 27 connects the C-terminus of helix 1 and the following beta-turn, suggesting that this region is important for glucoamylase thermostability.
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STA10: A gene involved in the control of starch utilization by Saccharomyces.
Julio Polaina,Melanie Y. Wiggs +1 more
TL;DR: Genetic analysis of crosses carried out between starch utilizing strains of Saccharomyces diastaticus and laboratory strains of S. cerevisiae has revealed the existence of a gene which inhibits the expression of the amylolytic capability in the resulting hybrids, as well as in the meiotic offspring of the crosses.
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