| Literature DB >> 32514307 |
Peicheng Sun1, Christophe V F P Laurent2,3, Stefan Scheiblbrandner2, Matthias Frommhagen1, Dimitrios Kouzounis1, Mark G Sanders1, Willem J H van Berkel1, Roland Ludwig2, Mirjam A Kabel1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are powerful enzymes that oxidatively cleave plant cell wall polysaccharides. LPMOs classified as fungal Auxiliary Activities family 9 (AA9) have been mainly studied for their activity towards cellulose; however, various members of this AA9 family have been also shown to oxidatively cleave hemicelluloses, in particularly xyloglucan (XG). So far, it has not been studied in detail how various AA9 LPMOs act in XG degradation, and in particular, how the mode-of-action relates to the structural configuration of these LPMOs.Entities:
Keywords: AA9 LPMO; Active site segments; Biomass; Biorefinery; Hemicellulose; Lignocellulose; Neurospora crassa; Phylogenetic tree; Plant cell wall; Xyloglucan
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514307 PMCID: PMC7257166 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-020-01731-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 7.670
One-letter codes according to Fry et al. [15] and symbols used in this study for representing XG oligosaccharide structures
ablue circle: glucosyl unit; star: xylosyl unit; yellow circle: galactosyl unit; red triangle: fucosyl unit
Fig. 1a Amino acid sequence alignments of NcLPMO9C (PDB entry: 4D7U) and NcLPMO9M (PDB entry: 4QI8) and b, c their respective crystal structures. The active site segments are indicated as Seg1 (red), Seg2 (blue), Seg3 (yellow), Seg4 (green) and Seg5 (purple)
Fig. 2Molecular weight (MW) distribution of tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG) digests in presence of ascorbic acid (Asc) from a 1.25 µM NcLPMO9M and b 1.25 µM NcLPMO9C, analyzed by HPSEC-RI. Dotted lines are control reactions containing only TXG with Asc. MW distributions of additional control digests are shown in Additional file 1: Fig. S1. MWs are indicated based on calibration with a series of pullulan standards (0.4–708 kDa)
Fig. 3HPAEC elution patterns of oligosaccharide products after the incubation of tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG) with NcLPMO9C (1.25 μM; a, b) and NcLPMO9M (1.25 μM; c, d) in the presence (1 mM; a, c) and absence (b, d) of ascorbic acid (Asc). TXG oligosaccharides released by xyloglucanase (XEG, 1.25 μM) in the presence of Asc (g) were added as the reference. In addition, TXG only (f), TXG with 1 mM Asc (e), TXG oligosaccharide standards (xyloglucan hepta + octa + nona saccharides; h) and a standard (i) containing a mixture of cellobiose, cellotriose, cellotetraose, cellopentaose and cellohexaose (from left to right in chromatogram) are shown
Fig. 4MALDI-TOF mass spectra of tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG), after incubation with a 1.25 µM NcLPMO9C and b 1.25 µM NcLPMO9M, both in the presence of 1 mM of ascorbic acid (Asc). TXG oligosaccharide clusters included non-oxidized oligosaccharides (HnPm) and C4-oxidized oligosaccharides (Ox-HnPm). The clusters of H4P3 and H5P3 are enlarged in the inserts. Abbreviations: H, hexaose (glucose or galactose, 162 Da); P, pentaose (xylose, 132 Da); n, number of hexaoses; m, number of pentaoses; Ox, oxidized. M/z shown correspond to lithium (Li)-adducts
Fig. 5HILIC-ESI-MS base-peak and extracted ion chromatograms of tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG) digests from aNcLPMO9C and bNcLPMO9M. Extracted ion chromatograms are made for non-, C4- and C1-oxidized products (non-Ox, C4-Ox and C1-Ox) released by NcLPMO9C and NcLPMO9M (in the presence of 1 mM ascorbic acid). Determination of C4- and C1-oxidized TXG oligosaccharides is based on the m/z difference of − 2 and + 16, respectively, compared to m/z-values of corresponding non-oxidized oligosaccharides. The identification (numbered peaks) of C4-oxidized TXG oligosaccharides in NcLPMO9C- and NcLPMO9M-TXG-digest, based on the MS/MS fragmentation patterns, is shown in Tables 2 and 3, respectively. Asterisks indicate formic acid adducts of non-oxidized TXG oligosaccharides having the same m/z as C1-oxidized products
List of C4-oxidized XG oligosaccharides identified based on fragmentation patterns in CID-MS/MS present in the NcLPMO9C-TXG-digest
| 9C_C4-Ox Peak Nr. | Elution time (min) | MS/MS fragments ( | Annotation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 30.7–32.7 | 1059.4 | O=GGXXX | |
| O=GXXXG | ||||
| 2 | 36.4–37.5 | 1221.5 | 311 (2), | O=GGXLX/O=GGXXL |
| 311 (2), | O=GGLXX | |||
| 455 (8), | O=GX(H4P2) | |||
| 3 | 39.7–41.4 | 1383.7 | 311 (3), | O=GG(H5P3) |
| 4 | 43.0–45.0 | 1515.5 | n.d. | O=GH6P4 |
Chromatograms, including peak numbers, are shown in Fig. 5. Nomenclature (annotation) according to Fry et al. [15]
aRelative intensities of MS/MS fragments are shown between brackets and informative MS/MS fragments are indicated in italics
List of C4-oxidized XG-oligosaccharides identified based on fragmentation patterns in CID-MS/MS present in the NcLPMO9M-TXG-digest
| 9M_C4-Ox Peak Nr. | Elution time (min) | MS/MS fragments ( | Annotation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 10.7–11.7 | 471.2 | O=GGX | |
| 179 (20), | O=GXG | |||
| 2 | 17.5–18.7 | 765.4 | O=GXXG | |
| O=GXGX | ||||
| 3 | 24.1–27.9 | 927.3 | O=GXGL | |
| O=GGLX | ||||
| 4 | 27.9–32.0 | 927.3 | O=GLGX | |
| 30.5–31.5 | 1059.4 | O=GXXGX | ||
| O=GXGXX | ||||
| 5 | 32.5–34.1 | 1089.1 | O=GLLG | |
| O=GLGL | ||||
| 33.9–34.9 | 1221.5 | O=GXGXL | ||
| O=GXGLX | ||||
| O=GLXGX | ||||
| 6 | 38.1–38.9 | 1221.5 | 353 (3), | O=GXGXL |
| O=GLXGX | ||||
| 38.6–39.6 | 1383.7 | O=GXGLL | ||
| 7 | 41.7–44.4 | 1383.7 | 453 (13), 455 (4), 635 (3), 767 (1), 851 (3), 869 (3), 929 (100), 1091 (2), 1223 (2), 1365 (17) | O=GH6P3 |
| 1515.5 | n.d. | O=GH6P4 |
Chromatograms, including peak numbers, are shown in Fig. 5. Nomenclature (annotation) according to Fry et al. [15]
aRelative intensities of MS/MS fragments are shown between brackets and informative MS/MS fragments are indicated in italics
Fig. 6Negative ion mode CID-MS/MS fragmentation patterns of C4-oxidized tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG) oligosaccharides present in the NcLPMO9C-TXG-digest annotated as O=GGXXX (m/z 1059.4, a) and O=GGXLX (m/z 1221.5, b). O=G indicates that the oxidation is on the glucosyl unit in keto-form. Oxidation of the C4-carbon position is indicated in red. The fragments are annotated according to the nomenclature proposed by Domon and Costello [49]. The m/z-values shown in grey in b are from the other co-eluted isomers
Fig. 7Negative ion mode CID-MS/MS fragmentation patterns of C4-oxidized tamarind seed xyloglucan (TXG) oligosaccharides present in the NcLPMO9M-TXG-digest annotated as O=GLGX (m/z 927.3, a) and O=GXGLL (m/z 1383.7, b). O=G indicates that the oxidation is on the glucosyl unit in keto-form. Oxidation of the C4-carbon position is indicated in red. The fragments are annotated according to the nomenclature proposed by Domon and Costello [49]
Fig. 8a Illustration of structural units in xyloglucan (XG) and b schematic representation of XG cleavage patterns by NcLPMO9C (blue arrows) and NcLPMO9M (red arrows), respectively. G unit, glucosyl residues only (blue circle); X unit, glucosyl-xylosyl residues (xylose, star); L unit, glucosyl-xylosyl-galactosyl residues (galactose, yellow circle) and F unit, glucosyl-xylosyl-galactosyl-fucosyl residues (fucose, red triangle). Positions of galactosyl units may vary and fucosyl units are present in black currant XG, but not in tamarind seed XG. NcLPMO9C showed substitution-intolerant mode-of-action meaning that its oxidative cleavage towards XG was (predominately) at the non-reducing end of unbranched G units, while NcLPMO9M oxidatively cleaved XG regardless of substitution (substitution-tolerant) with seemingly preference on substituted glucosyl units. Whether NcLPMO9M can cleave between two L units remains to be studied and is shown as red question mark. The size of the arrows is indicative for more pronounced cleavage sites, which was based on (the number of) structures found of identifiable (oxidized) oligosaccharides by using HILIC-ESI-MS
Fig. 9Unrooted topology tree based on active site segments only of AA9 LPMOs with numbering on the terminal nodes. Corresponding organism name, Genbank accession number, LPMO name (if characterized) and PDB entry (if applicable) of each number in the terminal node is listed in Additional file 1: Table S4. Background colors in the topology tree show the long (+)/short (−) of Seg1 and Seg2 segments [red, +Seg1−Seg2; light blue, −Seg1+Seg2; dark blue, −Seg1+Seg2 but extended Seg3 (+Seg3); yellow, −Seg1−Seg2]. Reported characterized LPMOs are indicated by colored dots; XG product patterns alike that of NcLPMO9C (blue, Substitution-intolerant), alike that of NcLPMO9M (red, Substitution-tolerant) or not XG-active (yellow, Inactive). Grey dots indicate that the LPMOs were reported for 1) their activity on cellulose only and not tested on XG (e.g., No. 10, HiLPMO9B) or 2) their cellulolytic enhancing activity and not tested on XG (e.g., No. 35, AfAA9_B) or 3) tested with XG but the data were not conclusive (e.g., No. 20, PaLPMO9D). Green dots indicate that oxidative XG cleavage has been shown, but reported data are inconclusive to be determined as substitution-intolerant or -tolerant. LPMOs with red dots: 5. NcLPMO9M; 7. GtLPMO9A-2; 15. FgLPMO9A; 31. TaLPMO9A; 38. GcLPMO9B; 39. GcLPMO9A. LPMOs with blue dots: 41. MtLPMO9J; 43. NcLPMO9C; 51. NcLPMO9D; 54. CvAA9A; 56. LsAA9A. LPMOs with yellow dots: 47. NcLPMO9A; 63. MtLPMO9B; 66. MtLPMO9I; 76. TtLPMO9E; 78. NcLPMO9F. *17. PaLPMO9D: XG catalytic performance was determined based on a colorimetric H2O2-production assay [31]. *45. PaLPMO9H: XG product profiles were shown to be either NcLPMO9C-like (“Substitution-intolerant”) via HPAEC [31] and NcLPMO9M-like (“Substitution-tolerant”) via direct infusion ESI-MS/MS [26], hence inconclusive. *47. NcLPMO9A: “Inactive” on XG alone but “Substitution-intolerant” in combination with cellulose [20]. *62. PaLPMO9B: XG catalytic performance was determined based on a colorimetric H2O2-production assay [31]. *73. AN3046: Only one XG product profile was shown (MALDI-TOF mass spectrum), hence inconclusive [29]. *76. TtLPMO9E: Inactive towards XG using ascorbic acid, but XG-active when using photosynthetic pigments with light [33]. *84. PaLPMO9E: XG catalytic performance was determined based on a colorimetric H2O2-production assay [31]