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1.
Cellobiohydrolase I (CBH I) has a higher adsorption affinity (K ad) and tightness (–H a) for Avicel than cellobiohydrolase II (CBH II). The adsorption processes of CBH I and II were exothermic, and the degree of exothermy were larger with the increasing ionic strength. Entropy change of CBH I was larger than CBH II with increasing ionic strength. CBH I was more effective than CBH II for binding at a given ionic strength.  相似文献   

2.
Monoclonal antibodies have been used to determine the presence of cellobiohydrolases I and II (CBH I and II), and endoglucanase I (EG I) on the surface of conidia from Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 and RUT C-30, and 8 other Trichoderma species. For this purpose, proteins were released from the conidial surface by treatment with a non-ionic detergent (Triton X-100 and -octylglucoside), followed by SDS-PAGE/Western blotting and immunostaining. Both CBH I and II were clearly present, but — unlike in extracellular culture fluids from Trichoderma — CBH II was the predominant cellulase. In T. reesei EG I could not be detected. The higher producer strain T. reesei RUT C-30 exhibited a higher conidial level of CBH II than T. reesei QM 9414. In order to assess the importance of the conidial CBH II level for cellulase induction by cellulose, multiple copies of the chb2 gene were introduced into the T. reesei genome by cotransformation using PyrG as a marker. Stable multicopy transformants secreted the 2- to 4-fold level of CBH II into the culture medium when grown on lactose as a carbon source, but their CBH I secretion was unaltered. Upon growth on cellulose, both CBH I and CBH II secretion was enhanced. Those strain showing highest cellulase activity on cellulose also appeared to contain the highest level of conidial bound CBH II. CBH II was also the predominant conidial cellulase in various other Trichoderma sp. However, roughly the same amount of conidial bound CBH II was detected in all strains, although their cellulase production differed considerably.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The secretion of multiple forms of cellulolytic enzymes by a Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 selectant exhibiting high protease activity (T. reesei QM 9414/A 30) was investigated using monoclonal, domain-specific antibodies against cellobiohydrolase (CBH) I, CBH II and -glucosidase, and a polyclonal antibody against endoglucanase I. The pattern of appearance of these proteins was followed during growth of the fungus on Avicel cellulose, using sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)/Western blotting/immunostaining. Evidence was obtained that, at late cultivation stages, CBH I and II became partially modified to lower molecular weight components, whereas -glucosidase and endoglucanase I appeared to remain largely intact. Modification of CBH I appeared to commence from the carboxy-terminal AB region, whereas CBH II appeared to become modified both from the amino- (ABB') and the carboxy-terminal. Evidence for a protease activity that modifies the already truncated cellobiohydrolases in the culture filtrate was obtained. These results show that proteolysis at late culture stages may contribute to the multiplicity of cellulases found in T. reesei culture fluids. Initial proteolytic cleavage of CBH I and II may, however, involve an unusual protease not detectable by the azocasein method.Offprint requests to: C. P. Kubicek  相似文献   

4.
A gene encoding a cellobiohydrolase (CBH) was isolated from Thermoascus aurantiacus IFO 9748 and designated as cbh1. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded by cbh1 showed high homology with the sequence of glycoside hydrolase family 7. To confirm the sequence of the gene encoding the CBH, the cloned gene was expressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in which no cellulase activity was found, and the gene product was purified and subjected to enzymatic characterization. The recombinant enzyme was confirmed as a CBH by analysis of the reaction product and designated as CBHI. Recombinant CBHI retained more than 80% of its initial activity after 1 h of incubation at 65 °C and was stable in the pH range 3.0–9.0. The optimal temperature for enzyme activity was about 65 °C and the optimal pH was about 6.0. The recombinant enzyme was found to be highly glycosylated and this glycosylation was shown to contribute to the thermostability of the enzyme. CBHI expression was shown to be induced at higher temperature in T. aurantiacus.  相似文献   

5.
The cellobiohydrolase II (CBHII) of Microbispora bispora, originally cloned in Escherichia coli, was subcloned into Streptomyces lividans using shuttle vectors pSKN 01 and pSKN 02. The enzyme was secreted from Streptomyces, whereas it was intracellular in E. coli. The yields of CBHII produced by S. lividans transformants were 15–20-fold higher than those produced by E. coli transformants. The optimal pH of M. bispora native cellobiohydrolase and the cloned enzyme from S. lividans is 6.5. The thermal and pH stability of CHBII produced in M. bispora, E. coli and S. lividans were compared. Enzyme produced in E. coli was inactivated more rapidly (k = 0.252 min–1 at 90° C; 90% inactivation after 10 min vs. 0.119 min–1 for the others). CBHII was monitored following electrophoretic separation by reaction with a monoclonal antibody. The apparent molecular mass of the protein produced from the S. lividans clone was 93 kDa, the same as that of the native enzyme, but that of the enzyme produced in E. coli was smaller (82 kDa). Correspondence to: P. Hu  相似文献   

6.
Decompositions of amorphous cellulose induced by cellulases of Trichoderma reesei were evaluated from gradients at zero time of exponential functions which were fitted to nephelometrically measured values of turbidty of incubated solutions of cellulose [turbidity = A × exp (B × t)+ C [A, B, C = constants, t = time]]. Synergistic enhancements of decomposition of amorphous cellulose resulted in the range of 300 p.c. whenever of the two isoenzymes of cellobiohydrolase I of Trichoderma reesei (CBH I, being an exo-glucanase) one was incubated together with one of the isoenzymes of CBH II (being really an endo-glucanase). Accessibility of amorphous cellulose to enzymatic decomposition being calculated from the fitted function by the term (A/(A + C)) × 100 [p.c.] resulted for the CBH I isoenzymes and for the CBH II/1 in the range of 27 to 38 p.c. of the total substrate. Incubations of CBH II/1 in with CBH I/1 and CBH I/2 were followed by increases of accessibility to 85 and 87 p.c., respectively. CBH II/2 by itself caused a substrate accessibility in the range of 80 p.c., which increased to 96 p.c. when it was incubated together with CBH I/1 or CBH I/2. Amorphous cellulose dispersing activity (ACD activity) being evaluated from the fitted function by the term (A + C)/(Ac + Cc) × 100 [p.c.] (Ac + Cc × control turbidity at zero time) was not increased when a CBH I isoenzyme was incubated together with a CBH II isoenzyme. EG I, a convetional endo-glucanase from Tr. reesei proved not to act synergistically in any case when incubated together with one of the CBH isoenzymes. On the contrary, EG I turned out to act antagonistically to CBH II/1 and CBH II/2. Results can be interpreted as an exo-endo-synergism taking place between C1-specific exo- and endo-glucanases.  相似文献   

7.
The cellulase system of Neocallimastix frontalis was separated by differential affinity on cellulose into an adsorbed fraction that could solubilize crystalline cellulose (crystalline-cellulose-solubilizing fraction, CCSF), and a non-adsorbed fraction that contained endoglucanase and -glucosidase activities (non-adsorbed endoglucanase/ -glucosidas, NAE/-G) but which showed no activity to crystalline cellulose. Both fractions were tested for their capacity to act synergistically with the cellobiohydrolase (CBH) components of aerobic fungi in degrading crystalline cellulose. The CCSF acted synergistically with CBH I components of both Penicillium pinophilum and Trichoderma koningii but not with CBH II. The NAE/-G fraction also acted synergistically with the CBH components of P. pinophilum but, remarkably, only when both CBH I and CBH II were present in the reaction mixture. By comparison with previously published studies on the mechanism of action of P. pinophilum cellulase it is speculated that the CCSF of N. frontalis may contain CBH I- and CBH II-type enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
The ability to screen the functionality of gene constructs in a transient system of appropriate tissues informs the researcher of the potential success of stable transformation. For this purpose, we developed a transient system to test the functionality of endosperm-preferred promoters in maize. Two endosperm-preferred promoters from rice (a globulin and a glutelin promoter) were employed. Ears of Zea mays L. were harvested at 17 d after pollination, surface sterilized and the endosperm excised. Using Agrobacterium tumefaciens co-cultivation and sonication, transient expression of the target genes was detected after 4 and 5 d. We demonstrate expression of CBH I and CHB II (both exo-cellulases) up to 1.7% TSP, under the rice globulin and glutelin promoters.  相似文献   

9.
WHATMAN 1 CHR filter paper manufactured from macerated cotton fibers was shown to be a soft substrate when broken down by purified cellulases of Trichoderma reesei (CELLUCLAST). Destruction of filter-paper disks was induced by CBH I/1, CBH I/2, CBH II/1, CBH II/2, and EG I in a macroscopic assay. Attack on disks by mixtures of these cellulases (CBH I/1 or CBH I/2 mixed with CBH II/1, CBH II/2, or with EGJ) were followed by synergistically enhanced destructions. SCHLEICHER &SCHUELL filter paper No 595 was shown to be a harder substrate of enzymatical decomposition when induced by cellulases of CELLUCLAST. None of the cellulases could induce macroscopic destruction of filter-paper disks when acting in isolation. However, mixtures of isolated exo and endo-glucanases (CBH I/1 or CBH I/2 mixed with CBH II/1, CBH II/2, or EG I) caused powerful destruction of filter-paper disks. SCHLEICHER &SCHUELL filter paper No 595 incubated first with an endo-glucanase (CBH II/1, CBH II/2, EG I) and treated in a secondary incubation with an exo-glucanase (CBH I/1, CBH I/2) were destroyed to a greater extent than with incubations executed in the reverse order. Results confirm the endo exo concept of explaining cellulose decomposition. The filter-paper destruction assay was performed with filter-paper disks prepared with an office punch. Disks were incubated in 1 ml EPPENDORF reaction tubes filled up beforehand with 0.4 or 0.5 ml of enzyme solution. The degree of synergism of cellulases resulted from the assay in the range of 300 to 1 300 p.c.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
A quantitative linear model accurately (R2 = 0.88) describes the thermostabilities of 54 characterized members of a family of fungal cellobiohydrolase class II (CBH II) cellulase chimeras made by SCHEMA recombination of three fungal enzymes, demonstrating that the contributions of SCHEMA sequence blocks to stability are predominantly additive. Thirty-one of 31 predicted thermostable CBH II chimeras have thermal inactivation temperatures higher than the most thermostable parent CBH II, from Humicola insolens, and the model predicts that hundreds more CBH II chimeras share this superior thermostability. Eight of eight thermostable chimeras assayed hydrolyze the solid cellulosic substrate Avicel at temperatures at least 5 °C above the most stable parent, and seven of these showed superior activity in 16-h Avicel hydrolysis assays. The sequence-stability model identified a single block of sequence that adds 8.5 °C to chimera thermostability. Mutating individual residues in this block identified the C313S substitution as responsible for the entire thermostabilizing effect. Introducing this mutation into the two recombination parent CBH IIs not featuring it (Hypocrea jecorina and H. insolens) decreased inactivation, increased maximum Avicel hydrolysis temperature, and improved long time hydrolysis performance. This mutation also stabilized and improved Avicel hydrolysis by Phanerochaete chrysosporium CBH II, which is only 55–56% identical to recombination parent CBH IIs. Furthermore, the C313S mutation increased total H. jecorina CBH II activity secreted by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression host more than 10-fold. Our results show that SCHEMA structure-guided recombination enables quantitative prediction of cellulase chimera thermostability and efficient identification of stabilizing mutations.SCHEMA is a computational approach to identifying blocks of sequence that minimize structural disruption when they are recombined in chimeric proteins (1). SCHEMA recombination of eight blocks from three fungal cellobiohydrolase class II (CBH II)2 genes was used in our previous work to create a library of 38 = 6,561 chimeric sequences, all having the native Hypocrea jecorina cellulose binding module and linker and observed to feature a degree of glycosylation similar to that found in native CBH IIs secreted by fungi (2). Synthesis and characterization of selected CBH II chimeras expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae revealed enzymes with thermostabilities and cellulose hydrolysis performance superior to those of the parent enzymes from Humicola insolens, H. jecorina, and Chaetomium thermophilum.Our prior analysis showed that a qualitative model based on sequence-stability data from 23 functional chimeras (categorizing blocks as destabilizing, stabilizing, or neutral) could identify highly stable chimeras in the SCHEMA library (2). When studying SCHEMA recombination of a bacterial cytochrome P450, we previously estimated that building a quantitative regression model would require stability measurements for at least 35 representative sequences (3). We therefore synthesized an additional 18 CBH II chimeras to further explore the sequences that the qualitative model predicted would encode the most thermostable chimeras. If sequence blocks contribute additively and independently of their context, as was found for SCHEMA chimeras of cytochrome P450 (3), then quantitative stability prediction would be possible based on stability data from a very limited sampling of the thousands of possible chimeras. Here we show that a quantitative CBH II chimera stability model can in fact be constructed and also that it was possible, using site-directed mutagenesis experiments, to pinpoint a single amino acid substitution that is responsible for the large stabilizing contribution of one of the SCHEMA blocks.Highly thermostable fungal CBH IIs are potentially useful for the degradation of cellulosic substrates in biofuels, textile, and other applications (4). High thermostability translates to longer half-lives at elevated hydrolysis temperatures, where viscosity and microbial contamination are reduced (5). We therefore investigated how selected thermostable CBH II chimeras perform in the hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose (Avicel) at elevated temperatures (up to 70 °C). All of the thermostable chimeras tested have specific activities on phosphoric acid swollen cellulose (PASC) at 50 °C that are comparable with the most active parent (H. jecorina CBH II) and hydrolyze Avicel at temperatures higher than any of the three parent enzymes, including the CBH II from the thermophilic fungus H. insolens.  相似文献   

13.
Regulation of the formation and secretion of two cellulase components from Trichoderma reesei QM 9414, cellobiohydrolases I and II (CBH I and CBH II, respectively), by the carbon source was investigated. With monoclonal antibodies against CBH I and CBH II it was found that during cultivation on carbon sources which enable fast growth (glucose, glycerol, and fructose), no formation of CBH I occurred, whereas low levels of CBH II were formed. Lactose and cellulose, which allow comparably slower growth, promoted the formation of both CBH I and CBH II. However, noncarbohydrate carbon sources as citrate or acetate, which also enable only slow growth, did not promote the formation of CBH I or CBH II. The addition of glucose or glycerol to lactose- or cellulose-pregrown mycelia, on the other hand, only partially reduced the formation of CBH I. This reduction was also achieved by several other metabolizable and nonmetabolizable carbon compounds, e.g., fructose, galactose, β-methylglucoside, 2-deoxyglucose, and rhamnose, as well as by transfer to no carbon source at all. This result indicates that the control of CBH I synthesis by the carbon source is due to induction and not to repression. The use of cycloheximide and 5-fluorouracil as inhibitors at and before translation, respectively, revealed a half-life for CBH I mRNA of at least several hours, which may, at least in part, account for the prolonged synthesis of some CBH I under these conditions. Northern (RNA) hybridization with full copies of cbh1 and cbh2 genes indicated that the control of CBH I and CBH II biosyntheses by the carbon source operates mainly at the pretranslational level. We conclude that the low rate of cellulase synthesis on glucose and some other carbon sources is due to the lack of an inducer and not to carbon source repression.  相似文献   

14.
Three forms of cellobiohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.91), CBH IA, CBH IB and CBH II, were isolated to apparent homogeneity from culture filtrates of the aerobic fungus Talaromyces emersonii. The three enzymes are single sub-unit glycoproteins, and unlike most other fungal cellobiohydrolases are characterised by noteworthy thermostability. The kinetic properties and mode of action of each enzyme against polymeric and small soluble oligomeric substrates were investigated in detail. CBH IA, CBH IB and CBH II catalyse the hydrolysis of microcrystalline cellulose, albeit to varying extents. Hydrolysis of a soluble cellulose derivative (CMC) and barley 1,3;1,4-beta-D-glucan was not observed. Cellobiose (G2) is the main reaction product released by CBH IA, CBH IB, and CBH II from microcrystalline cellulose. All three CBHs are competitively inhibited by G2; inhibition constant values (K(i)) of 2.5 and 0.18 mM were obtained for CBH IA and CBH IB, respectively (4-nitrophenyl-beta-cellobioside as substrate), while a K(i) of 0.16 mM was determined for CBH II (2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl-beta-cellotrioside as substrate). Bond cleavage patterns were determined for each CBH on 4-methylumbelliferyl derivatives of beta-cellobioside and beta-cellotrioside (MeUmbG(n)). While the Tal. emersonii CBHs share certain properties with their counterparts from Trichoderma reesei, Humicola insolens and other fungal sources, distinct differences were noted.  相似文献   

15.
Two immunologically related cellobiohydrolases, cellobiohydrolase I (CBH I) and cellobiohydrolase II (CBH II), were purified from Aspergillus ficum. The Avicel-adsorbable CBH I (molecular weight, 128,000) digested Avicel, cotton, and cellulose powder to cellobiose, but the Avicel-unadsorbable CBH II (molecular weight, 50,000) could not digest those substrates. Both enzymes hydrolyzed insoluble cellooligosaccharides ( 25) to cellobiose. High-pressure liquid chromatographic analysis of soluble cellooligosaccharide hydrolysates revealed that both enzymes split off strictly cellobiose units from the nonreducing end of the cellulose chain with an exowise mechanism. CBH I showed glucosyltransferase activity, but CBH II did not. The N-bromosuccinimideoxidized CBH I was completely inactive but retained the ability to adsorb to Avicel. This suggested that CBH I has separate sites for binding to cellulose and for catalyzing cleavage of glycosidic linkages. Cellobiohydrolases were of two types, CBH I and CBH II. The former can adsorb to and digest Avicel, while the latter can do neither.  相似文献   

16.
Summary An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using monoclonal antibodies has been developed to measure the concentration of three main cellulase components from Trichoderma reesei, cellobiohydrolase I (CBH I), cellobiohydrolase II (CBH II) and I (EG I), in both commercial enzyme preparations as well as in samples from laboratory fermentations. The sensitivity of the assay is 1–10 ng protein, depending on the type of cellulase. The coefficient of variability is between 10% and 20%. By a combination of two different domain-specific monoclonals against CBH I or II it is also possible to quantify the concentration of intact and truncated forms of these two enzymes, respectively. The use of the ELISA to quantify the formation of the three cellulase components under different cultivation conditions is described. Offprint requests to: C. P. Kubicek  相似文献   

17.
Yin Z  Meng F  Song H  Wang X  Chao M  Zhang G  Xu X  Deng D  Yu D 《Planta》2011,234(4):815-827
Filamentation temperature-sensitive H (FtsH) is an ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease involved in diverse biological functions. There are 12 FtsH proteins in Arabidopsis, among which AtFtsH2 plays an important role in regulating the turnover of photosystem II (PSII) reaction center D1 protein and the development of the photosynthetic apparatus. Here, we have identified 11 FtsH genes in the soybean genome by a bioinformatics approach. These soybean FtsH genes corresponded to seven Arabidopsis FtsH genes, suggesting that the main characteristics of soybean FtsH genes were formed before the evolutionary split of soybean and Arabidopsis. Phylogenetic analyses allowed us to clone a soybean AtFtsH2-like gene designated as GmFtsH9. The predicted protein of GmFtsH9 consists of 690 amino acids and contains three typical FtsH proteins conserved domains. The expression level of GmFtsH9 was determined in a soybean recombinant inbred line population under a pot experiment conducted for measuring chlorophyll a fluorescence transient parameters, photosynthetic CO2 fixation rate (P N), and seed yield. Expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping revealed two trans-acting eQTLs for GmFtsH9. The significant correlation of gene expression level with chlorophyll a fluorescence transient parameters and the presence of overlapping eQTL (QTL) between gene expression level and chlorophyll a fluorescence transient parameters indicated that GmFtsH9 could be involved in regulating PSII function. These results further lead to the understanding of the mechanism underlying FtsH gene expression, and contribute to the development of marker-assisted selection breeding programs for modulating soybean FtsH gene expression.  相似文献   

18.
Aims: To develop a novel PCR‐based method able to detect potential cellulolytic filamentous fungi and to classify them exploiting the amplification of the cellobiohydrolase gene (cbh‐I) and its polymorphism. Methods and Results: A mixed approach including the combination of (i) fungal cultivation and isolation, (ii) classification of fungal isolates through the amplification of the cbh gene using a fluorescently labelled primer (f‐CBH‐PCR) and (iii) final fungal identification based on amplification and sequencing of the ITS1‐5.8S rDNA‐ITS2 region of the selected fungal strains was developed. By this approach, it was possible to screen 77 fungal strains belonging to 14 genera and 26 species. Conclusions: The f‐CBH‐PCR permitted the discrimination of fungal species, producing typical f‐CBH profiles. Significance and Impact of the Study: In this study, the cbh gene was used as a preliminary classification tool able to differentiate among themselves the fungal members isolated from indoor museum items and surrounding environment. Such mixed approach consented the fast identification of all isolated fungal strains. The f‐CBH‐PCR method demonstrated its discrimination power, and it can be considered as a new molecular system suitable for the classification of fungal strains isolated from different environments.  相似文献   

19.
Cellulose degradation is essential for the future production of many advanced biofuels. Cellulases from the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei are among the most efficient enzymes for the hydrolysis of cellulosic materials. One of the cellulases from T. reesei, cellobiohydrolase II (CBH2), was studied because of its industrial relevance and proven enzymatic activity. Using both crude and rigorous membrane fractionation methods we show that full length T. reesei CBH2 is exclusively localized to the outer membrane when expressed recombinantly in Escherichia coli. Even fusing signal sequence-free maltose-binding protein to the N-terminus of CBH2, which has been shown to increase solubility of other proteins, did not prevent the outer membrane localization of CBH2. These results highlight the difficulties in producing fungal cellulases in bacterial hosts and provide a stepping stone for future cellulase engineering efforts.  相似文献   

20.
In previous papers we have reported the characterisation of mitochondrial mutator mutants of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In contrast to nuclear mutator mutants known from other eucaryotes, this mutator phenotype correlates with mutations in an unassigned open reading frame (urf a) in the mitochondrial genome. Since an efficient biolistic transformation system for fission yeast mitochondria is not yet available, we relocated the mitochondrial urf a gene to the nucleus. As host strain for the ectopic expression, we used the nonsense mutant ana r -6, which carries a premature stop codon in the urf a gene. The phenotype of this mutant is characterised by continuous segregation of progeny giving rise to fully respiration competent colonies, colonies that show moderate growth on glycerol and a fraction of colonies that are unable to grow on glycerol. The phenotype of this mutant provides an excellent tool with which to study the effects on the mutator phenotype of ectopic expression of the urf a gene. Since a UGA codon encoding tryptophan is present in the original mitochondrial gene, we constructed two types of expression cassettes containing either the mitochondrial version of the urf a gene (mt-urf a) or a standard genetic code version (nc-urf a; UGA replaced by UGG) fused to the N-terminal import leader sequence of the cox4 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We show that the expression of the mt-urf a gene in its new location is able to cure, at least in part, the phenotype of mutant ana r -6, whereas the expression of the nc-urf a gene completely restores the wild-type (non-mutator) phenotype. The significant similarity of the urf a gene to the mitochondrial var1 gene of S. cerevisiae and homologous genes in other yeasts suggests that the urf a gene product might be a ribosomal protein with a dual function in protein synthesis and maintenance of mitochondrial DNA integrity. Received: 13 May 1997 / Accepted: 14 January 1998  相似文献   

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