About: Cyclomaltodextrinase is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 61 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1437 citations. The topic is also known as: cyclodextrinase & cyclomaltodextrin dextrin-hydrolase (decyclizing).
TL;DR: The present review discusses the multiple specificity in the light of the oligomerization and the molecular structures arriving at a clarified enzyme classification and a physiological role of the enzymes is proposed.
TL;DR: Since the enzyme from the recombinant plasmid carrier could convert pullulan into not only panose but also glucose and maltose, it was concluded that these reactions were due to the single enzyme.
Abstract: A new type of pullulanase which mainly produced panose from pullulan was found in Bacillus stearothermophilus and purified. The enzyme can hydrolyze pullulan efficiently and only hydrolyzes a small amount of starch. When pullulan was used as a substrate, the main product was panose and small amounts of glucose and maltose were simultaneously produced. By using pTB522 as a vector plasmid, the enzyme gene was cloned and expressed in Bacillus subtilis. Since the enzyme from the recombinant plasmid carrier could convert pullulan into not only panose but also glucose and maltose, we concluded that these reactions were due to the single enzyme. The new pullulanase, with a molecular weight of 62,000, was fairly thermostable. The optimum temperature was 60 to 65 degrees C, and about 90% of the enzyme activity was retained even after treatment at 60 degrees C for 60 min. The optimum pH for the enzyme was 6.0.
TL;DR: Two strategies are used and combined to increase the yield of soluble recombinant cyclomaltodextrinase expressed from a gene originating from the thermophilic Gram-positive bacterium Anoxybacillus flavithermus.
TL;DR: Comparison of known amino acid sequences of several amylolytic enzymes with cyclomaltodextrinase activity, site-directed mutagenesis of the enzyme, and substrate specificity imply that the region between the third and the fourth conserved regions of the enzymes may play an important role in binding and degradation of cyclomals.
TL;DR: The specificity of Bacillus stearothermophilus TRS40 neopullulanase toward amylose and amylopectin was analyzed and it scarcely hydrolyzed amylanase, while other amylolytic enzymes did not exhibit this distinct substrate specificity at all.
Abstract: The specificity of Bacillus stearothermophilus TRS40 neopullulanase toward amylose and amylopectin was analyzed. Although this neopullulanase completely hydrolyzed amylose to produce maltose as the main product, it scarcely hydrolyzed amylopectin. The molecular mass of amylopectin was decreased by only one order of magnitude, from approximately 108 to 107 Da. Furthermore, this neopullulanase selectively hydrolyzed amylose when starch was used as a substrate. This phenomenon, efficient hydrolysis of amylose but not amylopectin, was also observed with cyclomaltodextrinase from alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. strain A2-5a and maltogenic amylase from Bacillus licheniformis ATCC 27811. These three enzymes hydrolyzed cyclomaltodextrins and amylose much faster than pullulan. Other amylolytic enzymes, such as bacterial saccharifying α-amylase, bacterial liquefying α-amylase, β-amylase, and neopullulanase from Bacillus megaterium, did not exhibit this distinct substrate specificity at all, i.e., the preference of amylose to amylopectin.