| Literature DB >> 23418789 |
Hao Shi1, Yu Zhang, Xun Li, Yingjuan Huang, Liangliang Wang, Ye Wang, Huaihai Ding, Fei Wang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Xylanase is an important component of hemicellulase enzyme system. Since it plays an important role in the hydrolysis of hemicellulose into xylooligosaccharides (XOs), high thermostable xylanase has been the focus of much recent attention as powerful enzyme as well as in the field of biomass utilization.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23418789 PMCID: PMC3598563 DOI: 10.1186/1754-6834-6-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Figure 1Effects of pH and temperature on the activity and stability of the recombinant Xyn10A. a. Optimal pH and pH stability of the Xyn10A. b. Effect of temperature on Xyn10A activity. c. The thermostability of the Xyn10A with 5 mM Ca2+. d. The thermostability of Xyn10A with different concentration of Ca2+. The residual activity was monitored, and the maximum activity was defined as 100% (a, b) or initial activity was defined as 100% (c, d). Values shown were the mean of the average of three experiments, and the variation about the mean was below 5%.
Characteristics of recombinant xylanase of .
| Specific enzyme activity | 145.81 U mg-1 |
| Optimum temperature | 95°C |
| Optimum pH | 7.0 |
| Thermal stability (55-85°C) | 2 h |
| Molecular weight | 131 kDa |
| 2.57 mg mL-1 | |
| 325.32 μmol mg-1 min-1 | |
| 126.58 min-1 | |
| 710.28 s-1 | |
| 276.37 mL mg-1 s-1 |
Figure 2Effects of cations and reagents on the activity of purified Xyn10A. The final concentration of cations was 1 mM. The final concentration of reagents detailed as below, 0.05% Tween 60 and Tris, 0.1% SDS. The activity of the experiment without cation or reagent was defined as 100%. Values shown were the mean of duplicate experiments, and the variation about the mean was below 5%.
Hydrolysis products of birchwood xylan and beechwood xylan
| X1 | 497/533 | 576/625 | 677/701 | 8300/1829 | 9798/4605 | 11980/9062 |
| X2 | 11/44 | 2200/1870 | 10203/6938 | 9674/9094 | 7962/11362 | 7494/7955 |
| X3 | 0/160 | 5500/4642 | 7425/7458 | 1682/5783 | 1923/1367 | 209/321 |
| X4 | 0/152 | 3200/3298 | 1017/1278 | 27/397 | 0/34 | 0/60 |
| X5 | 0/151 | 2750/2653 | 334/484 | 0/52 | 0/39 | 0/0 |
| X6 | 0/0 | 2820/2532 | 0/264 | 0/0 | 0/0 | 0/0 |
| Conversion percentage % | 2.5/5.2 | 85.2/78.1 | 98.3/85.6 | 98.4/85.8 | 98.4/87.0 | 98.4/87.0 |
X1, X2, X3, X4, X5 and X6 are assigned to xylose, xylobiose, xylotriose, xylotetraose, xylopentaose and xylohexaose respectively. The former value in the table is for birchwood xylan and the latter is for beechwood xylan. The unit is mg L-1.
Figure 3The Neighbor-Joining (NJ, a) and Maximum-Parsimony (MP, b) trees resulted from analysis of xylanases with 22 amino acid sequences. Numbers on nodes correspond to percentage bootstrap values for 1000 replicates.
Figure 4Multi-alignment of Xyn10A with some GH10 family members. Sequence alignment was performed by using Clustal X2.0. The active sites were indicated in green. T. neapolitana: GeneBank No. YP002534174; T. sp.: GeneBank No. AAD32593; T. petrophila: GeneBank No. YP001244458; T. sp.: GeneBank No. YP001738920; T. naphthophila: GeneBank No. YP003346200; T. maritima: GeneBank No. NP227877; T. thermarum: GeneBank No. AEH51685; P. mobilis: GeneBank No. YP001567298.