4.7 Article

Regioselectivity of oxidation by a polysaccharide monooxygenase from Chaetomium thermophilum

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-018-1156-2

Keywords

Chaetomium thermophilum; Auxiliary activity family 9 (AA9); Polysaccharide monooxygenase (PMO); Regioselectivity of oxidation; C1; C4 and C6 oxidation

Funding

  1. Chinese National Key Technology Support Program [2015BAD15B05]
  2. Chinese National Nature Science Foundation [31571949]
  3. Chinese National Programs for High Technology, Research, and Development [2012AA10180402]

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Background: Polysaccharide monooxygenases (PMOs) of the auxiliary activity 9 (AA9) family have been reported to oxidize C1, C4, and C6 positions in cellulose However, currently no direct evidence exists that PMOs oxidize C6 positions in cellulose, and molecular mechanism of C1, C4 and C6 oxidation is unclear. Results: In this study, a PMO gene (Ctpmo1) belonging to AA9 was isolated from Chaetomium thermophilum and successfully expressed and correctly processed in Pichia pastoris A simple and effective chemical method of using Br-2 to oxidize CtPMOl reaction products was developed to directly identify C4- and C6-oxidized products by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) The PMO (CtPMOl) cleaves phosphoric acid-swollen cellulose (PASC) and celloheptaose, resulting in the formation of oxidized and nonoxidized oligosaccharides. Product identification shows that the enzyme can oxidize C1, C4, and C6 in PASC and cello-oligosaccharides Mutagenesis of the aromatic residues Tyr27, His64, His157 and residue Tyr206 on the flat surface of CtPMO1 was carried out using site-directed mutagenesis to form the mutated enzymes Y27A, H64A, H157A, and Y206A. It was demonstrated that Y27A retained complete activity of C1, C4, and C6 oxidation on cellulose; Y206A retained partial activity of C1 and C4 oxidation but completely lost activity of C6 oxidation on cellulose; H64A almost completely lost activity of C1, C4, and C6 oxidation on cellulose; and H157A completely lost activity of C1, C4, and C6 oxidation on cellulose. Conclusions: This finding provides direct and molecular evidence for C1, C4, especially C6 oxidation by lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase. CtPMO1 oxidizes not only C1 and C4 but also C6 positions in cellulose The aromatic acid residues His64, His157 and residueTyr206 on CtPMO1 flat surface are involved in activity of C1, C4, C6 oxidation.

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