| Literature DB >> 31727078 |
Leticia Arregui1, Marcela Ayala2, Ximena Gómez-Gil3, Guadalupe Gutiérrez-Soto4, Carlos Eduardo Hernández-Luna5, Mayra Herrera de Los Santos3, Laura Levin6, Arturo Rojo-Domínguez1, Daniel Romero-Martínez3, Mario C N Saparrat7,8, Mauricio A Trujillo-Roldán3, Norma A Valdez-Cruz9.
Abstract
The global rise in urbanization and industrial activity has led to the production and incorporation of foreign contaminant molecules into ecosystems, distorting them and impacting human and animal health. Physical, chemical, and biological strategies have been adopted to eliminate these contaminants from water bodies under anthropogenic stress. Biotechnological processes involving microorganisms and enzymes have been used for this purpose; specifically, laccases, which are broad spectrum biocatalysts, have been used to degrade several compounds, such as those that can be found in the effluents from industries and hospitals. Laccases have shown high potential in the biotransformation of diverse pollutants using crude enzyme extracts or free enzymes. However, their application in bioremediation and water treatment at a large scale is limited by the complex composition and high salt concentration and pH values of contaminated media that affect protein stability, recovery and recycling. These issues are also associated with operational problems and the necessity of large-scale production of laccase. Hence, more knowledge on the molecular characteristics of water bodies is required to identify and develop new laccases that can be used under complex conditions and to develop novel strategies and processes to achieve their efficient application in treating contaminated water. Recently, stability, efficiency, separation and reuse issues have been overcome by the immobilization of enzymes and development of novel biocatalytic materials. This review provides recent information on laccases from different sources, their structures and biochemical properties, mechanisms of action, and application in the bioremediation and biotransformation of contaminant molecules in water. Moreover, we discuss a series of improvements that have been attempted for better organic solvent tolerance, thermo-tolerance, and operational stability of laccases, as per process requirements.Entities:
Keywords: Bioremediation; Emerging contaminants; Laccases; Water bodies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31727078 PMCID: PMC6854816 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-019-1248-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the potential sources of water contaminants and their bioremediation by laccases. Emerging contaminants such as antibiotics, endocrine disruptors, dye-based pollutants and pharmaceutical drugs are often released into the environment causing harmful impacts and health problems to humans and other animals, water treatment with laccases and their biotechnological approaches generate less-toxic, inert or fully degraded compounds
Fig. 2Phylogenetic tree constructed with some of the different organism sources of laccases, as well as some of their applications in bioremediation. According to their bacterial, insect, plant or fungal origin, they are colored with blue, red, green or orange, respectively. The alignments and phylogenetic relationships were done using the MEGA X suite
Application of some interesting fungal laccases that degrade different compounds and may be useful in water treatement
| Laccase source | Applied enzyme form | Type of culture, ingredients and enzyme form | Application | Reaction parameters | Results obtained | Main putative mechanisms involved | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceutical compounds | |||||||
| | C CI | The fungus was grown in PDA solid medium for 7 days at 28 °C. Laccase extract was produced in 50 mL of liquid media, at 28 °C for 72 h and supported | Laccase removal of 17-alpha-ethynilestradiol (EE2) | Free and immobilized laccase extract (100 U/L) were mixed with 10 mL of EE2 at 10 mg/L, 10 mL of acetate buffer, pH 4 or 5 or 10 mL of distilled water, all of this at 28 °C | 80% of removal of EE2 after 24 h by the free and immobilized laccase extract at pH 4 and 5. The immobilized form had three cycles of reusability with high transformations | The laccase is able form dimers of the EE2 by polymerization of it | [ |
| | C | The | Degradation of estrogens tested | 100 U/L of laccases, with 17-α-ethinylestradiol at 10 μg/mL, and 1% of inducer by 24 h | Removal 96% of estrogens after 8 h of reaction | They suggest the degradation product, with hydroxylation of estrogens | [ |
| | F | Commercial laccase powder from | Degradation of PhAC: diclofenac, trimethoprim, carbamazepine, and sulfamethoxazole | Selected PhAC concentrations were added to the enzyme solution in individual beakers. The beakers were incubated on a rotary shaker for 48 h at 80 rpm and 25 °C | The results of this study revealed that laccase can effectively degrade diclofenac (100%), trimethoprim (95%), carbamazepine (85%), and sulfamethoxazole (56%) | Not reported | [ |
| | C | It was grown on PDA medium for 5 days at 28 °C and then on petri plates, pH 5 in static condition for 10 days, on Kirk’s medium. The supernatant was used | Degradation of chloramphenicol (CAP) | Different mediators like syringaldehyde, naphthol, vanillin and ABTS were added at 0.25, 0.50, 1, 3, 5 and 10 mM, to the reaction with 100 U of laccase enzyme and 10 mg/L of CAP in 0.1 M acetate buffer pH 5, by 48 h | The laccase enzyme degraded 0.5 mg/L CAP within 7 days without mediators and was efficiently degraded in the presence of laccase mediator system (syringaldehyde, vanillin, ABTS and α-naphthol) | Dehalogenation and oxidation of CAP by laccase to form chloramphenicol aldehyde which was non-toxic to the microorganisms studied | [ |
| | C | SF (500 mL) with 20 g of dried apple pomace, Tween 80 (0.1%) and moisture of 75% (w/w), inoculated with mycelia by 14 days, 30 °C with 200 mL. Enzyme from supernatant extract | Chlortetracycline (CTC) degradation | CTC at 2 mg/L, laccase dose at 0.5 IU, pH 4.5 or 6.0, and ultrasonication | 60% of CTC, considered as a recalcitrant pollutant, was removed in 2 h by ultrasonication and assisted laccase at pH 6.0. While at pH 4.5, 80% of CTC was degraded, resulting non estrogenic by products | Oxidation of C–C and C–O bonds | [ |
| | FP | PDA medium at 25 °C, and added ciprofloxacin (CIP: at 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 ppm). The enzyme was secreted | Degradation of ciprofloxacin (CIP) | Fungi growth by 14 days with 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500 ppm of CIP | Antibiotic degradation of about 68.8, 94.25 and 91.34% was estimated after 14 days of incubation at 500 ppm CIP | Not reported | [ |
| | F | STR of 10 L with 36.8% tomato juice medium, by 15 days, induced with CuSO4 and soybean oil at 48 h. LacI and LacII were purified | Degradation of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs): nonylphenol and triclosan (a biocide) | EDC at 10 ppm final concentration were prepared in pH 5 McIlvaine buffer with 100 U/L laccase. Samples were tested every 30 min for 8 h at 25 °C | More than 95% removal after 8 h of treatment with 100 U/L at pH 5 | Enzyme-driven oxidation | [ |
| Plastics, personal care and herbicide compounds | |||||||
| | CI | 11-days cultures in 10-L STR in complex liquid medium at 28 °C. Crude extract enzyme immobilized | Degradation of emerging endocrine disruptor (bisphenol A) | 800 μL McIlvaine buffer (pH 3), 100 µL of ABTS (5 mM, 1.0% w/v) and 100 µL of laccase extract of | 100% degradation of bisphenol A (20 mg/L) was achieved in less than 24 h | Probably degradation ends in the formation of 4-isopropenylphenol | [ |
| | MI | 7-days cultures in 30-L STR with complex liquid medium (50% tomato juice). Purified enzymes | In vitro oxidation of phenol | The reaction mixture in 1.5-mL contained dissolved phenol (0.5 mM), 50 mM sodium citrate pH 4.5 and 0.1 U/mL laccase | 84% phenol removal in 4 h. Dark colored products partly precipitated were found | Oxidative coupling of phenoxy radicals as major pathway of phenol conversion | [ |
| Recombinant laccase from | F | Cultures grown in 50 mL, incubated for 4 days at 28 °C/150 rpm. Purified laccase | Degradation of xenobiotic compounds (phenanthrene and benzo[α]pyrene) | Phenanthrene and benzo[α]pyrene were added into supernatants up to at 10 ppm, incubated at 28 °C and shaken at 150 rpm for 24 h | 57.5 U/L of laccase in supernatant removed phenanthrene and benzo[α]pyrene (97 and 99% respectively) present in wastewater from a biofuel industry plant | Not reported | [ |
| | C | Plants were grown for 16 days in a growing chamber at 24 °C under a photoperiod of 16:8 h (light:darkness). Enzyme secreted into rhizosphere | Phytoremediation of phenol content from olive mill wastewaters | Laccase activity of transgenic root exudates was evaluated by oxidation of 2 mM ABTS at 420 nm in 0.1 M citrate buffer pH 3.0 at 25 °C | Transgenic tobacco plants cultivated in a hydroponic solution with olive mill wastewaters were able to reduce the total phenol content up to 70% | Not reported | [ |
| | MI | It was grown in Kirk liquid medium with Tween 80 or soil supplemented with Tween 80 and wheat grains. Whole cultures | Degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) | Cultures and 50 mg/L of PAH at 30 °C by 28 days. 10 g soil and 0.5 g wheat grains in 30 mL tubes contaminated with a 50 mg/kg of PAHs at 30 °C by 60 days | 54 up to 75% removal of phenanthrene, anthracene. fluoranthene, pyrene and benzo (a)pyrene in soil with | Products of degradations were anthraquinone, phthalic acid, 4-hydroxy-9-fluorenone, 9-fluorenone and 4,5-dihydropyrene | [ |
| | C | 1L SF with synthetic liquid medium supplemented with dry coffee husk. 23 days static incubation at 30 °C. Crude extracts filtered | Biodegradation of a mixture of 2-chlorophenol (CP), 2,4-dichlorophenol (DCP), 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (TCP), pentachlorophenol (PCP) | Degradation of CPs during 8 h at 40 °C, 200 rpm in flasks containing 100 mL of a CP mixture, with 15 mg/L of each CP in 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 6.0. Enzymatic extract (5 mL) and 10 U/L | Biodegradation of 100%, 99%, 82.1% and 41.1% of CP, DCP, TCP and PCP, respectively, after 4 h. The reduction in chlorophenols, allowed 90% reduction toxicity | Not reported | [ |
| | C | 50 mL SF with modified Czapek medium and 20 mg of asphaltenes as carbon source, at 37 °C 100 rpm, 4 weeks. Whole cultures | Metabolization and mineralization of asphaltenes (recalcitrant petroleum fraction) | Asphaltene mineralization was quantified by measuring CO2 production. Cell-free extracellular medium was solvent extracted and analyzed by GC–MS | After 11 weeks of growth, the fungus metabolize 15.5% of the asphaltenic carbon, including 13.2% transformed to CO2 | Generation of oxidized metabolites such as hydroxypyrenedione and hydroxyphenylacetic acid | [ |
| | C | 15-days liquid cultures in modified Czapek Dox medium (0.5% peptone and 0.15 mM Cu2+) | Detoxification of water soluble fraction from ‘‘alpeorujo” (WSFA) | Reaction mixtures containing WSFA 20% (v/v) and 20 U laccase were incubated 24 h at 28 °C and 150 rpm | Reduction of free phenols from the WSFA | Oxidation of free phenols, resulting in radical formation, leading to polymerization as well as detoxification | [ |
| | C F | Extracted and purified enzyme (Novozymes) | Bisphenol A (BPA) degradation | 2.2 mM BPA incubated for 1 h with 1.0 unit/mL of laccase. The reaction mixture: 0.5 mM ABTS, 0.1 M sodium acetate, pH 5.0, and an enzyme in a total volume of 1.0 ml was incubated at 37 °C | BPA was degraded by a laccase, which was extracted and purified from DeniLite, a Novozymes’ product. Transforming and important endocrine-disturbing compound | BPA was metabolized to two compounds: one with high molecular weight due to oxidative condensation, and another identified as 4-isopro-penylphenol | [ |
| Dye-based pollutants | |||||||
| | C | 250-mL SF with 50 mL of effluent with 0.05 g/L Remazol Brilliant Blue R and 107 spores/mL and incubated | Decolorization dyes used in the textile industry | Cell in a microbial fuel cell with continuous laccase synthesis; and 0.05 g/L of anthraquinone remazol brilliant blue R dye | Laccase promoted decolorization by 86% of the anthraquinone dye remazol brilliant blue R (used in the textile industry) | Not mentioned, but phytotoxicity results showed that the process did not generate detectable toxic products | [ |
| | C | Solid-state fermentation in MYSA medium, pH 5.5, kept in darkness for 7 days at 25 °C. Supernatants was used as enzyme preparation. 5 compounds were tested in 0.5 L minireactor simulating an effluent | Decolorizing xanthene, azo and triarylmethane dyes | 0.1 mM of organic dyes: Bengal rose; blue black naphthol; congo red; methyl orange; bromocresol green; bromocresol purple; bromophenol blue; and phenol red, 550 nm; 100 mM potassium acetate buffer pH 4.8, 5% butyl acetate, 25 °C | The best activity-stability reached in pH 4.8 at 37 °C, decolorizing xanthene, azo and triarylmethane dyes, with selectivity on bromocresol green and bromocresol purple. Activity on effluent biotreatment | Not reported | [ |
| | C | SF, mycelial from petri dishes were incubated without agitation under air at 28 °C and in the absence of light by 14 days. Extract was dialyzed and partially purified | Decolorization of congo red | 50 mM acetate buffer (pH 5.5) in 250-mL 140 SF with 50 mL and containing 50 mg/L of Congo red and native 141 laccase (5 U). The mixtures were incubated at 30 °C in the dark in a rotary shaker at 100 rpm | 5 U were able to decolorize 80% of 50 mg/L Congo red within 24 h at 30 °C and pH 5.5 | Laccase acts not only on the dye chromophore group, but also that it cleaves different covalent bonds, causing an effective fragmentation of the molecule | [ |
| | F | SF in BMGY medium at 28 °C, the cells were suspended in of BMMY. Methanol was added to 1% every 24 h | Decolorization of triphenylmethane dyes, employed in industrial dyeing processes | The reaction mixture for the decolorization assay contained 0.1 mM of crystal violet, McIlvaine buffer and 50 μL of the enzyme in a total of 200 μL. ABTS, as the mediator, was added if necessary. Incubated in dark for 24 h | In the presence of ABTS, the decolorization rates of Crystal violet by laccases in | Not reported | [ |
| Recombinant laccase (Lcc IIIb) from | C | Cultures grown in optimized PPB medium pH 7.0 at 2 L STR | Decolorization of pollutant dyes: bromocresol purple, safranin, malachite green, kristal violet, bromothymol blue, nigrosine and phenol red | Reaction mixture was composed of 10 µL of supernatant and 90 µL of a buffer prepared by dissolving 0.1 mg of each dye in 1 mL of citrate buffer at pH 3. Dye decolorization was followed spectrophotometrically | The dye decolorization rates after the first hour were 43%, 54%, 55%, 49%, 56%, 53% and 37% for bromocresol purple, safranin, malachite green, kristal violet, Bromothymol blue, nigrosine and phenol red, respectively | Not reported | [ |
| Recombinant LCC3 from | C | 4-days liquid cultures induced with methanol | Synthetic dye decolorization | 50 µM of dye, citrate–phosphate buffer pH 4.5 at 30 °C, 1–10 U/mL laccase. Mediators used ρ-coumaric acid, HBT, violuric acid (200 µM) acetosyringone (10–200 µM) | 50–100% decolorizing ability of azoic, indigoid, triarylmethane, and anthraquinonic with acetosyringone within 2 h incubation at pH 6, 70 °C | Decolorization effectiveness depended on the chemical characteristics of redox mediators and dyes, and the ratio | [ |
| | C F | 22-days static liquid cultures in glucose (20 g/L), asparagine (3 g/L) medium with 1 mM Cu2+ | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | 19.5 U laccase per reaction, in test tubes at 30 °C with sodium acetate buffer (10 mM, pH 4.5) in a total volume of 3 mL. The effect of different salts, heavy metals, reaction temperature, pH and redox was analyzed | Laccase decolorized 85% of indigo carmine, xylidine, malachite green, gentian violet, bromophenol blue, 65% of fast blue RR and 30% of Azure B and Methylene Blue in 24 h | Direct oxidation of certain dyes and/or by the LMS | [ |
| | FP F | The fungus was maintained on 2% malt agar slants at 25 °C Commercial purified enzyme (Fluka) | Biodegradation of triphenylmethane dyes | Reactions in SF with 100 mL dye solution (150 mg/L) buffered with 1.6 mM 2,2-dimethyl succinate, pH 4.5, at 25 °C (laccase 1225 U/L), HBT (10−3 M) | Degradation dye brilliant green1 and acid green 16. resulting benzoic acid and diethylamine and 5,7-disulfo-2-naphtoic acid respectively | Oxidation of the methyl carbon of dye structure, giving stable products | [ |
| | I | Submerged fermentation of a recombinant | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | 20 U/mL of immobilized laccase or 0.5 g in a FBR. Several dyes at 0.02% (w/v) 30 °C 0.1 M sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.5) 90 rpm | The anthraquinonic dyes acid blue 25 and acid green 27 were decolorized. The RBBR and the diazo RB-5 were only decolorized with laccase/HBT, 31 and 60%, respectively, after 24 h | Direct oxidation of certain dyes and/or by the LMS | [ |
| Recombinant lcc1 gene from | F | SF at 30 °C and STR 2 L at 25 °C cultures in phosphate buffered minimal methanol (BMM), supplemented with yeast extract or casaminoacids | Decolorization dyes (amaranth, carmoisine, cochineal red, sunset yellow, patented blue, blue indigo and alizarin red S | 1 mL (0.05 mg/mL of dye in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 5.0) and 1 IU of laccase with or without 1 mM redox mediator 1-hydroxybenzotriazole or violuric acid at 25 °C, plus dyes | All the dyes were decolorized up to 60% percent after 2 h with containing 1 U of Lcc1 and the redox mediator violuric acid 1 mM | Generation of a phenoxy radical resulting in the cleavage of azo linkages with nitrogen release | [ |
F free purified enzyme, I immobilized purified enzyme, FP fungal pellets, C crude extract or culture supernatant, CI crude extract immobilized, MI mycelium immobilized, STR stirred-tank reactor, FBR fixed-bed bioreactor, PhAC pharmaceutically active compound, SF shake flask, PDA potato dextrose agar, LMS laccase-mediator system, HBT hydroxybenzotriazole, EE2 17-alpha-ethynilestradiol, CAP chloramphenicol, CTC chlortetracycline, CIP ciprofloxacin, SFMZ sulfamethoxazole, EDCs endocrine disrupting chemicals, AzBTS-(NH4)2 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt, ABTS diammonium 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonate), PAHs polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, CP 2-chlorophenol, DCP 2,4-dichlorophenol, TCP 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, PCP pentachlorophenol, BPA bisphenol A, WSFA water soluble fraction from ‘‘alpeorujo”, BMGY buffered glycerol-complex medium
Application of some interesting bacterial laccases that degrade different compounds and may be useful in water treatement
| Laccase source | Applied enzyme form | Type of culture, ingredients | Application | Reaction parameters | Results obtained | Main putative mechanisms involved | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceutical compounds | |||||||
| Recombinant laccase from | CS | Expressed in | Degradation of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs | After 24 h, both diclofenac and aspirin were fully degraded | In the case of the diclofenac, laccase oxidation by hydroxylations of 4′ or 5′ positions of the second benzene ring could be the modifications | [ | |
| | C | Production of laccase was done in ISP9 mineral medium, with soy flour (10 g/L) as carbon source and a copper concentration of 1 mg/L CuSO4∙5 H2O. Cultures were incubated at 30 °C for 23 days. Cell-free culture supernatant was collected, filtered and stored as enzyme source | Degradation of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (diclofenac: DFC) and mefenamic acid: MFA) | The reactions were performed in citrate phosphate buffer (30–40 mM) at three different pH values (5, 6 and 7), with a pollutant concentration of 20 mg/L. 2000 U/L of crude enzyme preparation were used. The reactions were incubated in the dark at 25 °C for 12 days | The enzyme showed a high conversion rate under acidic conditions (pH 5, 6), with 50% of conversion after 2 days for DFC. With respect to MFA, the highest conversion was obtained in pH 6 | Not discussed | [ |
| Recombinant | F | 2 L of LB medium at 37 °C were inoculated with 40 mL of an exponential-growth-phase culture. When exponential growth had resumed, the temperature was reduced to 28 °C, and SilA expression was induced with 1 mM IPTG. Purified enzyme was used | Degradation of fluoroquinolone antibiotics (ciprofloxacin: CIP, and norfloxacin) | The reactions were carried out in 50 mM phosphate buffer pH 8 at 35 °C, using 0.4 U/mL of laccase and 50 μg/mL of each fluoroquinolone. Several mediators at concentrations of 0.1, 0.3 and 0.5 mM were tested | After 24 h and with 0.5 mM acetosyringone, higher than 90% percent conversions were obtained for both antibiotics, with a detoxification effectiveness of 70% for CIP and 90% for norfloxacin | Possible oxidation of piperazine substituents | [ |
| | F | The culture was done in a solid-state fermentation, using cotton seed cake (5 g/L) as substrate, supplemented with mineral salts and glucose 1% (w/v). The medium was inoculated with a spore suspension and incubated for 6 days at 35 °C. The laccase was extracted and purified | Degradation of sulfa antibiotics (sulfadiazine and sulfathiazole) | In a 100 mM citrate–phosphate buffer pH 6 were dissolved each sulfa drug, with a final concentration of 50 mg/L. To this solution were added the laccase (81.3 U/mg), and 1 mM HBT (mediator). The reaction was done at 50 °C for 60 min | Under the conditions previously described, 73 and 90% removal efficiencies were achieved to sulfadiazine and sulfamethoxazole solutions, respectively. Moreover, the reaction products showed less antibiotic effect in bacterial cultures | Not reported | [ |
| Dye based pollutants | |||||||
| Recombinant laccase from | F | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | The reactions were done with 0.025, 0.05 and 0.1 U of the purified enzyme, in 50 mM citrate–phosphate buffer (pH 4.0 and 7.5) and 15 μL dye solution (100 mg/L) at 70 °C in 90 min | All the 10 dyes tested were efficiently oxidized under by the enzyme alone in both acidic and neutral conditions | Not reported | [ | |
| Recombinant | F | 48 h culture in BMGY at 28 °C. The induction was made with methanol 1% and 0.2 mM CuSO4 for 144 h, feeding methanol each 24 h. Purified laccase | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | The reactions were carried out at 55 °C in phosphates buffer 50 mM, pH 7.5, with a dye concentration of 80 mg/L and supplemented with 1 mM CuSO4 and 0.1 mM of acetosyringone as mediator. 1 μL of purified laccase was used | After 3 h of reaction, the laccase decolorized almost all the Congo red and malachite green tested. After 24 h, 90% of the remazol brilliant blue R were degraded | Not mentioned | [ |
| Recombinant and mutant laccase WLF from | F | Culture grown at 37 °C in LB medium until 0.5 DO. After that, were added IPTG (0.4 mM) and CuSO4 (0.25 mM) and maintained at 15 °C for 24 h. Purified laccase | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | Reaction mixture consisted in 0.25 mg of dye, 2 mg/L of purified laccase 1 mM de acetosyringone in 5 mL of 100 mM carbonate buffer pH 10, at 37 °C | Highest transformations of all the dyes tested. The efficiency with aromatic heterocyclic dyes was lower compared with azo, anthraquinonic and triphenylmethane dyes | Not reported | [ |
| | SS | Decolorization of synthetic dyes (malachite green, toluidine blue and reactive black 5) | To 2 mL of 50 mM acetate buffer (for pH values of 3–6) or 50 mM Tris buffer (for pH values of 7 and 8) were added the spore laccase suspension (8 U/L) and dye (final concentration of 10 mg/L). The effect of ABTS (15 μM) as mediator was also studied. The reactions were carried out at 30 °C for 2 h | Almost all the oxidation conditions showed better results with ABTS. The highest decolorization values for malachite green and toluidine blue were achieved between 5 and 7 pH values, while with reactive black were between pH 3 and 5 | Not mentioned | [ | |
| Recombinant | F | An inoculum of | Decolorization of synthetic dyes (reactive black B, reactive black WNN, congo red and remazol brilliant blue R) | A reaction mixture of 50 mM phosphates buffer pH 7.5, 10 μM CuSO4, 50 mg/L dye and 40 U/L of purified laccase were heated at 70 °C for 24 h | After 24 h the decolorization efficiency for congo red, reactive black B and reactive black WNN was higher than 90%, while for remazol brilliant blue R was around 70% | Not mentioned | [ |
| Recombinant | F | 2 L of Luria–Bertani (LB) | Decolorization of synthetic dyes | Laccase SilA and three mediators (0.1 mM), acetosyringone (AS), syringaldehyde (SA) and methyl syringate (MeS), by 24 h at 35 °C pH 8, and different dyes (acid black 48: AB48, acid orange 63: AO63, reactive black 5: RB5, orange II: OII, tartrazine: TART, azure B: AB, indigo carmine: IC, cresol red: CR | Laccase and mediators such as AS and MeS enhanced the decolorization and detoxification of a variety of textile dyes, principally RB5, OII, and IC, diminishing the toxicity of acid orange 63, tartrazine | The oxidation of MeS (which has the weakest acceptor group at the para-position) gives an stable phenoxy radical | [ |
| Plastic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) compounds | |||||||
| Recombinant | F | Degradation of PAHs (anthracene, pyrene benzo[α]pyrene, phenanthrene, fluoranthene, etc.) | The reactions were carried out in 50 mM acetate buffer pH 4 with 10% acetonitrile, with PAHs concentrations from 0.1 to 1 mg/L and laccase concentration of 3 U/mL. The reactions were incubated for 24 h at 20, 40 and 60 °C | Just anthracene and benzo[α]pyrene were significantly oxidized (almost complete oxidations at 60 °C), the other ones had degradation values from 0 to 40% in all the conditions tested | Not reported | [ | |
| | C | Production of laccase was done in ISP9 mineral medium, with soy flour (10 g/L) as carbon source and a copper concentration of 1 mg/L CuSO4∙5 H2O. Cultures were incubated at 30 °C for 23 days. Cell-free culture supernatant was collected, filtered and stored as enzyme source | Degradation of bisphenol A | The reactions were performed in citrate phosphate buffer (30–40 mM) at three different pH values (5, 6 and 7), with a pollutant concentration of 20 mg/L. 2000 U/L of crude enzyme preparation were used. The reactions were incubated in the dark at 25 °C for 12 days | Under all the conditions tested after 2 days there was full degradation, especially at pH 5 and 6 | Not reported | [ |
CS cell suspension, SS spore suspension, F free purified enzyme, C crude enzyme extract, IPTG isopropyl β-d-1-thiogalactopyranoside, DFC diclofenac, MFA mefenamic acid, AzBTS-(NH4)2 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt, ABTS diammonium 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonate), PAHs polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, BMGY buffered glycerol-complex medium, CIP ciprofloxacin, buffered methanol-complex medium
Fig. 3Cartoon structures of the three-domain laccase from Bacillus subtilis (PDB 1GSK) and the homotrimeric two-domain laccase from Streptomyces coelicolor (PDB 3CG8). The domain assignations were made using the SWORD partition algorithm
Fig. 4Representation of the different amino acids of the catalytic site that coordinates the catalytic coppers in Trametes versicolor laccase (PDB 1KYA). The amino acids of the histidine-cysteine pathway are in green
Fig. 5Laccase structure conservation and function. a Structure of Trametes versicolor (PDB ID 1GYC), and Bacillus subtilis (PDB ID 1GSK) laccases compared to Cucurbita pepo (zucchini) ascorbate oxidase (PDB ID 1AOZ) from left to right. Domain 1 (D1) is at the front and right of the structure, domain 2 (D2) is behind and in the upper portion, domain 3 (D3) is at the left. Brown spheres symbolize the position of copper atoms, T1 above the trinuclear cluster. b The molecular surface shows protruding chemical groups, in red, and concave or cavity regions, in green. Some of these latter regions correspond to the ligand-binding site (LB) along with the dioxygen molecule entrance (O2) and the water exit (H2O) channels. Central and right images were created from that on the left by rotating it 30° over the horizontal axis, or 30° over the vertical axis, respectively
Fig. 6Mechanism, kinetic model and structural elements involved in laccase functional properties and reaction. a Representation of the laccase mechanism of action in the active site of Trametes versicolor laccase (PDB 1KYA). In orange are represented those aminoacids involved in the binding, stabilization and orientation of the substrate, in grey and green those that are involved in the coordination of catalytic coppers and the electron transfer and in yellow those that transfer protons for the oxygen assisted reduction. b Laccase action on a lignin-model illustrating the domino effect [198]. c Complex two-site ping-pong bi-bi kinetic model proposed for the laccase reaction [184, 185]. d Structural and functional elements involved in different steps of the laccase reaction
Application of some interesting plant laccases that degrade different compounds and may be useful in water treatement
| Laccase source | Applied enzyme form | Type of culture, ingredients | Application | Reaction parameters | Results obtained | Main putative mechanisms involved | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dye-based pollutants | |||||||
| | P R | Single plant having a total biomass of 70 ± 4 g in 500 mL beaker having 200 mL of 20, 40, 60, 80 and 100 mg/L by 12 h in dye solution in distilled water Root tissue showed laccase (138%), lignin peroxidase (129%), riboflavin reductase (111%), DCIP reductase (47%), tyrosinase (26%) and azo reductase (18%) activities | Progressive dye accumulation and removal of Rubin GFL (RGFL) dye | Reactors (phytoreactor of 30 L) were watered with 500 mL tap water every day for 30 days | Proposed oxidative cleavage and deamination of the dyes. Phytotoxicity study demonstrated reduced toxicity of biotransformed RGFL | [ | |
| | P | Plants of selected species were independently planted on ridge beds and watered with normal water for first 30 days | The textile effluent from common effluent treatment plant | 1000 plants were nourished with normal water (control) and remaining 1000 plants with real textile wastewater for remaining 30 days of the experiments (test) | Reduction in dye by 59, 50, 46 and 73%, for each independent plant respectively within 30 days compared to dye accumulated in unplanted ridges | The mechanisms for their degradation or detoxification in plants are poorly understood | [ |
| | P | Plants of approximately the same growth stage, having equal number of shoots, and almost equivalent weight Three plants were dipped in 250 mL flasks containing solution of various dyes for 96 h | Decolorization of pollutant dyes | Three plants were dipped in each of the 250-mL SF containing 100 mL solution of the synthetic dye mixture for 96 h. Those are: reactive orange HE2R, reactive yellow MEG4, reactive yellow GR, blue 2GL, remazol red, green HE4B, brown 3REL, blue 2RNL, patent blue, and malachite green Cell free extract were used for enzyme assays | Plants of | Biodegradation in living cells is realized by multiple enzymes (laccases and peroxidases mainly) to mineralize synthetic dyes | [ |
| | C F | Cell suspension cultures on modified Murashuge and Skoog’s medium pH 5.8 and 25 °C. The cultures were maintained at 100 rpm under 16:8 h light:darkness photoperiod during 10 days. Filtrates obtained were used as sources of extracellular enzymes for enzyme assays | Decolorization of pollutant dyes: brilliant blue R (BBR), malachite green, reactive red 2, direct red 5B and methyl orange | The respective dyes at 40 mg/L, 0.2 M sodium acetate buffer (pH 4.8) and 0.5 mL enzyme and 35 μM ABTS. The reaction mixture was incubated at 30 °C under static as well as shaking conditions at 100 rpm | Suspension cells and purified laccase showed the ability to decolorize different dyes completely. In the case of purified laccase, the addition of ABTS to BBR, increase decolorization and degradation | Whole cell cultures involved a asymmetric cleavage of BBR followed by a demethylation with laccase | [ |
| | P | Plants were exposed to textile industry effluent in rhizofiltration reactor system for 6 days | Phytoremediation of sulfonated remazol red dye and textile effluents | Plants were put in contact with each effluent sample was monitored for a retention time of 6 days (144 h) and effluent samples were analyzed Cell free extract from roots, stem, leaves and plants as enzyme source | Unknown | [ | |
| Herbicide compounds | |||||||
| Recombinant LAC1 from | Seeds of | Transformation of sinapic acid, to other phenolic compounds like 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (TCP) | LAC1 in presence of 60 nmol of ABTS/min/mg protein In transformed plants, expressing LAC1, 10–20 μM of TCP, syringic acid 2 mM or 0.5 mM of sinapic acid | Laccase activity was responsible for the conversion of sinapic acid into mono-lactone type dimer and the transformation of TCP | Conversion of sinapic acid into monolactone-type dimer | [ | |
| Recombinant laccases from | CS | 48 h cultures in YPD medium induced with 1% methanol at 30 °C | Modification and detoxification of herbicides atrazine (ATR) and isoproturon (IPU) | Transformants were add in YPD medium containing 1% methanol and 0.4 mg/L ATR or 2.0 mg/L IPU at 30 °C for 48 h. The ATR or IPU conversion rates were calculated | The heterologous expression of the two rice laccase genes in | Mechanisms poorly understood | [ |
P whole plant, R plant roots, CS cell suspension, C crude culture supernatant, F free purified enzyme, RGFL rubin GF, DCIP 2,6-dichloroindophenol, TCP 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, AzBTS-(NH4)2 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt, ABTS diammonium 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonate), BBR brilliant blue R, ATR atrazine, IPU isoproturon, YPD yeast extract–peptone–dextrose