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Title: Maltitol and maltobionate act differently on maltose- and maltooligosaccharide hydrolysis by human small intestinal glucoamylase-maltase indicating two different enzyme binding modes. Author: Günther S, Wehrspaun A, Heymann H. Journal: Arch Biochem Biophys; 1996 Mar 15; 327(2):295-302. PubMed ID: 8619618. Abstract: The hydrolysis of maltose and maltotriose at the same catalytic site of glucoamylase-maltase has been demonstrated. Maltitol acts as a competitive inhibitor, Ki = 69 (+/-10) mM, of the maltose hydrolysis and as a noncompetitive inhibitor of the hydrolysis of maltotriose, Ki = Kii = 29 (+/-4) mM, and maltotetraose, Ki = Kii = 30 (+/-3) mM. Maltobionate was not hydrolyzed by the enzyme and did not influence the maltose hydrolysis. In contrast, in hydrolysis of maltooligosaccharides it acts as an uncompetitive inhibitor. For the hydrolysis of maltotriose, Kii = 25(+/-8) mM, and maltotetraose, Kii = 30(+/-4) mM was found. According to a characteristic of this rare inhibition pattern a simultaneous decrease of the apparent Km and the apparent Vmax of maltooligosaccharide hydrolysis with increasing maltobionate concentrations was observed. We were able to discriminate two different binding modes for glucoamylase-maltase. Maltitol binds to the free enzyme (maltose binding mode) as well as to the maltooligosaccharide-enzyme complex, whereas maltobionate binds only to the oligosaccharide-enzyme complex (oligosaccharide binding mode). This could be shown by the different inhibition behaviors of maltitol and maltobionate depending on the substrate: maltose or maltooligosaccharides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]