| Literature DB >> 28774672 |
Katewadee Boonyapakron1, Aritsara Jaruwat2, Benjamas Liwnaree2, Thidarat Nimchua1, Verawat Champreda1, Penchit Chitnumsub3.
Abstract
In the pulp bleaching industry, enzymes with robust activity at high pH and temperatures are desirable for facilitating the pre-bleaching process with simplified processing and minimal use of chlorinated compounds. To engineer an enzyme for this purpose, we determined the crystal structure of the Xyn12.2 xylanase, a xylan-hydrolyzing enzyme derived from the termite gut symbiont metagenome, as the basis for structure-based protein engineering to improve Xyn12.2 stability in high heat and alkaline conditions. Engineered cysteine pairs that generated exterior disulfide bonds increased the kcat of Xyn12.2 variants and melting temperature at all tested conditions. These improvements led to up to 4.2-fold increases in catalytic efficiency at pH 9.0, 50°C for 1h and up to 3-fold increases at 60°C. The most effective variants, XynTT and XynTTTE, exhibited 2-3-fold increases in bagasse hydrolysis at pH 9.0 and 60°C compared to the wild-type enzyme. Overall, engineering arginines and phenylalanines for increased pKa and hydrogen bonding improved enzyme catalytic efficiency at high stringency conditions. These modifications were the keys to enhancing thermostability and alkaliphilicity in our enzyme variants, with XynTT and XynTTTE being especially promising for their application to the pulp and paper industry.Entities:
Keywords: Alkaliphilicity; Bio-bleaching; Pulp and paper industry; Structure-based protein engineering; Xylanase
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28774672 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2017.07.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biotechnol ISSN: 0168-1656 Impact factor: 3.307