FEBS Open Bio (Apr 2020)

The temperature and pH repertoire of the transglutaminase family is expanding

  • Aaron Lerner,
  • Ajay Ramesh,
  • Torsten Matthias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/2211-5463.12839
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
pp. 492 – 494

Abstract

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Transglutaminases (TGs) play important roles in the food industry, pharmacology, and biotechnology, but as protein cross‐linkers, their complexes are stable, resistant, immunogenic, and potentially pathogenic. Many TGs have been characterized, but they operate in narrow temperature and pH range limits. In a research article in this issue, Clemens Furnes and colleagues describe a novel cold‐adapted TG from Atlantic cod, which expands the operating boundaries to a lower temperature and a wider pH. In this accompanying commentary, we discuss how this TG opens new applications in cold environments and can be deactivated by heating. New sources of TGs should be explored in hot environments like hot springs, in order to increase the temperature and widen the pH ranges for human and industrial benefits.

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