Literature DB >> 19625252

SCHEMA recombination of a fungal cellulase uncovers a single mutation that contributes markedly to stability.

Pete Heinzelman1, Christopher D Snow, Matthew A Smith, Xinlin Yu, Arvind Kannan, Kevin Boulware, Alan Villalobos, Sridhar Govindarajan, Jeremy Minshull, Frances H Arnold.   

Abstract

A quantitative linear model accurately (R(2) = 0.88) describes the thermostabilities of 54 characterized members of a family of fungal cellobiohydrolase class II (CBH II) cellulase chimeras made by SCHEMA recombination of three fungal enzymes, demonstrating that the contributions of SCHEMA sequence blocks to stability are predominantly additive. Thirty-one of 31 predicted thermostable CBH II chimeras have thermal inactivation temperatures higher than the most thermostable parent CBH II, from Humicola insolens, and the model predicts that hundreds more CBH II chimeras share this superior thermostability. Eight of eight thermostable chimeras assayed hydrolyze the solid cellulosic substrate Avicel at temperatures at least 5 degrees C above the most stable parent, and seven of these showed superior activity in 16-h Avicel hydrolysis assays. The sequence-stability model identified a single block of sequence that adds 8.5 degrees C to chimera thermostability. Mutating individual residues in this block identified the C313S substitution as responsible for the entire thermostabilizing effect. Introducing this mutation into the two recombination parent CBH IIs not featuring it (Hypocrea jecorina and H. insolens) decreased inactivation, increased maximum Avicel hydrolysis temperature, and improved long time hydrolysis performance. This mutation also stabilized and improved Avicel hydrolysis by Phanerochaete chrysosporium CBH II, which is only 55-56% identical to recombination parent CBH IIs. Furthermore, the C313S mutation increased total H. jecorina CBH II activity secreted by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression host more than 10-fold. Our results show that SCHEMA structure-guided recombination enables quantitative prediction of cellulase chimera thermostability and efficient identification of stabilizing mutations.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19625252      PMCID: PMC2785310          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C109.034058

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  14 in total

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6.  A family of thermostable fungal cellulases created by structure-guided recombination.

Authors:  Pete Heinzelman; Christopher D Snow; Indira Wu; Catherine Nguyen; Alan Villalobos; Sridhar Govindarajan; Jeremy Minshull; Frances H Arnold
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-03-23       Impact factor: 11.205

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