| Literature DB >> 24949262 |
Masahiro Watanabe1, Hiroyuki Inoue1, Benchaporn Inoue1, Miho Yoshimi1, Tatsuya Fujii1, Kazuhiko Ishikawa1.
Abstract
Cellulosic materials constitute most of the biomass on earth, and can be converted into biofuel or bio-based materials if fermentable sugars can be released using cellulose-related enzymes. Acremonium cellulolyticus is a mesophilic fungus which produces a high amount of cellulose-related enzymes. In the genome sequence data of A. cellulolyticus, ORFs showing homology to GH10 and GH11 xylanases were found. The xylanases of A. cellulolyticus play an important role in cellulolytic biomass degradation. Search of a draft genome sequence of A. cellulolyticus for xylanase coding regions identified seven ORFs showing homology to GH 11 xylanase genes (xylA, xylB, xylC, xylD, xylE, xylF and xylG). These genes were cloned and their enzymes were prepared with a homologous expression system under the control of a glucoamylase promoter. Six of the seven recombinant enzymes were successfully expressed, prepared, and characterized. These enzymes exhibited optimal xylanase activity at pH 4.0 - 4.5. But this time, we found that only XylC had enormously higher relative activity (2947 U•mg (-1)) than the other xylanases at optimum pH. This result is surprising because XylC does not retain a carbohydrate-binding module 1 (CBM-1) that is necessary to bind tightly own substrate such as xylan. In this study, we discuss the relationship between activity, pH and sequence of seven xylanases in A. cellulolyticus.Entities:
Keywords: Acremonium cellulolyticus; Biomass; Hemicellulose; Homologous expression; Xylan; Xylanase
Year: 2014 PMID: 24949262 PMCID: PMC4052667 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-014-0027-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Summary of nucleotide primers used in this study
| | |
| AC-F12 ( | ATTGTTAACAAGATGAAGATCACATCAGTGTTCG |
| AC-R12 ( | AATCCTGCAGGTTAAGATACAGTAACAGTGGCACTTC |
| AC-F13 ( | ATTGTTAACATCATGGGCATCTCATCTATTCTTC |
| AC-R13 ( | AATCCTGCAGGCTATTGGCACTGACTGTAGTAAGCGT |
| AC-F25 ( | ATTGTTAACAAGATGAAGCTCTCTCTGGCTGCAA |
| AC-R25 ( | AATCCTGCAGGCTAGGACACGGTGATGGTACTAGAAC |
| AC-F26 ( | ATTGTTAACAAGATGCGGTCATTTGCTCGCCTTGTC |
| AC-R26 ( | AATCCTGCAGGTCAGCTAACAGTAAAATCCAGGTAAC |
| AC-F27 ( | ATTGTTAACAAGATGATTTATTTCCCTCAGCTCATG |
| AC-R27 ( | AATCCTGCAGGCTATTGAGTGGCAGTCTGCTGGGCA |
| AC-F28 ( | ATTGTTAACAAGATGTTCTCTTTCAGTACTGCCTT |
| AC-R28 ( | AATCCTGCAGGCTACAAGCATTGATAGTAGTACGGGT |
| AC-F29 ( | ATTGATATCAAGATGGTTGCTTTCTCGAGCTTATTTAC |
| AC-R29 ( | AATCCTGCAGGGTCCAACATCAATGCTACTTACAGC |
| | |
| GAGGACGGAGTCAATGGAGA | |
| CCGAGAGGTAGGAGCCAGAA | |
| TGCTCTCGGTGTTGATGTTG | |
| GTGGTCTGGTAGTCGGTGGA | |
| GTGTCGACCAACCCTCCATC | |
| GTCCAAGTGCCTTCCATGCT | |
| TTTAGCGATAGCGGCAGGTT | |
| CCCATGTAAGGGAGCGAGTT | |
| CGGGCCACAAACTATATCCA | |
| TTCCAGCCAACACCAACAAC | |
| ACTAGCAAGGACGGCGTAGA | |
| CACCGAGGAACTCAGACGAA | |
| CAGCACGGGGTTTGAGGTT | |
| CCGAAGTTGATGGGAGTGGT | |
| AACATCATTCCCAGCAGCAC | |
| CGGCAGGTCAAGTCAACAAC |
Summary of seven xylanases (GH11) in
| Y209 | pANC209 | A | 209 | 22377 | - | AGGIN |
| Y210 | pANC210 | B | 282 | 29510 | CBM | AEAIN |
| Y223 | pANC223 | C | 223 | 23955 | - | QSITT |
| Y230 | pANC230 | D | 190 | 21029 | - | - |
| Y231 | pANC231 | E | 234 | 25788 | - | ATNYI |
| Y232 | pANC232 | F | 276 | 29210 | CBM | NTPNS |
| Y233 | pANC233 | G | 233 | 24906 | - | SAINY |
Specific activity and thermal shift assay of six xylanases (GH11)
| XylA | 320 | 999 (pH 4.0) | 55 | 59 | 4 |
| XylB | 252 | 667 (pH 4.0) | 62.5 | 66 | 3.5 |
| XylC | 1434 | 2947 (pH 4.0) | 58 | 61.5 | 3.5 |
| XylE | 43 | 304 (pH 4.0) | 59 | 65.5 | 6.5 |
| XylF | 16 | 34 (pH 4.0) | 54 | 60 | 6 |
| XylG | 35 | 285 (pH 4.0) | 55 | 64.5 | 9.5 |
Figure 1Sequence alignment betweenGH11s andGH11. All seven xylanases (XylA-G) were detected from A. cellulolyticus. Strictly conserved residues are highlighted with an asterisk and similarly conserved residues are marked as a colon. The two glutamate catalytic residues are strictly conserved (highlighted with gray background). All xylanases have a signal peptide at the N-terminus whereas only XylB and XylF have a CBM at their C-terminal end. The figure was made using ClustalW Thompson et al. ([1994]).
Figure 2SDS-PAGE analysis of six kinds of xylanase (GH11). Lanes: M. protein marker, 1. XylA, 2. XylB, 3. XylC, 4. XylE, 5. XylF, 6. XylG. All of these proteins are final products after purification on a Resource ISO column.
Figure 3Optimum pH of six kinds of xylanase (GH11). The optimal pH of each xylanase was determined using the DNS method with 1% (w/v) birch-wood xylan. The buffers were: 0.1 M citric acid buffer pH 3.0 – 3.5; 0.1 M sodium acetate pH 4.0 − 4.5; 0.1 M sodium citrate pH 5.0 – 6.0; 0.1 M Hepes-NaOH pH 7.0; 0.1 M Tris–HCl pH 8.0. The enzymes are: XylA (black diamond), XylB (black square), XylC (black triangle), XylE (white circle), XylF (black dash) and XylG (black circle). The percent relative activity is based on the activity of XylC at pH 4.0. The data plotted are averages of triplicate experiments.
Figure 4Expression of xylanase genes.A. cellulolyticus Y-94 was cultured in medium containing 50 g/l of cellulose (A) or 50 g/l of xylan (B). Culture time was 24 h (data not shown), 72 h (white bars), and 120 h (black bars). Expression levels are shown relative to that of gpdA as an internal control.