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1.
Thermobifida fusca Cel9A-90 is a processive endoglucanase consisting of a family 9 catalytic domain (CD), a family 3c cellulose binding module (CBM3c), a fibronectin III-like domain, and a family 2 CBM. This enzyme has the highest activity of any individual T. fusca enzyme on crystalline substrates, particularly bacterial cellulose (BC). Mutations were introduced into the CD or the CBM3c of Cel9A-68 using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzymes were expressed in Escherichia coli; purified; and tested for activity on four substrates, ligand binding, and processivity. The results show that H125 and Y206 play an important role in activity by forming a hydrogen bonding network with the catalytic base, D58; another important supporting residue, D55; and Glc(−1) O1. R378, a residue interacting with Glc(+1), plays an important role in processivity. Several enzymes with mutations in the subsites Glc(−2) to Glc(−4) had less than 15% activity on BC and markedly reduced processivity. Mutant enzymes with severalfold-higher activity on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) were found in the subsites from Glc(−2) to Glc(−4). The CBM3c mutant enzymes, Y520A, R557A/E559A, and R563A, had decreased activity on BC but had wild-type or improved processivity. Mutation of D513, a conserved residue at the end of the CBM, increased activity on crystalline cellulose. Previous work showed that deletion of the CBM3c abolished crystalline activity and processivity. This study shows that it is residues in the catalytic cleft that control processivity while the CBM3c is important for loose binding of the enzyme to the crystalline cellulose substrate.  相似文献   

2.
Gluconacetobacter hansenii, a Gram-negative bacterium, produces and secrets highly crystalline cellulose into growth medium, and has long been used as a model system for studying cellulose synthesis in higher plants. Cellulose synthesis involves the formation of β-1,4 glucan chains via the polymerization of glucose units by a multi-enzyme cellulose synthase complex (CSC). These glucan chains assemble into ordered structures including crystalline microfibrils. AcsA is the catalytic subunit of the cellulose synthase enzymes in the CSC, and AcsC is required for the secretion of cellulose. However, little is known about other proteins required for the assembly of crystalline cellulose. To address this question, we visually examined cellulose pellicles formed in growth media of 763 individual colonies of G. hansenii generated via Tn5 transposon insertion mutagenesis, and identified 85 that produced cellulose with altered morphologies. X-ray diffraction analysis of these 85 mutants identified two that produced cellulose with significantly lower crystallinity than wild type. The gene disrupted in one of these two mutants encoded a lysine decarboxylase and that in the other encoded an alanine racemase. Solid-state NMR analysis revealed that cellulose produced by these two mutants contained increased amounts of non-crystalline cellulose and monosaccharides associated with non-cellulosic polysaccharides as compared to the wild type. Monosaccharide analysis detected higher percentages of galactose and mannose in cellulose produced by both mutants. Field emission scanning electron microscopy showed that cellulose produced by the mutants was unevenly distributed, with some regions appearing to contain deposition of non-cellulosic polysaccharides; however, the width of the ribbon was comparable to that of normal cellulose. As both lysine decarboxylase and alanine racemase are required for the integrity of peptidoglycan, we propose a model for the role of peptidoglycan in the assembly of crystalline cellulose.  相似文献   

3.
Thermobifida fusca Cel9A-90 is a processive endoglucanase consisting of a family 9 catalytic domain (CD), a family 3c cellulose binding module (CBM3c), a fibronectin III-like domain, and a family 2 CBM. This enzyme has the highest activity of any individual T. fusca enzyme on crystalline substrates, particularly bacterial cellulose (BC). Mutations were introduced into the CD or the CBM3c of Cel9A-68 using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzymes were expressed in Escherichia coli; purified; and tested for activity on four substrates, ligand binding, and processivity. The results show that H125 and Y206 play an important role in activity by forming a hydrogen bonding network with the catalytic base, D58; another important supporting residue, D55; and Glc(-1) O1. R378, a residue interacting with Glc(+1), plays an important role in processivity. Several enzymes with mutations in the subsites Glc(-2) to Glc(-4) had less than 15% activity on BC and markedly reduced processivity. Mutant enzymes with severalfold-higher activity on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) were found in the subsites from Glc(-2) to Glc(-4). The CBM3c mutant enzymes, Y520A, R557A/E559A, and R563A, had decreased activity on BC but had wild-type or improved processivity. Mutation of D513, a conserved residue at the end of the CBM, increased activity on crystalline cellulose. Previous work showed that deletion of the CBM3c abolished crystalline activity and processivity. This study shows that it is residues in the catalytic cleft that control processivity while the CBM3c is important for loose binding of the enzyme to the crystalline cellulose substrate.  相似文献   

4.
During growth on crystalline cellulose, the thermophilic bacterium Caldicellulosiruptor bescii secretes several cellulose-degrading enzymes. Among these enzymes is CelA (CbCel9A/Cel48A), which is reported as the most highly secreted cellulolytic enzyme in this bacterium. CbCel9A/Cel48A is a large multi-modular polypeptide, composed of an N-terminal catalytic glycoside hydrolase family 9 (GH9) module and a C-terminal GH48 catalytic module that are separated by a family 3c carbohydrate-binding module (CBM3c) and two identical CBM3bs. The wild-type CbCel9A/Cel48A and its truncational mutants were expressed in Bacillus megaterium and Escherichia coli, respectively. The wild-type polypeptide released twice the amount of glucose equivalents from Avicel than its truncational mutant that lacks the GH48 catalytic module. The truncational mutant harboring the GH9 module and the CBM3c was more thermostable than the wild-type protein, likely due to its compact structure. The main hydrolytic activity was present in the GH9 catalytic module, while the truncational mutant containing the GH48 module and the three CBMs was ineffective in degradation of either crystalline or amorphous cellulose. Interestingly, the GH9 and/or GH48 catalytic modules containing the CBM3bs form low-density particles during hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose. Moreover, TM3 (GH9/CBM3c) and TM2 (GH48 with three CBM3 modules) synergistically hydrolyze crystalline cellulose. Deletion of the CBM3bs or mutations that compromised their binding activity suggested that these CBMs are important during hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose. In agreement with this observation, seven of nine genes in a C. bescii gene cluster predicted to encode cellulose-degrading enzymes harbor CBM3bs. Based on our results, we hypothesize that C. bescii uses the GH48 module and the CBM3bs in CbCel9A/Cel48A to destabilize certain regions of crystalline cellulose for attack by the highly active GH9 module and other endoglucanases produced by this hyperthermophilic bacterium.  相似文献   

5.
This study indicates that controlled depolymerization of plant (PC) and bacterial (BC) celluloses can be achieved by employing suitable ultrasonication settings. Size exclusion chromatography results indicate that reduction in the molecular weight of the two polymers was accompanied by a parallel drop in the polydispersity index of PC and an unexpected increase in the said index of BC. X-ray diffraction patterns of the fractionated materials were found to be Cellulose II crystals whereas experimentation on microcrystalline cellulose unveiled the Cellulose I conformation. The crystallinity index revealed no obvious changes in PC as a function of the time of sonication whereas a major increase in the crystalline component was encountered for BC. Furthermore, thermal degradation using TGA and FTIR spectra suggest that the processes of dissolution and regeneration in cuprammonium hydroxide of PC and BC followed by ultrasonication do not affect the chemical fingerprints via oxidative reactions of the cellulosic materials.  相似文献   

6.
To understand the lignocellulose degradation activity of the Clostridium josui cellulosome, a carbohydrate-binding module of the scaffoldin CjCBM3 was characterized. CjCBM3 shows binding to crystalline cellulose, non-crystalline cellulose and soluble polysaccharides. The binding isotherm of CjCBM3 to acid-swollen cellulose is best fitted by the Langmuir two-site model, suggesting that there are two CjCBM3 binding sites on acid-swollen cellulose with different affinities. The second site shows lower affinity and larger binding capacity, suggesting that the cellulosome is directly targeted to the cellulose surface with high affinity, where larger amounts of the cellulosome bind to cellulose with low affinity.  相似文献   

7.
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.  相似文献   

8.
Enzymatic hydrolysis of recalcitrant polysaccharides like cellulose takes place on the solid-liquid interface. Therefore the adsorption of enzymes to the solid surface is a pre-requisite for catalysis. Here we used enzymatic activity measurements with fluorescent model-substrate 4-methyl-umbelliferyl-β-D-lactoside for sensitive monitoring of the binding of cellobiohydrolase TrCel7A from Trichoderma reesei to bacterial cellulose (BC). The binding at low nanomolar free TrCel7A concentrations was exclusively active site mediated and was consistent with Langmuir''s one binding site model with K d and A max values of 2.9 nM and 126 nmol/g BC, respectively. This is the strongest binding observed with non-complexed cellulases and apparently represents the productive binding of TrCel7A to cellulose chain ends on the hydrophobic face of BC microfibril. With increasing free TrCel7A concentrations the isotherm gradually deviated from the Langmuir''s one binding site model. This was caused by the increasing contribution of lower affinity binding modes that included both active site mediated binding and non-productive binding with active site free from cellulose chain. The binding of TrCel7A to BC was found to be only partially reversible. Furthermore, the isotherm was dependent on the concentration of BC with more efficient binding observed at lower BC concentrations. The phenomenon can be ascribed to the BC concentration dependent aggregation of BC microfibrils with concomitant reduction of specific surface area.  相似文献   

9.
Mutations in the Arabidopsis COBRA gene lead to defects in cellulose synthesis but the function of COBRA is unknown. Here we present evidence that COBRA localizes to discrete particles in the plasma membrane and is sensitive to inhibitors of cellulose synthesis, suggesting that COBRA and the cellulose synthase complex reside in close proximity on the plasma membrane. Live-cell imaging of cellulose synthesis indicated that, once initiated, cellulose synthesis appeared to proceed normally in the cobra mutant. Using isothermal calorimetry, COBRA was found to bind individual β1–4-linked glucan chains with a KD of 3.2 μm. Competition assays suggests that COBRA binds individual β1–4-linked glucan chains with higher affinity than crystalline cellulose. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the cell wall of the cobra mutant also indicated that, in addition to decreases in cellulose amount, the properties of the cellulose fibrils and other cell wall polymers differed from wild type by being less crystalline and having an increased number of reducing ends. We interpret the available evidence as suggesting that COBRA facilitates cellulose crystallization from the emerging β1–4-glucan chains by acting as a “polysaccharide chaperone.”  相似文献   

10.
The mechanisms by which cellulolytic enzymes and enzyme complexes in Ruminococcus spp. bind to cellulose are not fully understood. The product of the newly isolated cellulase gene endB from Ruminococcus flavefaciens 17 was purified as a His-tagged product after expression in Escherichia coli and found to be able to bind directly to crystalline cellulose. The ability to bind cellulose is shown to be associated with a novel cellulose-binding module (CBM) located within a region of 200 amino acids that is unrelated to known protein sequences. EndB (808 amino acids) also contains a catalytic domain belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 44 and a C-terminal dockerin-like domain. Purified EndB is also shown to bind specifically via its dockerin domain to a polypeptide of ca. 130 kDa present among supernatant proteins from Avicel-grown R. flavefaciens that attach to cellulose. The protein to which EndB attaches is a strong candidate for the scaffolding component of a cellulosome-like multienzyme complex recently identified in this species (S.-Y. Ding et al., J. Bacteriol. 183:1945–1953, 2001). It is concluded that binding of EndB to cellulose may occur both through its own CBM and potentially also through its involvement in a cellulosome complex.  相似文献   

11.
Cotton fiber cellulose is highly crystalline and oriented; when native cellulose (cellulose I) is treated with certain alkali concentrations, intermolecular hydrogen bonds are broken and Na-cellulose I is formed. At higher alkali concentrations Na-cellulose II forms, wherein intermolecular and intramolecular hydrogen bonds are broken, ultimately resulting in cellulose II polymers. Crystallinity changes in cotton fibers were observed and assigned using attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR FT-IR) spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction (XRD) subsequent to sodium hydroxide treatment and compared with an in situ protein-binding methodology using cellulose-directed carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). Crystallinity changes observed using CBM probes for crystalline cellulose (CBM2a, CBM3a) and amorphous cellulose (CBM4-1, CBM17) displayed close agreement with changes in crystallinity observed with ATR-FTIR techniques, but it is notable that crystallinity changes observed with CBMs are observed at lower NaOH concentrations (2.0 mol dm(-3)), indicating these probes may be more sensitive in detecting crystallinity changes than those calculated using FTIR indices. It was observed that the concentration of NaOH at which crystallinity changes occur as analyzed using the CBM labeling techniques are also lower than those observed using X-ray diffraction techniques. Analysis of crystallinity changes in cellulose using CBMs offers a new and advantageous method of qualitative and quantitative assessment of changes to the structure of cellulose that occur with sodium hydroxide treatment.  相似文献   

12.
Cellulose colonization by Clostridium cellulolyticum was studied by using [methyl-3H]thymidine incorporation. The colonization process indicated that a part of the bacterial population was released from cellulose to the liquid phase before binding and colonizing another adhesion site of the cellulose. We postulate that cellulose colonization occurs according to the following process: adhesion, colonization, release, and readhesion.  相似文献   

13.
The crystal structure of the carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) 4 Ig fused domain from the cellulosomal cellulase cellobiohydrolase A (CbhA) of Clostridium thermocellum was solved in complex with cellobiose at 2.11 Å resolution. This is the first cellulosomal CBM4 crystal structure reported to date. It is similar to the previously solved noncellulosomal soluble oligosaccharide-binding CBM4 structures. However, this new structure possesses a significant feature—a binding site peptide loop with a tryptophan (Trp118) residing midway in the loop. Based on sequence alignment, this structural feature might be common to all cellulosomal clostridial CBM4 modules. Our results indicate that C. thermocellum CbhA CBM4 also has an extended binding pocket that can optimally bind to cellodextrins containing five or more sugar units. Molecular dynamics simulations and experimental binding studies with the Trp118Ala mutant suggest that Trp118 contributes to the binding and, possibly, the orientation of the module to soluble cellodextrins. Furthermore, the binding cleft aromatic residues Trp68 and Tyr110 play a crucial role in binding to bacterial microcrystalline cellulose (BMCC), amorphous cellulose, and soluble oligodextrins. Binding to BMCC is in disagreement with the structural features of the binding pocket, which does not support binding to the flat surface of crystalline cellulose, suggesting that CBM4 binds the amorphous part or the cellulose “whiskers” of BMCC. We propose that clostridial CBM4s have possibly evolved to bind the free-chain ends of crystalline cellulose in addition to their ability to bind soluble cellodextrins.  相似文献   

14.
Carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs) are noncatalytic domains that assist tethered catalytic domains in substrate targeting. CBMs have therefore been used to visualize distinct polysaccharides present in the cell wall of plant cells and tissues. However, most previous studies provide a qualitative analysis of CBM-polysaccharide interactions, with limited characterization of engineered tandem CBM designs for recognizing polysaccharides like cellulose and limited application of CBM-based probes to visualize cellulose fibrils synthesis in model plant protoplasts with regenerating cell walls. Here, we examine the dynamic interactions of engineered type-A CBMs from families 3a and 64 with crystalline cellulose-I and phosphoric acid swollen cellulose. We generated tandem CBM designs to determine various characteristic properties including binding reversibility toward cellulose-I using equilibrium binding assays. To compute the adsorption (nkon) and desorption (koff) rate constants of single versus tandem CBM designs toward nanocrystalline cellulose, we employed dynamic kinetic binding assays using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation. Our results indicate that tandem CBM3a exhibited the highest adsorption rate to cellulose and displayed reversible binding to both crystalline/amorphous cellulose, unlike other CBM designs, making tandem CBM3a better suited for live plant cell wall biosynthesis imaging applications. We used several engineered CBMs to visualize Arabidopsis thaliana protoplasts with regenerated cell walls using confocal laser scanning microscopy and wide-field fluorescence microscopy. Lastly, we also demonstrated how CBMs as probe reagents can enable in situ visualization of cellulose fibrils during cell wall regeneration in Arabidopsis protoplasts.  相似文献   

15.
We recently reported that the cwa1 mutation disturbed the deposition and assembly of secondary cell wall materials in the cortical fiber of rice internodes. Genetic analysis revealed that cwa1 is allelic to bc1, which encodes glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored COBRA-like protein with the highest homology to Arabidopsis COBRA-like 4 (COBL4) and maize Brittle Stalk 2 (Bk2). Our results suggested that CWA1/BC1 plays a role in assembling secondary cell wall materials at appropriate sites, enabling synthesis of highly ordered secondary cell wall structure with solid and flexible internodes in rice. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of CWA1/BC1, as well as its orthologs (COBL4, Bk2) and other BC1-like proteins in rice, shows weak similarity to a family II carbohydrate-binding module (CBM2) of several bacterial cellulases. To investigate the importance of the CBM-like sequence of CWA1/BC1 in the assembly of secondary cell wall materials, Trp residues in the CBM-like sequence, which is important for carbohydrate binding, were substituted for Val residues and introduced into the cwa1 mutant. CWA1/BC1 with the mutated sequence did not complement the abnormal secondary cell walls seen in the cwa1 mutant, indicating that the CBM-like sequence is essential for the proper function of CWA1/BC1, including assembly of secondary cell wall materials.Key words: carbohydrate-binding module, COBRA-LIKE, CWA1/BC1, glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein, secondary cell wall formationThe main function of carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) of microbes and plants is to attach the enzyme to a variety of cell surface glycans and thereby increase the local concentration of substrate, leading to more efficient catalysis.14 Almost all CBMs studied to date contain surface-exposed aromatic rings, which have been shown to be the main sites of interaction with polysaccharides. These residues form face-to-face hydrophobic stacking interactions in which a Trp residue or ring of a Tyr residue interacts with the non-polar face of a sugar ring.59 CBMs have been classified into families based on amino acid sequence similarity. Currently, there are 59 defined families of CBMs and these CBMs display substantial variation in ligand specificity (http://www.cazy.org/Carbohydrate-Binding-Modules.html). Among these CBM families, the large family of CBM2 has been further classified into two subgroups, CBM2a and 2b, which have shown to bind cellulose and xylan, respectively.1012 CBM2a characteristically possess three exposed Trp residues,13 whereas CBM2b have two Trp residues,14 which are conserved among the CBM2 members (Fig. 1A).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Sequence alignment of the CBM-like sequence of CWA1/BC1, the BC1L proteins and bacterial CBM2 members. (A) Sequence alignment between bacterial CBM2a, 2b and CWA1/BC1. The three surface-exposed Trp residues of CBM2a members are indicated by asterisks and W. The CBM sequences of CBM2a are: CfiCenA, Cellulomonas fimi endo-1,4-glucanase; CfiCex, C. fimi exo-beta-1,4-glucanase. Those of CBM2b are: CfiXylD1, C. fimi endo-1,4-beta-xylanase D; CfiXylD2, C. fimi endo-1,4-beta-xylanase. CWA1/BC1 shows weak similarity to CBM2, and some Trp residues are conserved with bacterial CBM2 members. (B) Sequence alignment of CWA1/BC1, the BC1L proteins and CWA1/BC1 orthologs, Zea maiz Brittle Stalk 2 (ZmBk2) and Arabidopsis thaliana COBRA-LIKE 4 (AtCOBL4). The CBM-like sequence of CWA1/BC1, especially the Trp residues, is highly conserved among the analyzed sequences. Substituted Trp (W) residues to Val (V) in CWA1/BC1 are indicated by closed triangles. Numbers at the left are the positions of the amino acids in each protein, with gaps (dashes) included to maximize alignments. Identical and similar amino acids are shaded and gray, respectively.Our recent study showed that the defect of the rice CWA1/BC1 (CELL WALL ARCHITECTURE 1/BRITTLE CULM 1) gene induced abnormal secondary cell wall formation with amorphous and bulky structures at the cytoplasm side and CWA1/BC1 encodes one of COBRA-like glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins, which are specifically found in plants, suggesting that CWA1/BC1 regulates assembly of secondary cell wall materials in rice sclerenchyma. Furthermore, several reports have shown that the N-terminus of rice CWA1/BC1 and other COBRA-like GPI-anchored proteins in Arabidopsis (12 members) and maize Brittle Stalk 2 (Bk2) share weak similarity to a CBM2 in several bacterial cellulases.15,16 However, the importance of CBM-like sequence in COBRA family members has not been clarified. To investigate the nature of CWA1/BC1, we compared the CBM-like sequence in rice CWA1/BC1 with bacterial CBM2, 10 members of the BC1-like (BC1L) protein in rice and CWA1/BC1 orthologs, Arabidopsis COBL4 and maize Bk2. Furthermore, we constructed three-point mutated CWA1/BC1, in which three conserved Trp residues in CBM-like sequence were substituted for Val residues (CWA1/BC1W→V), and introduced it into the cwa1 mutant to evaluate the necessity of the CBM-like sequence for proper function of CWA1/BC1. We discuss a putative explanation, based on our results, of the properties and possible functions of CWA1/BC1.  相似文献   

16.
In enzymatic saccharification of lignocellulosics, the access of the enzymes to exposed cellulose surfaces is a key initial step in triggering hydrolysis. However, knowledge of the structure–hydrolyzability relationship of the pretreated biomass is still limited. Here we used fluorescent‐labeled recombinant carbohydrate‐binding modules (CBMs) from Clostridium josui as specific markers for crystalline cellulose (CjCBM3) and non‐crystalline cellulose (CjCBM28) to analyze the complex surfaces of wood tissues pretreated with NaOH, NaOH–Na2S (kraft pulping), hydrothermolysis, ball‐milling, and organosolvolysis. Japanese cedar wood, one of the most recalcitrant softwood species was selected for the analysis. The binding analysis clarified the linear dependency of the exposure of crystalline and non‐crystalline cellulose surfaces for enzymatic saccharification yield by the organosolv and kraft delignification processes. Ball‐milling for 5–30 min increased saccharification yield up to 77%, but adsorption by the CjCBM–cyan fluorescent proteins (CFPs) was below 5%. Adsorption of CjCBM–CFPs on the hydrothermolysis pulp were less than half of those for organosolvolysis pulp, in coincidence with low saccharification yields. For all the pretreated wood, crystallinity index was not directly correlated with the overall saccharification yield. Fluorescent microscopy revealed that CjCBM3–CFP and CjCBM28–CFP were site‐specifically adsorbed on external fibrous structures and ruptured or distorted fiber surfaces. The assay system with CBM–CFPs is a powerful measure to estimate the initiation sites of hydrolysis and saccharification yields from chemically delignified wood pulps. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010; 105: 499–508. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The rumen bacterium Ruminococcus albus binds to and degrades crystalline cellulosic substrates via a unique cellulose degradation system. A unique family of carbohydrate-binding modules (CBM37), located at the C terminus of different glycoside hydrolases, appears to be responsible both for anchoring these enzymes to the bacterial cell surface and for substrate binding.  相似文献   

18.
Comparative study of acetaldehyde, furfural and 5-hydroxymethyl furfural from celluloses which differed in crystallinity was made by pyrolytic gas chromatography.

Pyrolysis of tobacco cellulose at 200~300°C resulted in rapid increase in the yields of furfurals from the amorphous regions in comparison with that from the crystalline regions. At 500°C, however, acetaldehyde was obtained in higher yields from microcrystalline cellulose than that from tobacco cellulose under the same condition.

In thermogravimetric analysis, the threshold temperature for the pyrolysis of tobacco cellulose was lower than that of microcrystylline cellulose. These results showed that the yields of the volatile compounds from pyrolysis of cellulose depended on temperature and crystallinity.  相似文献   

19.
Plant cell walls are degraded by glycoside hydrolases that often contain noncatalytic carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs), which potentiate degradation. There are currently 11 sequence-based cellulose-directed CBM families; however, the biological significance of the structural diversity displayed by these protein modules is uncertain. Here we interrogate the capacity of eight cellulose-binding CBMs to bind to cell walls. These modules target crystalline cellulose (type A) and are located in families 1, 2a, 3a, and 10 (CBM1, CBM2a, CBM3a, and CBM10, respectively); internal regions of amorphous cellulose (type B; CBM4-1, CBM17, CBM28); and the ends of cellulose chains (type C; CBM9-2). Type A CBMs bound particularly effectively to secondary cell walls, although they also recognized primary cell walls. Type A CBM2a and CBM10, derived from the same enzyme, displayed differential binding to cell walls depending upon cell type, tissue, and taxon of origin. Type B CBMs and the type C CBM displayed much weaker binding to cell walls than type A CBMs. CBM17 bound more extensively to cell walls than CBM4-1, even though these type B modules display similar binding to amorphous cellulose in vitro. The thickened primary cell walls of celery collenchyma showed significant binding by some type B modules, indicating that in these walls the cellulose chains do not form highly ordered crystalline structures. Pectate lyase treatment of sections resulted in an increased binding of cellulose-directed CBMs, demonstrating that decloaking cellulose microfibrils of pectic polymers can increase CBM access. The differential recognition of cell walls of diverse origin provides a biological rationale for the diversity of cellulose-directed CBMs that occur in cell wall hydrolases and conversely reveals the variety of cellulose microstructures in primary and secondary cell walls.  相似文献   

20.
从红茶菌液中筛选获得一株产细菌纤维素的菌株BC-41,经生理生化分析和分子生物学鉴定,现证实该菌株为中间葡糖酸醋杆菌(Gluconacetobacter intermedius)。对该菌株所产生的细菌纤维素进行了物理特性的表征和分析,获得以下数据:BC-41所产的纤维素纯度达到91.32%,湿纤维素膜含水率达99.16%,每克干纤维素膜能吸水28.59 g;扫描电子显微镜观察,显示该纤维素具有网状结构,且纤维束宽度分布在40-100 nm之间;X射线衍射分析,证实该纤维素的晶型为纤维素I型,结晶指数为48.8%;通过黏度测定法,得出该纤维素的平均聚合度达2 100。  相似文献   

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