4.5 Article

Utilization of Bacillus subtilis cells displaying a glucose-tolerant β-glucosidase for whole-cell biocatalysis

Journal

ENZYME AND MICROBIAL TECHNOLOGY
Volume 132, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.enzmictec.2019.109444

Keywords

Surface display; Bacillus subtilis; Whole-cell biocatalysis; Thermo-stability; Enzyme recycle; Glucose-tolerant beta-glucosidase

Funding

  1. Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
  2. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The microbial production of industrial enzymes requires a large number of complex biochemical steps for purification which increases their production cost. Additionally, poor thermo-stability of the purified enzymes under the operational conditions along with the challenges in their recovery and subsequent reuse, limit their usage in an industrial bioprocess. Surface display of heterologous enzymes on bacterial cells appear to be a suitable alternative. Bacillus subtilis, the most well characterized Grain-positive bacterium, is being increasingly studied as a host for surface display. We displayed a glucose-tolerant beta-glucosidase (UnBgl1A) on the surface of B. subtilis cells using CWBb as the anchor protein. These cells displaying UnBgl1A (SD-01) were directly employed for biocatalysis without cell lysis and enzyme purification. The SD-01 cells elicited similar to 2 times more catalytic activity compared to the cells expressing the enzyme intracellularly (IN-01). The displayed enzyme and the purified enzyme elucidated similar glucose tolerance (IC50 similar to 0.9 M glucose), temperature optima (similar to 50 degrees C), and pH optima (similar to 6.0). The surface displayed UnBgl1A retained similar to 50% activity after 4 h when stored at 50 degrees C whereas the purified UnBgl1A lost all its activity by the 4th hour. Additionally, the SD-01 cells could be efficiently reused for 3 sets of reactions. Further, supplementation of a cellulase cocktail with the cells of the SD-01 strain resulted in similar to 2 times more glucose release from sugarcane bagasse compared to supplementation with the purified UnBg11A. Therefore, displaying enzymes on the B. subtilis cell surface could be an attractive platform for the commercial production of industrial enzymes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available