| Literature DB >> 30923563 |
Camille Filiatrault-Chastel1,2, David Navarro1, Mireille Haon1, Sacha Grisel1, Isabelle Herpoël-Gimbert1, Didier Chevret3, Mathieu Fanuel4, Bernard Henrissat5,6, Senta Heiss-Blanquet2, Antoine Margeot2, Jean-Guy Berrin1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lignocellulosic biomass is considered as a promising alternative to fossil resources for the production of fuels, materials and chemicals. Efficient enzymatic systems are needed to degrade the plant cell wall and overcome its recalcitrance. A widely used producer of cellulolytic cocktails is the ascomycete Trichoderma reesei, but this organism secretes a limited set of enzymes. To improve the saccharification yields, one strategy is to upgrade the T. reesei enzyme cocktail with enzymes produced by other biomass-degrading filamentous fungi isolated from biodiversity.Entities:
Keywords: Biofuels; Cellulolytic enzymes production; Filamentous fungi; LPMO; Plant biomass
Year: 2019 PMID: 30923563 PMCID: PMC6420742 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1394-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Biomass saccharification performances of 15 Aspergillus spp. secretomes. Effect on the saccharification of pretreated biomass (5% w/v) of the addition to a T. reesei cellulolytic cocktail of Aspergillus secretomes produced by strains BRFM 405, 430, 1487, 1489 and 1490 on maize bran (MB), sugar beet pulp (SBP) and Avicel (Avi). a Wheat straw; b poplar; c miscanthus. The bars show the improvement of cellulose conversion yields in the presence of secretomes compared to cellulose conversion yields obtained with T. reesei cocktail alone, after 24 h and 96 h of reaction. Means were calculated on more than 10 replicates; the * indicates a Student test p-value lower than 0.05
Fig. 2Protein content of the Aspergillus spp. secretomes. Composition of the 15 secretomes in number of identified CAZymes (GH glycoside hydrolases, PL polysaccharide lyases, CE carbohydrate esterases, AA auxiliary activities), non-CAZyme proteins and proteins of unknown function
Fig. 3Phylogeny and modularity of the new LPMO family. a Graphical representation of the different types of modularity existing among the family, citing examples of proteins form various species with their Genbank ID. The catalytic module, shown in green, is preceded by a signal peptide (SP), and can be followed by a C-terminal extension, a CBM1 module or a GPI anchor. b Radial phylogram of 208 selected sequences, based on the alignment of their catalytic module alone. Edges are colored according to the taxonomic division of the corresponding organisms. Full circles indicate CBM1-containing sequences and empty circles indicate GPI anchor-containing sequences. The sequence from Aspergillus aculeatus is indicated by a red star
Fig. 4Oxidative cleavage of cellulose by AaAA16. a HPAEC–PAD chromatograms showing soluble products generated from 0.1% PASC cellulose using 4.4 µM AaAA16, with or without l-cysteine (1 mM). The peak annotations are based on comparison with oligosaccharides standards, native (DP1–DP5) or oxidized at the C1 position (DP2ox-DP4ox). The box at the right top shows an enlargement of the C1-oxidized product region. b MS spectrum of soluble degradation products generated by AaAA16 from PASC. Mass spectrometry analysis of soluble degradation products generated by AaAA16 from PASC. The main panel shows the full-scale spectrum of the sample containing native and oxidized cello-oligosaccharides, and the boxed regions are magnified to show the peaks corresponding to oxidized cello-oligosaccharides. c MS/MS spectrum of the DP3 oxidized product peak (m/z 519.16) observed on (b). The fragmentation pattern corresponds to a C1 oxidized species with an aldonic acid at the reducing end. Observed fragments are depicted on the structure. Blue triangles: Water losses. Black stars: contaminant peak from an ion co-isolated during the MS/MS precursor selection
Fig. 5Synergy between AaAA16 and CBHI for the degradation of cellulosic substrates. Cellobiose released from 0.1% PASC or NFC by T. reesei CBHI (1 mg/g of substrate), with or without prior 24-h treatment by AaAA16 (10 mg/g), was quantified by HPAEC–PAD. Error bars represent the standard deviation calculated on three replicates