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Characterization of thermostable and chimeric enzymes via isopeptide bond-mediated molecular cyclization De-Ying Gao, Xiao-Bao Sun, Ming-Qi Liu, Yan-Ni Liu, Hui-En Zhang, XinLei Shi, Yang-Nan Li, Jia-kun Wang, Shang-Jun Yin, and Qian Wang J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b01459 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Jun 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 9, 2019
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Characterization of thermostable and chimeric enzymes via
2
isopeptide bond-mediated molecular cyclization
3 4
De-Ying Gao†, Xiao-Bao Sun†, Ming-Qi Liu‡, Yan-Ni Liu†, Hui-En Zhang†, Xin-Lei
5
Shi†, Yang-Nan Li†, Jia-Kun Wang§, Shang-Jun Yin†, *, Qian Wang†, *
6 7 8 9
†
College of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Zhejiang Wanli University,
10
Ningbo 315100, Zhejiang, China
11
‡
12
Instrumentation for Marine Food, College of Life Science, China Jiliang University,
13
Hangzhou 310018, Zhejiang, China
14
§ College
National and Local United Engineering Lab of Quality Controlling Technology and
of Animal Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, China
15
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ABSTRACT
17
Mannooligosaccharides are released by mannan-degrading endo-β-1,4-mannanase and
18
are known as functional additives in human and animal diets. To satisfy demands for
19
biocatalysis and bioprocessing in crowed environments, in this study, we employed a
20
recently developed enzyme-engineering system, isopeptide bond-mediated molecular
21
cyclization, to modify a mesophilic mannanase from Bacillus subtilis. The results
22
revealed that the cyclized enzymes showed enhanced thermostability and ion stability,
23
resilience to aggregation and freeze-thaw treatment by maintaining their
24
conformational structures. Additionally, by using the SpyTag/SpyCatcher system, we
25
generated a mannanase-xylanase bifunctional enzyme that exhibited a synergistic
26
activity in substrate deconstruction without compromising substrate affinity.
27
Interestingly, the dual-enzyme ring conformation was observed to be more robust than
28
the linear enzyme but inferior to the single-enzyme ring conformation. Taken
29
together, these findings provided new insights into the mechanisms of molecular
30
cyclization on stability improvement and will be of useful in the production of new
31
functional oligosaccharides and feed additives.
32 33
KEYWORDS : mannanase, isopeptide bond-mediated ligation, molecular
34
cyclization, thermostability, chimeric enzyme, synergy
35
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INTRODUCTION
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Hemicelluloses, mainly composed of mannan and xylan, are the second most
38
abundant renewable lignocellulosic biomass in nature. Complete deconstruction of
39
mannan
40
endo-β-1,4-mannanase
41
α-L-arabinosidase (EC 3.2.1.55), α-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.22), and acetylmannan
42
esterase (EC 3.1.1.6).1 Among them, endo-β-1,4-mannanase is the key enzyme that
43
randomly catalyzes the cleavage of β-1,4- glycosidic bonds of the mannan backbone
44
to release mannooligosaccharides and facilitate initial degradation.2 Mannanases are
45
classified into the glycoside hydrolase (GH) families 5, 26, and 113 in the CAZy
46
database (http://www.cazy.org/) and mainly follow a preserving catalytic mechanism.3
47
Feed enzymes, including mannanase and xylanase, are known to degrade
48
non-starch polysaccharides (NSPs) in plant-derived feed diets. Oligosaccharides
49
produced by feed enzymes were believed to promote beneficial bacteria, such as
50
Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species, and inhibit harmful bacteria in the colon
51
by oligosaccharides released from NSPs.4,5 The studies on mannose- and
52
mannooligosaccharide-producing enzymes and microorganisms started in the late
53
1970s. Preliminary statistics have found more than 100 species of enzyme-producing
54
microorganisms, including bacteria (e.g., Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas
55
aeruginosa), fungi (e.g., Aspergillus spp.) and Actinomycetes (e.g., Streptomyces
56
spp.).6 However, poor tolerance of native mannanases to heat and inhibitors leads to
57
inferior stability and thus inefficient catalysis, limiting their applications in industrial
requires
the
activities (EC
of
a
3.2.1.78),
number
of
β-mannosidase
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enzymes, (EC
such
as
3.2.1.25),
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processing.
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Protein engineering approaches, such as site-directed mutagenesis and directed
60
evolution, have been used to improve enzyme thermostability and/or pH stability.7
61
However, these strategies could not be adopted directly, when the target enzyme lacks
62
a well-characterized catalytic mechanism or an efficient activity assay method for
63
high-throughput screening. The correlation between thermostability and structural
64
rigidity was previously discussed in depth,8 while the activity was generally regarded
65
as closely related to flexibility.9 Therefore, the delicate balance between rigidity and
66
flexibility is crucial for protein design.10 Importantly, due to the limitation of
67
condition-based screening methods, mutants obtained by enzyme evolution might
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show improved stability (rigidity) but depressed the activity (flexibility). Compared
69
with proteins in a linear conformation, cyclic proteins exhibit higher thermostability
70
and structural stability and are widely observed in bacteria, plants, fungi and
71
animals.11 Protein cytoskeleton cyclization is a process in which the C- and N-termini
72
of linear peptides are combined via amide bonds to form cyclic molecules. This cyclic
73
structure enables the target enzyme to be more stable than the native enzyme in
74
adverse environments, such as those at high temperature or having strong ions or
75
denaturing agents.12 Protein trans-splicing, ligation of two proteins with a peptide, and
76
sortagging mediated by transpeptidase are commonly utilized strategies for molecular
77
cyclization. However, these techniques suffer from several limitations, including
78
incontrollable splicing, the requirement for specific termini for crosslinking, and low
79
efficiency. It was reported that pilins from some Gram-positive bacteria such as
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Streptococcus pyogenes contain spontaneous isopeptide bond.13 Subsequently, a
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molecular cyclization system “superglue” was developed from Spy0128 and other
82
pilins.14-17 The cyclization reaction was achieved via the spontaneously formed
83
isopeptide bond between Lys and Asn/Asp. Importantly, the system is versatile and
84
efficient, and industrial enzymes such as phytase18 and xylanase19 were engineered to
85
improve thermostability.
86
Although the effects and mechanisms of single-enzyme cyclization on
87
thermostability have been addressed, resilience to crowded environments needs to be
88
elucidated. In this study, β-mannanase from B. subtilis was engineered as a cyclized
89
enzyme and a mannanase-xylanase dual-enzyme ring conformation was developed.
90
We investigated the stability and activities of the linear and the cyclized enzymes in
91
adverse conditions, such as alkaline pH, high temperature, and freeze-thaw treatment.
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Additionally, the thermostability and catalytic efficiency of the bifunctional enzymes
93
were evaluated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials. Plasmids pET-30a(+) (Novagen, Madison, WI, USA) and pETTC19
96
were used as the heterologous expression vectors in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3).
97
Locust bean gum and beechwood xylan were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO,
98
USA). Restriction endonucleases and T4 ligase were obtained from Promega
99
(Madison, WI, USA). Ni-NTA 6× His-tag agarose was purchased from Qiagen
100
(Shanghai, China). Pfu polymerase was purchased from TransGen Biotech (Beijing,
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China). The oligonucleotides used in this study were synthesized by Sangon
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(Shanghai, China) (Table 1). The synthetic fragment SnoopTag/SnoopCatcher (PDB:
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2WW8) was designed according to the sequence of GenBank No. AP017971 and
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synthesized by Genscript (Nanjing, China). Recombinant plasmid pUCm-T/TFX
105
carrying a xylanase gene from Thermobifida fusca20 and pUCm-T/LPMO carrying a
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lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO) gene from B. subtilis were constructed
107
in our previous studies.
108
Plasmid Construction and Protein Expression. To locate the SnoopTag and
109
SnoopCatcher at the N- and C-termini of the target gene, the synthetic fragment
110
SnoopTag/SnoopCatcher was digested with BamHI and NotI and inserted into
111
pET30a(+) to obtain pETSn. The BSM gene (GenBank No.: DQ269473) was
112
amplified from the B. subtilis genome, and the PCR fragments were inserted into
113
pET30a(+), pETTC and pETSn; the resulting plasmids were designated
114
pET30a(+)/BSM, pETTC/BSM and pETSn/BSM, respectively. To locate the SpyTag
115
at both the N- and C-termini of the target gene, the SpyTag fragment was amplified
116
and inserted into pETTC between the HindIII and NotI sites to replace the
117
SpyCatcher peptide downstream of the multiple cloning sites (MCS). To locate the
118
SpyCatcher at both the N- and C-termini of the target gene, the SpyCatcher fragment
119
was amplified and inserted into pETTC between the BglII and EcoRV sites to
120
replace the SpyTag peptide upstream of MCS; the resulting plasmids were
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designated pETTT and pETCC, respectively. BSM/TFX were introduced into
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pETCC/pETTT to obtain pETCC/BSM (CC/BSM) and pETTT/TFX (TT/TFX),
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respectively. All recombinant plasmids were confirmed by sequencing (Sangon) and
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transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3) competent cells by heat shock. All recombinant
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E.
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isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-induced, and sonicated as previously
127
described.19
coli
stains
harboring
linear
or
cyclized
enzymes
were
cultured,
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Protein Purification and In Vitro Assembly. Supernatants collected after
129
centrifugation at 15,294×g for 15 min at 4°C were each subjected to affinity
130
purification using a HisTrapTM FF column (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences, Pittsburgh,
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PA, USA) as previously described19 with minor modifications. The imidazole gradient
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in the elution buffer ranged from 20 mM to 1 M. Recombinant bovine enterokinase
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(EK) (BBI, Shanghai, China) was used to relinearize TC/BSM and Sn/BSM (1 U per
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50 μg protein). Reactions were performed in a digestion buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl, pH
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7.6, 50 mM NaCl, and 2 mM CaCl2) at 25°C for 12 h. The mannanase-xylanase
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chimera was achieved by mixing the purified CC/BSM (~1 μmol), TT/TFX (~1 μmol)
137
and TT/LPMO (~1 μmol) followed by assembly reaction was performed at 16°C with
138
gentle rotation at 100 rpm for 10 min.
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Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)
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and Zymogram Analyses. All native, cyclized, relinearized, and chimeric enzymes
141
were analyzed with SDS-PAGE (12% running gel and 4% stacking gel).21 For
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SDS-PAGE, the gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue G250 and destained
143
with 15% methanol and 5% acetic acid. For zymogram analysis, all samples were run
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on gels containing locust bean gum (0.5%) or beechwood xylan (0.5%). After
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electrophoresis, the gels were soaked in 25% isopropanol twice for 20 min each and
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washed extensively in 1× phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, 137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM
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KCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, and 2 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4) at 4°C overnight. The gels were
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stained with 1% Congo red for 20 min and further destained with 1 M NaCl until
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transparent bands appeared.
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Activities and Protein Concentration Assays. The catalytic activities of
151
mannanase and xylanases were measured using the 3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS)
152
method.22 Briefly, 15 μL of enzyme solution was incubated with 60 μL of 0.5% locust
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bean gum or beechwood xylan at various temperatures for 8 min, followed by the
154
addition of 75 μL of DNS and boiling for 5 min. After cooling to room temperature,
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the absorbance was determined spectrophotometrically at 540 nm. One unit of
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catalytic activity (U) was defined as the amount of enzyme that released 1 μmol of
157
reducing sugar equivalent to mannose or xylose per minute. Kinetic parameters were
158
determined using 0.5-12 mg/mL locust bean gum or 2-18 mg/mL beechwood xylan as
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substrate. Protein concentration was measured using the method described by
160
Bradford (1976) with bovine serum albumin as the standard. Approximately 0.2 μg of
161
purified protein was used in all these assays, and all assays were performed in
162
quadruplicate unless otherwise noted.
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Effects of pH and Temperature. The optimal pH was determined by assaying
164
the mannanase activity in various pH buffers (citrate/phosphate buffer for pH 2.2-8.0
165
and glycine-NaOH buffer for pH 9.0-10.0) at 50°C for 8 min. The optimal
166
temperature was determined by assaying the mannanase activity at pH 6.0 and
167
30-80°C for 8 min.
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To evaluate the pH stability, all linear and cyclized enzymes were preincubated
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in various pH buffers (citrate/phosphate buffer for pH 2.2-8.0 and glycine-NaOH
170
buffer for pH 9.0-10.0) at room temperature (25°C) for 1 h, and the residual activities
171
were determined under the optimal conditions (pH 6.0, 50°C). The initial activities
172
before preincubation were regarded as 100%.
173
To assess the thermostability, all linear, cyclized, and relinearized enzymes were
174
preincubated in citrate/phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) at 50-70°C for 1 h. Aliquots were
175
taken at different time intervals (2, 5, 10, 20, 30, and 60 min) and subjected to activity
176
assays under the optimal conditions (pH 6.0, 50°C). The initial activities before
177
preincubation were taken as 100%.
178
Protein Aggregation. All linear, cyclized, and relinearized enzymes (~25 μg
179
each) were preincubated at various temperatures (25, 37, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 and
180
100°C) for 15 min. The supernatants were collected after centrifugation at 15,294×g
181
and 4°C for 15 min and then subjected to SDS-PAGE, followed by optical density
182
analysis using the Image Lab v.5.2.1 software (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). Data
183
for native enzymes were set as 100%. Further, residual enzymatic activity in the
184
supernatant was assayed under the optimal conditions (pH 6.0, 50°C). Protein
185
aggregation were monitored by turbidity measurement at 400 nm using a Shimadzu
186
UV-1800 (Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan) spectrophotometer at 25°C.
187
Circular dichroism (CD). All linear and cyclized enzymes were prepared by
188
dialysis in 2 mM HEPES buffer to a final concentration of 0.075 mg/mL. Enzymes
189
were preincubated at 50°C, 70°C, and 90°C for 10 min and subjected to CD analysis
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using a MOS-500 spectropolarimeter (BioLogic Science Instruments, Claix, France)
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and a 0.1-cm path-length cuvette at wavelengths ranging from 190 nm to 250 nm. The
192
percentage of α helix, β strand, and random coil were calculated using CDPro
193
(http://sites.bmb.colostate.edu/sreeram/CDPro/).
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Intrinsic fluorescence measurement. The intrinsic fluorescence spectra of all
195
linear and cyclized enzymes were measured with an F-2500 spectrofluorometer
196
(Hitachi, Japan) and a 1-cm path-length cuvette. The enzymes were pretreated by
197
heating at 50℃, 60℃ or 80℃ for 1 h. Subsequently, fluorescence emission spectra
198
were determined with excitation at 280 nm and the emission in the range of 300-500
199
nm. Native enzymes were used as controls. All spectra were collected at 25 ℃ in
200
1×PBS buffer (pH 7.4).
201
Freeze-thaw stability. All linear and cyclized enzymes (~10 μg each) were snap
202
frozen in liquid nitrogen for 1 min and then warmed to 37°C for 3 min. A total of 20
203
cycles of freeze-thaw treatment were conducted, and aliquots were taken at the end of
204
the 5th, 10th, 15th, and 20th cycles and subjected to residual enzymatic activity assay as
205
described above. The initial activity before freeze-thaw treatment was regarded as
206
100%. Protein aggregation was monitored by turbidity measurement as above.
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Effects of metal ions on stability. All linear and cyclized enzymes were
208
preincubated with 0.5, 1 or 5 mM various metal ions (Cr2+, Pb2+, Cu2+ and Ca2+) or
209
EDTA for 1 h. Then, the enzymes were subjected to residual enzymatic activity assay
210
as described above. The initial activity before preincubation was considered as 100%.
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Synergy of chimeric enzyme on substrate degradation. The chimeric enzymes
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were achieved by simply incubating a mixture of equal amount (~0.1 mol) of
213
CC/BSM and TT/TFX or TT/LPMO at 16
214
mannanase-xylanase chimera (MXC) or mannanase-LPMO chimera (MLC). Then,
215
0.5% locust bean gum and beechwood xylan substrates were treated with MXC or
216
MLC for 10 min, followed by spectrometrically determining the released reducing
217
sugars at 540 nm as described above. To determine the synergism on natural
218
lignocellulose, substrate was prepared from corn husk, which was milled to pass
219
through a mesh of 1.40 mm and subjected for 2% NaOH treatment at 121℃ for 30
220
min.23 Then, the milled and pretreated corn husk was rinsed using ddH2O to PH 7.0
221
and then further rinsed using 50% ethanol and dried. Finally, the treated corn husk
222
samples were used to DNS assay to verify complete removal of residual reducing
223
sugars. To conduct natural lignocellulose deconstruction assay, 0.1 g alkaline-treated
224
corn husk was subjected to hydrolysis by MXC or MLC for 12 h, followed by
225
spectrometrically determining the released reducing sugars at 540 nm as described
226
above.
℃
for 10 min to obtain
227
Statistical analysis.
228
Kinetic parameters were calculated by GraphPad prism 7.0 (San Diego, CA)
229
using Michaelis-Menten. Statistical significance was analyzed using a two-tailed
230
Student’s t-test. Multiple comparisons were carried out by IBM SPSS Statistics v.
231
21.0 (IBM, Armonk, NY, USA) using a one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s test.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
233
Protein Expression and Purification of Recombinant Mannanase. The
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mannanase gene BSM was directed cloned from the B. subtilis genome (GenBank:
235
DQ269473). According to the CAZy classification, BSM belongs to the GH26 family,
236
and its amino acid sequence shares high similarity with that of the endo-mannanase of
237
other species of the same genus: 99% identity, B. velezensis (GenBank:
238
WP_088056375); 99% identity, B. amyloliquefaciens (GenBank: WP_115996828);
239
75% identity, B. licheniformis (GenBank: WP_075749790.1); and 74% identity, B.
240
sonorensis (GenBank: WP_029418987.1). The mature peptide of BSM was used for
241
molecular cyclization, and both linear and cyclized enzymes were heterologously
242
expressed in E. coli. The molecular weights of 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM were
243
approximately 45, 60, and 60 kDa (Figure 2), respectively, which were consistent
244
with their theoretical molecular weights (MW) of 44.3, 57.6 and 56.1 kDa. Notably,
245
both cyclized enzymes, especially Sn/BSM, were observed to have multiple bands on
246
SDS-PAGE, probably indicating insufficient cyclization by isopeptide bond-mediated
247
ligation.24 To validate the topology of the cyclized enzymes, both TC/BSM and
248
Sn/BSM were further digested with EK (Figure 2) or subjected to KA mutations
249
(Figure S1).
250
Optimal pH and pH Stability. The enzymes 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM
251
all shared an optimal pH of 6.0 (Figure S2), which is consistent with the reported
252
optimal pH for most mannanases under neutral or weakly acidic pH conditions. 25-27 In
253
terms of pH stability, 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM were all stable under neutral
254
and weakly acidic conditions (pH 5.0-7.0). Interestingly, compared with 30a/BSM,
255
TC/BSM showed significantly higher residual activity at pH 4.0, 8.0 and 9.0 (P
50°C (Figure 3B-D). The TC/BSM and
275
Sn/BSM showed half-lives of 88.8±16.1 and 73.1±17.6 min at 60°C, significantly
276
higher than 30a/BSM of 6.91±0.72 min. After pretreatment at 60°C for 1 h, the
277
TC/BSM and Sn/BSM retained 66.59% and 65.88% of their initial activities,
CtManT and 60°C CtManF from Clostridium
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respectively (Figure 3C and 3D). However, only negligible activities of 30a/BSM or
279
KA mutants were retained (Figure 3B and S3). Interestingly, the relinearized TC/BSM
280
(L-TC/BSM) and Sn/BSM (L-Sn/BSM) were again almost inactive after the
281
pretreatment under the same conditions (Figure 3E and F). It was inferred that
282
cyclized protein conformation, rather the SpyTag or SpyCatcher peptides located at
283
their flanking regions, contributed to the considerably enhanced thermostability,
284
which was in agreement with previous studies
285
50°C for 1 h, the relinearized enzymes, particularly L-Sn/BSM, retained 38.65%
286
residual activity, which was even more depressed than that of 30a/BSM. It is
287
speculative, but the enzyme might have underdone partial degradation during the 12 h
288
digestion at room temperature by EK. Thus, it is of considerable interest to investigate
289
the effects and mechanisms of molecular cyclization on stability against crowded
290
adverse conditions such as the presence of trypsin34 and metal ions.19
18, 19, 33
Notably, after preincubation at
291
The kinetic analysis showed that when using locust bean gum as a substrate, the
292
Vmax and Km of 30a/BSM were 1238±55.54 μmol/min/mg and 3.74±0.40 mg/ (Table
293
2), respectively, indicating that BSM was a typical endo-mannanase with moderate
294
catalytic ability2. Though thermostability was impressively improved, the Km was not
295
altered by molecular cyclization.28 However, the Kcat/km values significantly increased
296
(P < 0.05) by molecular cyclization, corroborating the finding of several previous
297
works.19, 2 4 The reason for this effect needs to be further elucidated.
298
To evaluate the effects of molecular cyclization on heat-induced aggregation, all
299
linear, cyclized and relinearized enzymes were preheated at temperatures ranging
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from 25 to 100°C for 15 min and subjected to SDS-PAGE analysis. The enzyme
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30a/BSM was stable below 50°C, which was in good agreement with the
302
thermostability assay result (Figure 3A). The linear enzyme started to precipitate
303
when the temperature reached 60°C and aggregated severely at higher temperatures
304
(Figure 4A). On the other hand, both TC/BSM and Sn/BSM remained soluble, even
305
when pretreated at 100°C for 15 min (Figure 4B and C). However, the relinearized
306
enzymes (Figure 4D and E) or KA mutants again precipitated, even at 50°C (Figure
307
S4). The cyclized enzymes were still robust, whereas the linear and relinearized
308
enzymes could hardly maintain their activities (Figure 4F and G). To understand the
309
conformational change during heat challenge, CD was employed to analyze the
310
secondary structure of the linear and cyclized enzymes. The native BSM mainly
311
comprised a (β/α)8 barrel, typical of the structure characteristics of GH26 family. Heat
312
treatment greatly altered the secondary structure pattern of 30a/BSM (Figure 5A and
313
D), but not that of TC/BSM or Sn/BSM (Figure 5B and C). After incubation at >
314
70°C, the α-helix (the major composition of the native protein) was disrupted as a
315
random coil. Moreover, a considerable loss of fluorescence intensity and red shift of
316
maximum emission wavelength (Figure 5G) were also observed, suggesting a
317
complete structural breakdown in the linear enzyme. However, the cyclized enzymes
318
were generally capable of maintaining their structure even after incubation at 90°C,
319
which was also illustrated by analyzing solvent exposure of inner hydrophobic
320
residues, particularly tryptophan and tyrosine (Figure 5H and I).19
321
We further performed freeze-thaw cycle treatment with linear and cyclized
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enzymes. After 5 freeze-thaw cycles, the majority of 30a/BSM aggregated and
323
precipitated out (Figure 6A). The residual activity of 30a/BSM in the supernatant
324
declined significantly (P < 0.05), whereas the activities of both TC/BSM and Sn/BSM
325
were mostly retained (Figure 6B-E). When compared to that of the control that did not
326
undergo freeze/thaw cycles, all the enzymes showed significantly degraded activity as
327
the number of cycles increased. Notably, after 20 freeze-thaw cycles, the cyclized
328
enzymes were still more robust than the linear enzymes, with TC/BSM retaining
329
71.93% of its initial activity, which was 1.73-fold that of Sn/BSM. We also
330
determined the effects of metal ions on the activities of both the linear and the
331
cyclized enzymes. As seen in Figure 7, Cr2+, Pb2+, Cu2+ and Ca2+, as well as EDTA,
332
were found to inhibit mannanase activity. Interestingly, molecular cyclization
333
conferred the linear enzyme with improved ion stability. The cyclized enzymes can be
334
used in pulp bleaching, in which many metal ions, such as Pb2+ Cr2+, and Cu2+, are
335
included as the crowded environment.35, 36
336
NSPs-active enzymes, such as mannanase and xylanase, are known to produce
337
functional oligosaccharides from agricultural lignocellulosic substrates. During many
338
industrial processes, thermal tolerance is required for commercial enzymes to
339
function. Thus, enzymes with good thermostability are desirable in probiotics,37
340
breadmaking38 and the brewing industry.39 During the past decade, genetic
341
engineering approaches, including site mutation, domain shuffling and directed
342
evolution, have been used to improve the thermostability of many enzymes. For
343
example, Wang et al40 mutated a critical amino acid with the lowest mutation energy,
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Ala 336 Pro, and obtained Mutant 336, which had an increased dynamic transition
345
temperature and half-life at 60°C but a decreased irreversible thermal denaturation
346
constant. In another study, an optimal mutant with the apparent melting temperature
347
increased by 14°C was generated using in silico design. Importantly, the mutant
348
increased xylooligosaccharide production at 70°C by 10-fold.7 Moreover, the addition
349
of a carbohydrate-binding module (CBM)32 or the deletion41 or replacement42 of key
350
distal residues also improved enzyme thermostability. Collectively, rational,
351
semi-rational and irrational designs are useful tools to modify enzymes. However,
352
these strategies generally require detailed stereostructures, known catalytic
353
mechanisms or high-throughput screening techniques.43 Moreover, stability
354
enhancement by truncating one or more key amino acid residues may not be used
355
extensively due to the diversity of disordered residues in the distal region and/or
356
catalytic mechanism. Recently, molecular cyclization based on isopeptide
357
bond-mediated ligation was established as an effective method for protein
358
engineering.44 For example, the SpyTag/SpyCatcher cyclization not only increased
359
thermostability18, 28, 45 but also contributed to improved catalytic efficiency.19, 24 More
360
importantly, this approach is universal for enzyme engineering and compatible with
361
various enzymes, such as phytase,18 lichenase,24 xylanase,19 and luciferase.28 Enzymes
362
are commonly stored at low temperature (mainly at -20°C or -80°C) and later thawed
363
for biochemical reactions. Such storage of enzymes without a cryoprotectant can
364
decrease their activity rapidly. In this study, the cyclized enzymes were found to be
365
more robust after freeze-thaw treatment. These enzymes can be better suited to
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366
applications in both industrial processes and research because they are more stable
367
during prolonged storage.46 Interestingly, Schoene et al18 proposed a better stability
368
improvement using SpyRing cyclization than using SnoopRing. However, no
369
significant difference between SpyRing and SnoopRing was observed in our study
370
(Figure 3-5), though SpyRing cyclization showed slightly higher residual activity after
371
freeze-thaw treatment for 5 to 20 cycles (Figure 6). The reason for this result remains
372
unclear, and further study needs to be performed.
373
Assembly and Characterization of Chimeric Enzymes. To extend the
374
substrate spectrum of BSM, we generated a mannanase-xylanase chimeric enzyme
375
(MXC) as shown in Figure 1. The enzymes TT/TFX and CC/BSM showed clear
376
bands of approximately 32 and 68 kDa, which is consistent with the calculated MWs
377
of 30.3 and 67.5 kDa, respectively (Figure 8A). However, though a major band of
378
approximately 120 kDa could be distinguished, several fainter bands were also
379
observed with the MXC. We speculated that both the MW and conformation of the
380
MXC, rather than MW alone, contributed to the altered electrophoretic velocity in the
381
gel.45 Insufficient and over-cyclization might also lead to the presence of multiple
382
bands.18, 47 Zymogram analysis revealed that CC/BSM and TT/TFX showed specific
383
degradation to locust bean gum and beechwood xylan, respectively, whereas the MXC
384
showed bifunctional activities towards both substrates (Figure 8B and C).
385
To determine whether SpyTag/SypCatcher could stabilize the dual-enzyme ring
386
conformation, we compared the thermostability of CC/BSM, TT/TFX, and MXC to
387
that of single-enzyme cyclization. After incubation at 60°C for 1 h, the MXC retained
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55.36% of its initial activity against locust bean gum, whereas CC/BSM retained
389
43.39% activity (Figure 9A and B). Interestingly, the residual activity of the MXC
390
was less than that of TC/BSM (66.59%) (Figure 3C) or Sn/BSM (61.61%) (Figure
391
3D) when treated under the same conditions. Similarly, the same results of residual
392
xylanase activities were observed using beechwood xylan as the substrate (Figure 9C
393
and D).19 Collectively, the dual-enzyme ring conformation was more stable than the
394
linear enzyme after heat challenge but inferior when compared to the single-enzyme
395
ring conformation. Our previous study19 and other works18,
396
molecular
397
conformation. Thus, we speculated that compared with the single-enzyme ring, the
398
dual-enzyme ring was loosened, which probably expose its hydrophobic regions to
399
solvent, leading to the breakdown of the secondary and tertiary structures. In other
400
words, a compact conformation may contribute to a more stable structure without
401
compromising catalytic efficiency. To our knowledge, this is the first study to
402
investigate the effects of dual- or more-ring cyclization generated via isopeptide
403
bond-mediated ligation on enzymatic catalysis and stability. However, further study
404
should be performed to elucidate the mechanism.
cyclization
enhanced
protein
thermostability
28
demonstrated that
by
stabilizing
its
405
Generally, natural plant biomass comprises complicated NSPs, such as xylanase,
406
mannan, and cellulose. Therefore, deconstruction of lignocellulosic biomass requires
407
the combined activities of multiple NSP-degrading enzymes.4,
408
CC/BSM, the MXC showed comparable Km but increased Kcat by 36.67% (P < 0.05)
409
and Kcat/km by 25.00% (P = 0.0589) when locust bean gum served as the substrate
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Compared with
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410
(Table 2), indicating cooperation of mannanase and xylanase on substrate breakdown.
411
LPMO, previously classified into the GH61 family and recently reclassified into an
412
auxiliary activity family, is a novel lignocellulose-active enzyme with oxidation
413
activity.49 In this study, we further evaluated synergistic activities of chimeric
414
enzymes towards locust bean gum, beechwood xylan and corn husk degradation.
415
Compared with mannanase alone, MXC did not exhibit higher hydrolysis (Figure
416
10A), and TFX was inactive against locust bean gum (Figure 8). However, MXC
417
showed improved catalysis to beechwood xylan (P < 0.05) (Figure 10C), though BSM
418
showed no measurable activity against beechwood xylan. We speculated that BSM
419
likely acted on the side chains of the substrate and negligible reducing sugars were
420
released by itself. Interestingly, MXC showed significantly higher hydrolysis of corn
421
husk compared with BSM and TFX alone (P < 0.05) (Figure 10D). Moreover, LPMO
422
was found to boost BSM either on locust bean gum or corn husk (P < 0.01) (Figure
423
10B and E), indicating chimeric enzyme complexes were more robust for
424
lignocellulose deconstruction.50
425
In summary, a mesophilic mannanase from B. subtilis was cloned, cyclized, and
426
heterologously expressed. Cyclized enzymes, both TC/BSM and Sn/BSM, showed
427
improved thermostability and ion stability, resilience to aggregation and freeze-thaw
428
treatment. Moreover, two mannanase-xylanase or mannanase-LPMO chimeric
429
enzyme complexes were generated. The dual-enzyme ring was observed to be more
430
robust than linear enzyme but inferior to single-enzyme ring. The results of this study
431
can used in production of functional oligosaccharides and feed additives production
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from agricultural lignocellulosic biomass.
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ASSOCIATED CONTENT
434
Supporting Information
435
SDS-PAGE, thermostability and protein aggregation analysis of KA mutants.
436
Optimum pH and pH stability of linear and cyclized enzymes. The Supporting
437
Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website.
438
AUTHOR INFORMATION
439
Corresponding Author
440
*Tel: +86 574 88222391; fax: +86 574 88222957; e-mail:
[email protected] 441
(S.J. Yin),
[email protected] (Q. Wang).
442
Funding
443
This work was supported by the Ningbo Public Service Platform for High-Value
444
Utilization of Marine Biological Resources (NBHY-2017-P2), General Project
445
Supported by Department of Education of Zhejiang Province (Y201840329) and
446
Zhejiang Provincial Top Key Discipline (CX2018004 and CX2018031).
447
Notes
448
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
449
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
450
The authors thank professor Zhongtang Yu from The Ohio State University for
451
language revision.
452
ABBREVIATIONS USED
453
BSM, Bacillus subtilis mannanase; 30a/BSM, linear BSM expressed in pET30a(+);
454
TC/BSM, BSM cyclized by SpyTag/SpyCathcer; Sn/BSM, BSM cyclized by
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SnoopTag/SnoopCatcher; L-TC/BSM, relinearized TC/BSM; L-Sn/BSM, relinearized
456
Sn/BSM; CC/BSM, linear BSM expressed in pETCC; TT/TFX, linear TFX expressed
457
in pETTT; CBM, carbohydrate-binding module; CD, circular dichroism; DNS,
458
3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid; GH, glycoside hydrolase; LPMO, lytic polysaccharide
459
monooxygenase; MCS, multiple cloning sites; MXC, mannanase-xylanase chimeric
460
enzyme; MLC, mannanase-LPMO chimeric enzyme; MW, molecular weight; NSP,
461
non-starch
462
enterokinase; SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
polysaccharide;
IPTG,
isopropyl-thio-β-D-galactopyranoside;
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EK,
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
463
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FIGURES AND TABLES Figure 1. Schematic diagram of enzymes in this study. 30a/BSM, Linear B. subtilis mannanase; TC/BSM, Cyclized mannanase using SpyTag/SpyCatcher; Sn/BSM, Cyclized mannanase using SnoopTag/SnoopCatcher; CC/BSM, Linear mannanase with SpyCatcher located at both N- and C-termini; TT/TFX, Linear T. fusca xylanase with SpyTag located at both N- and C-termini; TT/LPMO, Linear B. subtilis LPMO with SpyTag located at both N- and C-termini; MXC, Mannanase-xylanase chimeric enzyme; MLC, Mannanase-LPMO chimeric enzyme; EK, enterokinase. Figure 2. SDS-PAGE analysis. Lanes: 1, 30a/BSM; 2, TC/BSM; 3, Linearized TC/BSM achieved by enterokinase digestion; 4, Sn/BSM; 5, Linearized Sn/BSM achieved by enterokinase digestion; M, Standard protein marker. Figure 3. Optimum temperature and thermostability. (A) Optimum temperature; (B-F) thermostability of 30a/BSM (B), TC/BSM (C), Sn/BSM (D), Relinearized TC/BSM (L-TC/BSM) (E) and relinearized Sn/BSM (L-Sn/BSM) (F). The highest activities under the optimum conditions (pH 6.0, 50°C) or initial activities before preincubation were taken as 100%. Data represent the mean ± SD (n=4). Figure 4. Heat-induced protein aggregation. (A) 30a/BSM; (B) TC/BSM; (C) Sn/BSM; (D) L-TC/BSM; (E) L-Sn/BSM; M, Standard protein marker; 1, Native enzyme control; 2, 25°C; 3, 37°C; 4, 50°C; 5, 60°C; 6, 70°C; 7, 80°C; 8, 90°C; 9, 100°C. (F) Residual activities after heat challenge; (G) Optical densities of supernatant proteins. Data represent the mean ± SD (n=4). Figure 5. Circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence analysis. (A-C) CD spectra of 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM. (D-F) The percentages of 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM
were
calculated
using
CDPro
(http://sites.bmb.colostate.edu/
sreeram/CDPro/). Data represent the mean ± SD (n=4). (G-I) Intrinsic fluorescence analysis of 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM. Inset was the maximum peak wavelength. Figure 6. Freeze-thaw stability. (A-C) SDS-PAGE analysis after free-thaw treatment of 30a/BSM, TC/BSM and Sn/BSM. M, Standard protein marker; 1, Control; 2, 5 cycles; 3, 10 cycles; 4, 15 cycles; 5, 20 cycles. (D) Protein aggregation monitored by
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
spectrometry at 400 nm. (E) Residual activities of linear BSM and cyclized BSM after freeze-thaw treatment. Data represent the mean ± SD (n=4). Statistical significance was analyzed using a two-tailed Student’s t-test and is indicated by asterisks. *, P