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Promotion of Efficient Saccharification of Crystalline Cellulose by Aspergillus fumigatus Swo1
Authors:Xin-ai Chen  Nobuhiro Ishida  Nemuri Todaka  Risa Nakamura  Jun-ichi Maruyama  Haruo Takahashi  Katsuhiko Kitamoto
Institution:Department of Biotechnology, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8657,1. Biotechnology Laboratory, Toyota Central R&D Labs Inc., Nagakute-cho, Aichi 480-1192, Japan2.
Abstract:Swollenin is a protein from Trichoderma reesei that has a unique activity for disrupting cellulosic materials, and it has sequence similarity to expansins, plant cell wall proteins that have a loosening effect that leads to cell wall enlargement. In this study we cloned a gene encoding a swollenin-like protein, Swo1, from the filamentous fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, and designated the gene Afswo1. AfSwo1 has a bimodular structure composed of a carbohydrate-binding module family 1 (CBM1) domain and a plant expansin-like domain. AfSwo1 was produced using Aspergillus oryzae for heterologous expression and was easily isolated by cellulose-affinity chromatography. AfSwo1 exhibited weak endoglucanase activity toward carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) and bound not only to crystalline cellulose Avicel but also to chitin, while showing no detectable affinity to xylan. Treatment by AfSwo1 caused disruption of Avicel into smaller particles without any detectable reducing sugar. Furthermore, simultaneous incubation of AfSwo1 with a cellulase mixture facilitated saccharification of Avicel. Our results provide a novel approach for efficient bioconversion of crystalline cellulose into glucose by use of the cellulose-disrupting protein AfSwo1.Cellulose is the primary polysaccharide of plant cell wall and the most abundant renewable biomass resource. Biological degradation of cellulose to soluble sugars has long been considered an alternative to the use of starch feedstocks for bioethanol production. Natural cellulose is an ordered, linear polymer of thousands of d-glucose residues linked by β-1,4-glucosidic bonds. Spontaneous crystallization of cellulose molecules due to chemical uniformity of glucose units and the high degree of hydrogen bonding in cellulose can often result in the formation of tightly packed microfibrils (8), which remain inaccessible to cellulolytic enzymes. No single enzyme is able to hydrolyze crystalline cellulose microfibrils completely. Synergistic effects of cellulase mixtures on crystalline cellulose degradation are well known (1, 7, 21). Nevertheless, cost-competitive technology for overcoming the recalcitrance of cellulosic biomass to enhance enzymatic saccharification is still a major impediment to the utilization of cellulosic materials in bioenergy generation.Expansins are plant cell wall proteins that cause cell wall enlargement by a unique loosening effect in an acid-induced manner (15, 20). They are also involved in many physiological processes where cell wall extension occurs, such as pollination, fruit ripening, organ abscission, and seed germination (13, 14). It has been proposed that plant expansins disrupt hydrogen bonding between cellulose microfibrils and other cell wall polysaccharides without hydrolytic activity, causing sliding of cellulose fibers or expansion of the cell wall (18, 19, 27). Swollenin, an expansin-like protein, was isolated and characterized from the cellulolytic filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei. It has a bimodular structure consisting of a carbohydrate-binding module family 1 (CBM1) domain and an expansin-like domain connected by a linker region rich in serine and threonine. Swollenin exhibits disruption activity on cellulosic materials such as cotton and algal cell walls without releasing any detectable reducing sugars (23). However, effects of cellulose disruption activity on degradation/saccharification of crystalline cellulose have not yet been reported.Here, we report cloning a swollenin-like gene (designated Afswo1) from the filamentous fungus Aspergillus fumigatus. We also report its production by Aspergillus oryzae and characterization of the purified AfSwo1.
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