
Proteins that inhibit alpha-amylases have been isolated from plants and microorganisms. These inhibitors can have natural roles in the control of endogenous alpha-amylase activity or in defence against pathogens and pests; certain inhibitors are reported to be antinutritional factors. The alpha-amylase inhibitors belong to seven different protein structural families, most of which also contain evolutionary related proteins without inhibitory activity. Two families include bifunctional inhibitors acting both on alpha-amylases and proteases. High-resolution structures are available of target alpha-amylases in complex with inhibitors from five families. These structures indicate major diversity but also some similarity in the structural basis of alpha-amylase inhibition. Mutational analysis of the mechanism of inhibition was performed in a few cases and various protein engineering and biotechnological approaches have been outlined for exploitation of the inhibitory function.
Fungal Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship, Binding Sites, Drug Design, Enzyme Inhibitors, Phytohemagglutinins, alpha-Amylases, Peptides, Plant Proteins
Fungal Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship, Binding Sites, Drug Design, Enzyme Inhibitors, Phytohemagglutinins, alpha-Amylases, Peptides, Plant Proteins
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