| Literature DB >> 29281693 |
Saori Amaike Campen1,2, Jed Lynn1,2, Stephanie J Sibert1, Sneha Srikrishnan1,2, Pallavi Phatale1,2, Taya Feldman1,3, Joel M Guenther1,3, Jennifer Hiras1,4, Yvette Thuy An Tran1,5, Steven W Singer1,4, Paul D Adams1, Kenneth L Sale1,3, Blake A Simmons1, Scott E Baker1,6, Jon K Magnuson1,2, John M Gladden1,3.
Abstract
Efficient deconstruction of plant biomass is a major barrier to the development of viable lignocellulosic biofuels. Pretreatment with ionic liquids reduces lignocellulose recalcitrance to enzymatic hydrolysis, increasing yields of sugars for conversion into biofuels. However, commercial cellulases are not compatible with many ionic liquids, necessitating extensive water washing of pretreated biomass prior to hydrolysis. To circumvent this issue, previous research has demonstrated that several thermophilic bacterial cellulases can efficiently deconstruct lignocellulose in the presence of the ionic liquid, 1-ethyl-3-methylimadizolium acetate. As promising as these enzymes are, they would need to be produced at high titer in an industrial enzyme production host before they could be considered a viable alternative to current commercial cellulases. Aspergillus niger has been used to produce high titers of secreted enzymes in industry and therefore, we assessed the potential of this organism to be used as an expression host for these ionic liquid-tolerant cellulases. We demonstrated that 29 of these cellulases were expressed at detectable levels in a wild-type strain of A. niger, indicating a basic level of compatibility and potential to be produced at high levels in a host engineered to produce high titers of enzymes. We then profiled one of these enzymes in detail, the β-glucosidase A5IL97, and compared versions expressed in both A. niger and Escherichia coli. This comparison revealed the enzymatic activity of A5IL97 purified from E. coli and A. niger is equivalent, suggesting that A. niger could be an excellent enzyme production host for enzymes originally characterized in E. coli, facilitating the transition from the laboratory to industry.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29281693 PMCID: PMC5744941 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bacterial and fungal cellulases expressed in A. niger.
| Gene ID | Predicted Function | GH | IL-tolerant | Thermo-tolerant | BG | CBH | EG | NCBI GenBank |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GFP F64L S65T | control | - | N/A | N/A | <1.0 | <1.0 | <30.0 | KY014123 |
| A5IL97 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 2384.0 | 938.3 | KY014108 | |
| BGL1 | BG | GH3 | N/A | N/A | 3.0 | KY014119 | ||
| CBH1 | CBH | GH7-CBM1 | N/A | N/A | 3.4 | 159.0 | KY014120 | |
| EG1 | EG | GH5 | N/A | N/A | 7.2 | 76.5 | KY014122 | |
| Csac | EG | CBM3-GH5 | Y | Y | 664.2 | KY014107 | ||
| PhoEG | EG | GH5 | Y | Y | 61.6 | KY014117 | ||
| Prumi | EG | GH26-GH5 | N/A | N/A | 2.9 | 126.0 | KY014118 | |
| Cel5A | EG | GH5 | Y | Y | 7.7 | 258.0 | KY014121 | |
| Cel9A | EG | GH9 | N/A | Y | 2.6 | 999.0 | KY014109 | |
| J01 | BG | GH3 | Y | N | 6.5 | KY014124 | ||
| J02 | BG | GH3 | Y | Y | 25.5 | KY014125 | ||
| J03 | BG | GH3 | Y | Y | 13.5 | KY014126 | ||
| J06 | BG | GH1 | N | Y | 38.9 | KY014110 | ||
| J07 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 120.4 | KY014111 | ||
| J08 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 1.6 | KY014127 | ||
| J09 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 2.2 | KY014128 | ||
| J11 | BG | GH3 | Y | Y | Negative | KY014129 | ||
| J14 | BG | GH3 | Y | Y | 158.7 | KY014112 | ||
| J15 | BG | GH3 | N | Y | 14.6 | KY014130 | ||
| J16 | BG | GH3 | Y | Y | 13.5 | KY014131 | ||
| J17 | BG | GH3 | N | Y | 34.6 | KY014132 | ||
| J18 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 11.4 | KY014133 | ||
| J19 | BG | GH1 | Y | Y | 13.5 | KY014134 | ||
| JMB19063; J20 | BG | GH3 | N/A | N/A | 140.3 | KY014113 | ||
| J24 | EG | GH9 | Y | N | 2.3 | 225.0 | KY014135 | |
| J26 | EG | GH12 | Y | Y | 3.4 | 420.1 | KY014114 | |
| J28 | EG | GH5 | N/A | N/A | 2.9 | 175.5 | KY014136 | |
| J29 | EG | GH5 | Y | Y | 2.3 | 249.8 | KY014137 | |
| J30 | EG | GH9 | Y | Y | 73.6 | 798.9 | KY014115 | |
| J31 | EG | GH5 | N/A | N/A | 0.7 | 126.0 | KY014138 | |
| J35 | EG | GH5 | N/A | N/A | 134.3 | KY014139 | ||
| J36 | EG | GH5 | Y | Y | 36.4 | 623.1 | KY014116 |
Glycoside hydrolase (GH) family is categorized based on the CAZy, carbohydrate-active enzyme database (http://www.cazy.org). The organism of origin for each cellulase was predicted by metagenomic binning [30] and described in [13]. BG, CBH, and EG, are β-glucosidase, cellobiohydrolase, and endoglucanase, respectively. IL-tolerant is defined as retaining >50% enzymatic activity in at least 10% (v/v) [C2mim][OAc]. Thermo-tolerant is defined by an optimum temperature for enzymatic activity of greater than 60°C. Data on Thermo- and IL- tolerance was obtained from references [11,13,31]. Enzyme activity numbers represent the highest activity of each plasmid transformant in mU per mL. The experiment was repeated with 4 biological replicates. The GFP strain was used to measure the fungal wild-type level of enzyme activity to calculate the bacterial enzyme activity in the fungal host; less than 1 mU per mL for β-glucosidases and cellobiohydrolase and less than 30 mU per mL for endoglucanase activity at different temperatures. The value was subtracted from the GFP control. Dark grey shading indicates not tested.
Fig 1Zymography of A5IL97 produced in E. coli and A. niger.
Zymography was performed with unpurified, non-denatured extracts of A5IL97, expressing strains of E. coli (Ec-A5IL97) and A. niger (An-A5IL97). Both β-glucosidase and cellobiohydrolase activities were analyzed on native gels, containing A) 4-methylumbelliferyl β-D-glucopyranoside (MUG) or B) 4-methylumbelliferyl β-D-cellobioside (MUC), respectively (top). The same gel was stained with Coomassie blue G250 after the zymography (bottom). Black arrows indicate the position of A5IL97.
A5IL97 production in A. niger.
| intracellular | extracellular | |
|---|---|---|
| Wet Biomass (g/L) | 99.73±6.96 | |
| Dry Biomass (g/L) | 28.53±1.21 | |
| A5IL97 Enzyme Production (U/L) | 1143.07±97.76 | 2032.81±425.76 |
| A5IL97 Protein Production (mg/L) | 7.40±0.17 | 13.83±2.42 |
| A5IL97 Production per Wet Biomass Weight (mg/L/g WW) | 73.82±1.74 | 137.93±24.09 |
| A5IL97 Production per Dry Biomass Weight (mg/L/g DW) | 252.69±5.97 | 472.17±82.48 |
Protein production data of a His-tagged A5IL97 produced by A. niger in a 50 mL culture. The biomass weight, enzyme, and protein production were measured after 7 days of cultivation. The numbers represent the mean of each measurement with standard deviations. The experiment was performed two times with three replicates.
Fig 2Enzymatic activity profile of A5IL97 from E. coli and A. niger.
Enzyme activity profiles were generated using purified Ec-A5IL97 and An-A5IL97 at temperatures between 70 and 95°C, pH between 4 and 8, and [C2C1lm][OAc] IL concentrations between 5 and 30% (v/v). The colorimetric substrate, pNPG, was used to measure the enzyme activity, represented in the color bars in the legend.
Fig 3Thermostability of A5IL97 in E. coli and A. niger.
Enzyme stability of A5IL97 using equal amounts of purified A5IL97 (200 μg/mL) from E. coli (Ec-A5IL97) and A. niger (An-A5IL97) at 70°C, 85°C, and 95°C. Error bars indicate the standard deviations from three replicates.
Fig 4Saccharification of biomass using cellulase mixture containing A5IL97 from either E. coli or A. niger.
Enzyme hydrolysis of IL-pretreated switchgrass using the JTherm cellulase mixture supplemented with either purified Ec-A5IL97 or An-A5IL97. The IL-pretreated switchgrass was washed free of IL prior to saccharification. Equivalent amounts of glucose and xylose were liberated over 72 hours. Error bars indicate the standard deviations from three replicates.