| Literature DB >> 34458755 |
Casper de Boer1, Nicholas G S McGregor2, Evert Peterse1, Sybrin P Schröder1, Bogdan I Florea1, Jianbing Jiang1, Jos Reijngoud3, Arthur F J Ram3, Gilles P van Wezel3, Gijsbert A van der Marel1, Jeroen D C Codée1, Herman S Overkleeft1, Gideon J Davies2.
Abstract
Cellulases and related β-1,4-glucanases are essential components of lignocellulose-degrading enzyme mixtures. The detection of β-1,4-glucanase activity typically relies on monitoring the breakdown of purified lignocellulose-derived substrates or synthetic chromogenic substrates, limiting the activities which can be detected and complicating the tracing of activity back to specific components within complex enzyme mixtures. As a tool for the rapid detection and identification of β-1,4-glucanases, a series of glycosylated cyclophellitol inhibitors mimicking β-1,4-glucan oligosaccharides have been synthesised. These compounds are highly efficient inhibitors of HiCel7B, a well-known GH7 endo-β-1,4-glucanase. An elaborated activity-based probe facilitated the direct detection and identification of β-1,4-glucanases within a complex fungal secretome without any detectable cross-reactivity with β-d-glucosidases. These probes and inhibitors add valuable new capacity to the growing toolbox of cyclophellitol-derived probes for the activity-based profiling of biomass-degrading enzymes. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34458755 PMCID: PMC8341922 DOI: 10.1039/d0cb00045k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Chem Biol ISSN: 2633-0679
Kinetic parameters for covalent inhibition of HiCel7B by putative β-1,4-glucanase inhibitors
| Compound | HiCel7B | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
|
| 31 ± 4 | 0.84 ± 0.08 | 450 |
|
| 1.9 ± 0.3 | 0.35 ± 0.03 | 3100 |
|
| 3.9 ± 0.3 | 0.50 ± 0.03 | 2100 |
Scheme 1Reagent and conditions: (a) TSMOTf, DCM, −15 °C to 0 °C, 45%. (b) (i) NaOMe, MeOH. (ii) H2, Pd(OH)2/C, H2O, MeOH, dioxane, 40%. (c) (i) Tf2O, pyr, DCM, −55 °C to rt. (ii) NaN3, DMF, 80 °C, 90%. (d) Ac2O, AcOH, H2SO4. (e) HSPh, BF3·Et2O, DCM, 46% over 2 steps. (f) 2, Ph2SO, Tf2O, TTBP, DCM, −70 °C to rt, 64%. (g) NaOMe, MeOH, DCM, 60%. (h) Na (s), t-BuOH, NH3, −60 °C, 53%. (i) 17, DIPEA, DMF, 27%; or 18, PFPOH, DIC, Et3N, DMF, 44%. (j) Cy5 alkyne, THPTA, CuI, DIPEA, DMSO, 46%. (k) (i) TFA, DCM; (ii) PFPOH, DIC, DMAP, DCM, 67%. (l) (i) PPh3, H2O, THF, 88%; (ii) BiotinNHS, DIPEA, DMF, 83%; (iii) TFA, DCM, quant.
Fig. 1HiCel7B inhibition kinetics with inhibitor 1. (A) Plot of fluorescence vs. time for HiCel7B in the presence of different concentrations of inhibitor 1. Each line represents a single measurement. (B) Plot of apparent decay constant (kapp) extracted from an exponential decay fit of the curves shown in panel A vs. inhibitor concentration with the hyperbolic fit shown as a dotted line. Each point is the average of two measurements.
Fig. 2Labelling of HiCel7B with 1. (A) Deconvoluted intact mass spectra of HiCel7B with (red) and without (black) incubation with 1. Δm (expected) = 338, Δm (observed) = 339. (B) Structure of the HiCel7B:1 complex showing 2Fo–Fc electron density at 2σ. Amino acids having polar or hydrophobic contacts with 1 are shown as purple sticks, 1, E197, and E202 are shown as tan sticks. (C) Overlay of 1 complex with Cellobiose:HiCel7B(E197S) complex (PDB ID: 1OJK). Active site residues and cellobiose from PDB ID 1OJK are shown in green, active site residues and 1 from PDB ID 6YOZ (this work) are shown in purple.
Fig. 3(A) Staining of the A. niger xylan-grown secretome with 14 and 19. Dual channel fluorescence scan of a 4–20% SDS-PAGE is shown. Lane 1 contains 14-stained secretome, lane 2 contains 14-stained secretome subsequently stained with 19, lane 3 contained 19-stained secretome, and lane 4 contains 19-stained secretome subsequently stained with 14. (B) Label-free quantification of proteins identified from the A. niger secretome following treatment with probe 15 and biotin–avidin enrichment. The “No Probe” sample is the negative control, the “Competition” sample was pre-treated with inhibitor 1, and the “Pulldown” sample was only treated with probe 15. The observed signal intensity was normalised to a 10 fmol μl−1 trysinised yeast enolase internal standard added to each sample prior to analysis.