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Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production

BACKGROUND: The ability of fungal cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) to generate H(2)O(2)in-situ is highly interesting for biotechnological applications like cotton bleaching, laundry detergents or antimicrobial functionalization of medical devices. CDH’s ability to directly use polysaccharide derived m...

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Autores principales: Sygmund, Christoph, Santner, Paul, Krondorfer, Iris, Peterbauer, Clemens K, Alcalde, Miguel, Nyanhongo, Gibson S, Guebitz, Georg M, Ludwig, Roland
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3654988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23617537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-12-38
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author Sygmund, Christoph
Santner, Paul
Krondorfer, Iris
Peterbauer, Clemens K
Alcalde, Miguel
Nyanhongo, Gibson S
Guebitz, Georg M
Ludwig, Roland
author_facet Sygmund, Christoph
Santner, Paul
Krondorfer, Iris
Peterbauer, Clemens K
Alcalde, Miguel
Nyanhongo, Gibson S
Guebitz, Georg M
Ludwig, Roland
author_sort Sygmund, Christoph
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The ability of fungal cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) to generate H(2)O(2)in-situ is highly interesting for biotechnological applications like cotton bleaching, laundry detergents or antimicrobial functionalization of medical devices. CDH’s ability to directly use polysaccharide derived mono- and oligosaccharides as substrates is a considerable advantage compared to other oxidases such as glucose oxidase which are limited to monosaccharides. However CDH’s low activity with oxygen as electron acceptor hampers its industrial use for H(2)O(2) production. A CDH variant with increased oxygen reactivity is therefore of high importance for biotechnological application. Uniform expression levels and an easy to use screening assay is a necessity to facilitate screening for CDH variants with increased oxygen turnover. RESULTS: A uniform production and secretion of active Myriococcum thermophilum CDH was obtained by using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as expression host. It was found that the native secretory leader sequence of the cdh gene gives a 3 times higher expression than the prepro leader of the yeast α-mating factor. The homogeneity of the expression in 96-well deep-well plates was good (variation coefficient <15%). A high-throughput screening assay was developed to explore saturation mutagenesis libraries of cdh for improved H(2)O(2) production. A 4.5-fold increase for variant N700S over the parent enzyme was found. For production, N700S was expressed in P. pastoris and purified to homogeneity. Characterization revealed that not only the k(cat) for oxygen turnover was increased in N700S (4.5-fold), but also substrate turnover. A 3-fold increase of the k(cat) for cellobiose with alternative electron acceptors indicates that mutation N700S influences the oxidative- and reductive FAD half-reaction. CONCLUSIONS: Site-directed mutagenesis and directed evolution of CDH is simplified by the use of S. cerevisiae instead of the high-yield-host P. pastoris due to easier handling and higher transformation efficiencies with autonomous plasmids. Twelve clones which exhibited an increased H(2)O(2) production in the subsequent screening were all found to carry the same amino acid exchange in the cdh gene (N700S). The sensitive location of the five targeted amino acid positions in the active site of CDH explains the high rate of variants with decreased or entirely abolished activity. The discovery of only one beneficial exchange indicates that a dehydrogenase’s oxygen turnover is a complex phenomenon and the increase therefore not an easy target for protein engineering.
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spelling pubmed-36549882013-05-16 Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production Sygmund, Christoph Santner, Paul Krondorfer, Iris Peterbauer, Clemens K Alcalde, Miguel Nyanhongo, Gibson S Guebitz, Georg M Ludwig, Roland Microb Cell Fact Research BACKGROUND: The ability of fungal cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) to generate H(2)O(2)in-situ is highly interesting for biotechnological applications like cotton bleaching, laundry detergents or antimicrobial functionalization of medical devices. CDH’s ability to directly use polysaccharide derived mono- and oligosaccharides as substrates is a considerable advantage compared to other oxidases such as glucose oxidase which are limited to monosaccharides. However CDH’s low activity with oxygen as electron acceptor hampers its industrial use for H(2)O(2) production. A CDH variant with increased oxygen reactivity is therefore of high importance for biotechnological application. Uniform expression levels and an easy to use screening assay is a necessity to facilitate screening for CDH variants with increased oxygen turnover. RESULTS: A uniform production and secretion of active Myriococcum thermophilum CDH was obtained by using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as expression host. It was found that the native secretory leader sequence of the cdh gene gives a 3 times higher expression than the prepro leader of the yeast α-mating factor. The homogeneity of the expression in 96-well deep-well plates was good (variation coefficient <15%). A high-throughput screening assay was developed to explore saturation mutagenesis libraries of cdh for improved H(2)O(2) production. A 4.5-fold increase for variant N700S over the parent enzyme was found. For production, N700S was expressed in P. pastoris and purified to homogeneity. Characterization revealed that not only the k(cat) for oxygen turnover was increased in N700S (4.5-fold), but also substrate turnover. A 3-fold increase of the k(cat) for cellobiose with alternative electron acceptors indicates that mutation N700S influences the oxidative- and reductive FAD half-reaction. CONCLUSIONS: Site-directed mutagenesis and directed evolution of CDH is simplified by the use of S. cerevisiae instead of the high-yield-host P. pastoris due to easier handling and higher transformation efficiencies with autonomous plasmids. Twelve clones which exhibited an increased H(2)O(2) production in the subsequent screening were all found to carry the same amino acid exchange in the cdh gene (N700S). The sensitive location of the five targeted amino acid positions in the active site of CDH explains the high rate of variants with decreased or entirely abolished activity. The discovery of only one beneficial exchange indicates that a dehydrogenase’s oxygen turnover is a complex phenomenon and the increase therefore not an easy target for protein engineering. BioMed Central 2013-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3654988/ /pubmed/23617537 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-12-38 Text en Copyright © 2013 Sygmund et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Sygmund, Christoph
Santner, Paul
Krondorfer, Iris
Peterbauer, Clemens K
Alcalde, Miguel
Nyanhongo, Gibson S
Guebitz, Georg M
Ludwig, Roland
Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title_full Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title_fullStr Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title_full_unstemmed Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title_short Semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
title_sort semi-rational engineering of cellobiose dehydrogenase for improved hydrogen peroxide production
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3654988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23617537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-12-38
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