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  4. Optimizing the composition of a synthetic cellulosome complex for the hydrolysis of softwood pulp
 
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2018
Journal Article
Title

Optimizing the composition of a synthetic cellulosome complex for the hydrolysis of softwood pulp

Title Supplement
Identification of the enzymatic core functions and biochemical complex characterization
Abstract
Background: The development of efficient cellulase blends is a key factor for cost-effectively valorizing biomass in a new bio-economy. Today, the enzymatic hydrolysis of plant-derived polysaccharides is mainly accomplished with fungal cellulases, whereas potentially equally effective cellulose-degrading systems from bacteria have not been developed. Particularly, a thermostable multi-enzyme cellulase complex, the cellulosome from the anaerobic cellulolytic bacterium Clostridium thermocellum is promising of being applied as cellulolytic nano-machinery for the production of fermentable sugars from cellulosic biomass. Results: In this study, 60 cellulosomal components were recombinantly produced in E. coli and systematically permuted in synthetic complexes to study the function-activity relationship of all available enzymes on Kraft pulp from pine wood as the substrate. Starting from a basic exo/endoglucanase complex, we were able to identify additional functional classes such as mannanase and xylanase for optimal activity on the substrate. Based on these results, we predicted a synthetic cellulosome complex consisting of seven single components (including the scaffoldin protein and a v-glucosidase) and characterized it biochemically. We obtained a highly thermostable complex with optimal activity around 60-65 °C and an optimal pH in agreement with the optimum of the native cellulosome (pH 5.8). Remarkably, a fully synthetic complex containing 47 single cellulosomal components showed comparable activity with a commercially available fungal enzyme cocktail on the softwood pulp substrate. Conclusions: Our results show that synthetic bacterial multi-enzyme complexes based on the cellulosome of C. thermocellum can be applied as a versatile platform for the quick adaptation and efficient degradation of a substrate of interest.
Author(s)
Leis, B.
Held, C.
Andreeßen, B.
Liebl, W.
Graubner, S.
Schulte, L.-P.
Schwarz, W.H.
Zverlov, V.V.
Journal
Biotechnology for biofuels. Online journal  
Open Access
DOI
10.1186/s13068-018-1220-y
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Molekularbiologie und Angewandte Oekologie IME  
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