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Biotechnology and Biological Transformations
Enhanced Purification Efficiency and Thermal Tolerance of T. aotearoense #-Xylosidase through Aggregation Triggered by Short Peptides Tianwang Xu, Xiongliang Huang, Zhe Li, Carol Sze Ki Lin, and Shuang Li J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00551 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Apr 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 10, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Enhanced Purification Efficiency and Thermal
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Tolerance of T. aotearoense β-Xylosidase through
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Aggregation Triggered by Short Peptides
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Tianwang Xu†1, Xiongliang Huang†1 and Zhe Li†, Carol Sze Ki Lin‡, Shuang Li†,*
5 6
†
7
Biology and Biological Engineering, South China University of Technology,
8
Guangzhou, China
9
‡
10
Provincial Key Laboratory of Fermentation and Enzyme Engineering, School of
School of Energy and Environment, City University of Hong Kong, Tat Chee
Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong
11 12
1
T. X. and X. H. contributed equally to this work.
13 14
**Corresponding author (Tel: +86-20-39380601. E-mail:
[email protected])
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ABSTRACT
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To simplify purification and to improve heat tolerance of a thermostable β-xylosidase
17
(ThXylC), a short ELK16 peptide was attached to its C-terminus, which is designated
18
as ThXylC-ELK. Wild-type ThXylC was normally expressed in soluble form.
19
However, ThXylC-ELK assembled into aggregates with 98.6% of total β-xylosidase
20
activity. After simple centrifugation and buffer washing, the ThXylC-ELK particles
21
were collected with 92.57% activity recovery and 95% purity, respectively.
22
Meanwhile, the wild type ThXylC recovery yield was less than 55% after heat
23
inactivation, affinity and desalting chromatography followed by HRV 3C protease
24
cleavage purification. Catalytic efficiency (Kcat/Km) was increased from 21.31 mM-1s-1
25
for ThXylC to 32.19 mM-1s-1 for ThXylC-ELK accompanied with the a little increase
26
of Km value. Heat tolerance of ThXylC-ELK at high temperatures was also increased.
27
The ELK16 peptide attachment resulted in 6.2-fold increase of half-life at 65 °C.
28
Released reducing sugars were raised 1.3-fold during sugarcane bagasse hydrolysis
29
when ThXylC-ELK was supplemented into the combination of XynA∆SLH and
30
Cellic CTec2.
31 32
Keywords: β-Xylosidase, self-assembly amphipathic peptide, active aggregates,
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purification, heat tolerance
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INTRODUCTION
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Second-generation biofuels from lignocellulosic biomass are considered one of
36
the most promising energy. Enzymatic hydrolysis of the lignocellulosic biomass into
37
fermentable sugars played a significant role for the process to be economically
38
feasible because of the recalcitrance of feedstock.1-3 Within this context, the
39
exploitation of functional enzyme characteristics and effective production process
40
received extensive attention.4 Presently, a number of approaches have been proposed
41
to achieve the goals, including the site-directed mutagenesis and directed evolution. 5,
42
6
43
formulation and immobilization are also applied to improve the catalytic performance
44
of the target enzymes.7, 8
Moreover, downstream processes in enzyme manufacturing, i.e. purification,
45
Through the combination of directed evolution and site-directed mutagenesis,
46
Zhang and coworkers obtained a xylanase mutant which showed the optimal
47
temperature increased from 77 oC to 87 oC and displayed 90% increase in catalytic
48
efficiency (kcat/Km).9 The thermal stability parameter of a β-xylosidase XylBH43 was
49
enhanced by 8.8 oC by DNA shuffling and saturation mutagenesis.10 Although these
50
approaches achieved tremendous success, there are still several drawbacks and
51
challenges to be overcome,11 such as efficient high-throughput screening technique,
52
knowledge on the relationship between enzyme function and structure, etc.
53
Earlier research showed that attachment of some peptides to the N or C terminus
54
of an enzyme could enhance its catalysis performance11 and thermostability.12 Fusion
55
of a short self-assembling amphipathic peptide (SAP) to the N terminus of
56
lipoxygenase resulted in about 4.5-fold enhancement of thermostability at 50 °C.
57
By genetic fusion, a small 27-residue β-propeller like segment was linked to HIV1
58
envelope glycoprotein13 and short collagen14 to improve their thermodynamic stability. 3
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Meanwhile, stimulus-responsive polymers, elastin-like peptides (ELPs) were used to
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purify target proteins by Inverse Transition Cycling (ITC) triggered by temperature or
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salt without chromatography.15-17 Wu et al reported ELK16 (LELELKLK)2 was able
62
to induce the cytoplasmic inclusion bodies formation in Escherichia coli (E. coli)
63
when attached to the carboxyl termini of the model protein.18 In our previous study, an
64
amphipathic octadecapeptide (18A) was fused to the C terminus of a nitrilase, the
65
formed active aggregates of Nit-SEA possessed higher thermal stability than the
66
native nitrilase.19
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The thermoacidophilic bacterial strain Thermoanaerobacterium aotearoense
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SCUT27 has been reported to be an excellent utilizer of xylan.20 A glycoside
69
hydrolase family 10 (GH10) xylanase from it was also cloned and characterized by
70
our group.21 In this work, a β-xylosidase from T. aotearoense P8G3#4 was cloned and
71
characterized. The more important objective of this work was to develop an efficient
72
and convenient method to simplify enzyme purification steps with satisfactory activity
73
recovery and to improve the catalytic performance at higher temperature of this
74
β-xylosidase based on aggregation triggered by a SAP.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
76
Strains, media, plasmids and reagents
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T. aotearoense P8G3#4 (CGMCC No. 9000) was isolated from a hot spring and
78
cultured in the modified MTC medium.20 E. coli DH5α (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA,
79
USA) and BL21(DE3) (Novagen, Wisconsin, WI, USA) were used as DNA
80
manipulation and expression host, respectively. E. coli cells were cultured in
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Luria-Bertani (LB) medium supplemented with 50 µg·mL-1 of kanamycin if necessary.
82
The plasmid pET-30a(+) was obtained from Novagen (Wisconsin, USA). Human
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Rhinovirus (HRV) 3C Protease for fusion tag cleavage was from TaKaRa (Dalian,
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China). p-Nitrophenyl β-D-xylopyranoside (pNPX) was purchased from Tokyo
85
Chemical Industry Co. Ltd., (TCI, Tokyo, Japan). Xylooligosaccharides (xylobiose,
86
xylotriose, xylotetraose and xylopentaose) were bought from Megazyme (Bray,
87
Ireland).
88
Plasmid construction
89
DNA was manipulated according to standard protocols. High-fidelity DNA
90
polymerase PrimerSTAR was from TaKaRa (Dalian, China). Restriction enzymes and
91
T4 DNA ligase were obtained from Fermentas (Thermo Scientific., Waltham, USA).
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The gene xylC, encoding the β-xylosidase, was amplified from the genomic
93
DNA
94
5′-TCGGCTCATATGGAATACCATGTGGCTAAAA-3′ and reverse primer (xylC-R)
95
5′-TAGCAACTCGAGAGAAGAGCCCCAAACTTTTATGTAATTATTTCCT-3′
96
(NdeI and XhoI are underlined). Purified PCR product was digested and introduced
97
into the NdeI and XhoI sites of pET-30a(+) to yield the pET30a-xylC.
98
of
T.
aotearoense
P8G3#4
with
the
forward
primer
(xylC-F)
PCR amplification was carried out with primer pairs of xylC-F and xylC-HRV
99
(5′-CCGCTCGAGGGGTCCCTGAAAGAGGACTTCAAGCCAAACTTTTATGT
100
AATTATTTCC-3', the HRV 3C protease recognition sites were in bold) using
101
pET30a-xylC as template. Amplified product was subcloned into pET-30a(+) to obtain
102
pET30a-xylC-HRV,
103
(LeuGluValLeuPheGlnGlyPro) was introduced between the xylC and His-tag.
104
in
which
the
protelytic
cleavage
site
Using pET30a-xylC as template, PCR products amplified through primer pairs of
105
xylC-F
and
xylC-R2
106
(5′-TCGTTCTCGAGTCATTTCAGCTTTAATTCTAATTCCAGTTTTAACTTCAGT
107
TCAAGTTCCAGCAGAAGAGCCCCAAACTTTTATG-3') were also inserted into 5
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the NdeI and XhoI sites of pET-30a(+) to construct pET-xylC-ELK. The ELK16
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peptide (LELELKLKLELELKLK) was fused to the C-terminus of XylC through this
110
manipulation. The 6×His tag was omitted by the addition of stop codon (TGA)
111
between the ELK16 and His-tag coding sequences.
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Expression and purification
113
The recombinant E. coli BL21(DE3) cells containing pET30a-xylC-HRV or
114
pET-xylC-ELK cells were cultured at 37 oC for about 2 h to the early exponential
115
phase (OD600 = 0.5-0.6). Isopropyl β-D-1-galactoside (IPTG) was added to a final
116
concentration of 0.1 mM to induce the β-xylosidase expression. After incubation at 30
117
o
118
for 30 min.
C for 24 h, the recombinant E. coli cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4300 g
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To purify ThXylC-HRV-His, the cell pellets were resuspended in a lysis buffer
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(20 mM sodium phosphate, 0.5 M NaCl, 50 mM imidazole, pH 7.4) and subjected to a
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brief sonication (4 s each with 4 s interval for 50 times) in an ice-water bath. The
122
supernatants of cell lysates were collected by centrifugation at 15,422 g for 30 min
123
and incubated at 65 oC for 30 min to inactivate unstable proteins. After centrifugation,
124
the soluble fractions were passed through a 0.22 µm filter and applied to the standard
125
immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) purification through a HiTrap™
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Chelating HP column (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ, USA), which was
127
chelated with nickel (Ni2+) ions. Aliquots containing β-xylosidase activity were
128
pooled and loaded onto a HiPrep™ 26/10 desalting column (GE Healthcare) and
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eluted for buffer exchange. The final collected ThXylC-HRV-His was stored in 100
130
mM phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) at 4 °C.
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For His-tag cleavage, 16 mg ThXylC-HRV-His, 200 µL HRV 3C protease (200
132
U), 1 mL 10×HRV 3C Protease Cleavage Buffer and sterile distilled water were 6
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combined to make a 10 mL total reaction volume. The reaction mixture were
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incubated at 4 oC for 16 h and then loaded onto HiTrap™ Chelating HP column
135
following the standard protocol described previously. The reaction mixture,
136
flow-through and eluted fractions were all analyzed by sodium dodecyl
137
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).
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For the insoluble ThXylC-ELK purification, cell pellets were gathered and lysed
139
by centrifugation and sonication as described before. Then the cell debris containing
140
ThXylC-ELK was collected and washed twice with the same volume of wash buffer
141
(50 mM sodium phosphate, 50 mM NaCl, 0.8% Triton X-100 (v/v), pH 7.5). When
142
incubated on ice for 20 min, the membrane proteins were re-solubilized by Triton
143
X-100 and removed by centrifugation. After centrifugation, the supernatants were
144
discarded, and the enzyme aggregates, ThXylC-ELK, were collected and resuspended
145
with Tris-Cl (50 mM, pH7.0) for further characterization.
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Enzyme characterization
147
Protein purity and molecular mass were estimated by SDS-PAGE in a 10%
148
separating gel and stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 (Sangon). Protein
149
concentration was determined by a BCA Protein Assay Kit (Sangon, Shanghai, China)
150
using bovine serum albumin (BSA, Sangon) as the standard. The enzymatic activity
151
distributions were determined by measurements of the corresponding β-xylosidase
152
activity for the soluble and insoluble fractions of cell lysates. The whole enzyme
153
activity was the sum of soluble and insoluble parts.
154
The β-xylosidase activity was determined by measuring the amount of
155
p-nitrophenol released from the substrate pNPX. The reaction mixture consisting of
156
170 µL 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) and 20 µL 40 mM pNPX was incubated at 65
157
o
C for 1 min, followed by the addition of 10 µL enzyme solution. After incubation at 7
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65 oC for 5 min, the reaction was stopped by the addition of 600 µL 1 M Na2CO3 and
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put into an ice-water bath for 2 min. The produced p-nitrophenol was measured at 405
160
nm as literature reported.
161
β-xylosidase required to release 1 µmol of p-nitrophenol per minute under the reaction
162
conditions. Each assay was performed in triplicate.
22, 23
One unit activity was defined as the amount of
163
The optimum pH was determined by measuring enzyme activity under various
164
pH values at 65 oC. The pH was adjusted by the addition of sodium acetate buffer (pH
165
4.0 to 5.5) or potassium phosphate buffer (pH 5.5 to 8.0) in the range from 4.0 to 8.0.
166
The optimum temperature was investigated by measuring the enzyme activity at
167
different temperatures ranging from 45 to 90 oC in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer
168
(pH 6.5). Thermostability assays were carried out by measuring the residual
169
β-xylosidase activities after pre-incubation at 65 and 70 oC for different hours.
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The Michaelis constant (Km), maximum activity (Vmax) and catalytic efficiency
171
(Kcat/Km) values were determined by measuring the initial rates at various pNPX
172
concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 1.0 mM under optimal reaction conditions. The
173
kinetic parameters were calculated by nonlinear regression using the GraphPad
174
Software
175
Michaelis-Menten equation in the panel of Enzyme kinetics - Substrate v Velocity was
176
chosen. 24
177
Enzyme synergism analysis
program
(GraphPad
Software,
Inc.
CA,
USA),
in
which
the
178
The synergistic actions of the recombinant xylanase A (XynA∆SLH, purified by
179
our group previously21) and β-xylosidase on the beechwood xylan (Sigma-Aldrich)
180
hydrolysis were investigated. The hydrolysis experiments were carried out at 55 oC in
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0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 6.5, containing 1.5 mg·mL-1 of substrate and different
182
amounts of enzymes (0.5 U of XynA∆SLH with or without 1.0 U of ThXylC-ELK). A 8
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solution of xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3), xylotetraose (X4) or xylopentaose (X5)
184
(Megazyme, Bray, Ireland) in the concentration of 1 mg·mL-1 for each mixed with 0.5
185
U of ThXylC-ELK was incubated at 65 °C for 3 h in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH
186
6.5). The hydrolyzed xylooligosaccharides and xylan were centrifuged and the
187
supernatants were analyzed on silica gel TLC plates (CF254, 100 × 100 mm, Merck).
188
The developing solvent was the mixture of chloroform/acetic acid/water (3:6:1, by
189
vol.). The plates were sprayed with a mixture of ethanol and concentrated sulfuric
190
acid (95:5, v/v) and then incubated at 105 oC for 15 min for color development. The
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standard mixture containing 1 mg⋅mL-1 of xylose, X2, X3, X4 and X5 was spotted to
192
determine the xylooligosaccharide identity.
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Sugarcane bagasse was acquired from Guangzhou Sugar Cane Industry Research
194
Institute (Guangzhou, China). In preliminary processing, the air-dried sugarcane
195
bagasse was milled to pass through with 0.3 mm sieve.19 0.2 g of pretreated sugarcane
196
bagasse was hydrolyzed in 20 mL of 0.1 M Bis-Tris-HCl (pH 6.5) containing (a) 10 U
197
of XynA∆SLH, (b) 10 U of XynA∆SLH and 20 U of ThXylC-ELK, (c) 10 U of
198
XynA∆SLH and 0.2 filter paper unit (FPU) of Cellic CTec2 (Novozyme, Denmark),
199
or (d) 10 U of XynA∆SLH, 20 U of ThXylC-ELK and 0.2 FPU of Cellic CTec2.
200
Samples were taken at different time intervals to determine the released reducing
201
sugars, which were measured by the standard dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS)
202
colorimetric method using xylose as standard.25
203
RESULTS
204
Overexpression and purification of recombinant enzymes
205
Heterologous expression of recombinant β-xylosidases in E. coli BL21(DE3)
206
was confirmed by SDS-PAGE and the catalytic activity against pNPX. The
207
ThXylC-HRV-His (attached with a 6×His-tag, 74.66 kD) was predominantly 9
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expressed as soluble protein (Figure 1a). The β-xylosidase activity in the supernatants
209
of cell lysates was detected as 39.02 U⋅mL-1, which accounts for about 98.6% of the
210
total activity. To purify the ThXylC-HRV-His, the supernatants of cell lysates were
211
subjected to heat treatment to inactivate thermally unstable proteins with the protein
212
recovery yield of 86.45%. After three-step purification (heat-treatment, affinity
213
purification and desalting), highly enriched preparations of the recombinant
214
ThXylC-HRV-His were obtained with an enzyme recovery of 62.50% and 9.78-fold
215
purification (Figure 1a and Table 1). After incubation with HRV 3C protease at 4 oC
216
for 16 h, cleavage reaction solution containing the ThXylC-HRV-His showed two
217
major protein bands of ThXylC (~ 73.44kD) and HRV 3C protease (~22 kD, Figure
218
1b lane 1). The target ThXylC flew through and the terminal His-tag and HRV 3C
219
protease remained on resin when IMAC Ni-charged resin is used.
220
On the contrary, almost no β-xylosidase activity (1.5 U⋅mL-1) was measured in
221
the supernatant fractions of cell lysate for E. coli BL21(DE3)/pET-xylC-ELK.
222
However, about 96.2% of the whole activity (37.65 U⋅mL-1) were accumulated in the
223
insoluble fractions. Judged by SDS-PAGE, the fusion ThXylC-ELK was found to be
224
predominantly in the insoluble fractions (Figure 1c). Furthermore, the final E. coli cell
225
densities (OD600) for ThXylC-HRV-His and ThXylC-ELK expression were 2.78±0.21
226
and 3.28±0.18, respectively.
227
The aggregates containing the β-xylosidase activity (ThXylC-ELK) were
228
purified by buffer washing and centrifugation with almost 95% of purity estimated
229
from the SDS-PAGE and 92.57% enzyme activity recovery. In addition, the specific
230
activity of ThXylC-ELK (108.19±1.74 U⋅mg-1) was increased about 1.53-fold
231
compared with the purified ThXylC (71.04±1.39 U⋅mg-1) (Table 1).
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Biochemical characterization of recombinant ThXylC and ThXylC-ELK
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Characteristics of ThXylC are almost the same as those of ThXylC-HRV-His
234
(Figure 2 and Table 2), thus only ThXylC will be discussed hereafter when compared
235
with ThXylC-ELK.
236
The soluble ThXylC and the aggregates of ThXylC-ELK both showed relatively
237
high activities in the range of pH 6.0 - 7.0 with the optimum activity at pH 6.5 in 0.1
238
M KH2PO4-K2HPO4 buffer (Figure 2a). The catalytic activity for ThXylC-ELK
239
exhibited higher activity in the acidic pH range when compared with ThXylC. For
240
example, the activity of ThXylC-ELK was about 60% at pH 5.5 relative to the activity
241
at pH 6.5, whereas it was only 16% for ThXylC under the same conditions.
242
In terms of the effect of temperature on β-xylosidase activity, the optimal
243
temperature of the purified ThXylC was found to be 65 °C (Figure 2b). It is
244
interesting to find that the optimal temperature for ThXylC-ELK was increased to
245
70 °C. When reaction temperature was set at 75 °C, the catalytic activity of
246
ThXylC-ELK still remained about 90% relative to that at 70 °C. The ThXylC retained
247
27.6% of the initial activity after an incubation of 48 h at 65 °C, and lost most of its
248
catalytic ability after an incubation at 70 °C for 6 h, with obvious white sediments at
249
the bottom of the reaction tube (Figure 2c). However, the residual activity of
250
ThXylC-ELK retained more than 50% after the incubation at 65 °C for 48 h. Even
251
incubated at 70 °C for 48 h, it still preserved about 26.6% of its initial activity. The
252
calculated half-lives for ThXylC and ThXylC-ELK at 65 °C were 8.9 h and 54.8 h,
253
respectively.
254
To understand substrate affinity and catalytic efficiency, kinetic parameters of the
255
purified ThXylC using pNPX as substrate were determined by the Michaelis-Menten
256
analysis. The values of Km and Vmax of recombinant ThXylC were 20.37 mM and 11
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434.10 U⋅mg-1, respectively. And the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of the enzyme was
258
determined as 21.31 mM-1s-1. The purified ThXylC exhibited unusual values of Km
259
and Vmax compared with other β-xylosidases (Table 2), implying the relative lower
260
affinity for the artificial substrate of pNPX. However, the Km, Vmax and kcat/Km of
261
ThXylC-ELK were measured as 27.67 mM, 890.7 U⋅mg-1 and 32.19 mM-1s-1,
262
respectively.
263
Synergistic action of ThXylC and XynA∆SLH
264
To evaluate the potential of ThXylC-ELK in practical applications, the action
265
mode of ThXylC-ELK was analyzed using different xylooligosaccharides as
266
substrates and assayed on silica gel plates. As shown in Figure 3a, the ThXylC-ELK
267
completely degrades X2, X3, X4 and X5 into xylose when incubated at 65°C for 3 h.
268
In addition, we also investigated the efficiency of combined action of previously
269
reported endo-xylanase, XynA∆SLH21 and ThXylC on beechwood xylan (Figure 3b).
270
Being consistent with our previous investigation,
271
beechwood xylan only by XynA∆SLH released xylobiose and presumed
272
methylglucuronoxylotriose (MeGlcAXyl3). The MeGlcAxyl3 might be the aldouronic
273
acid liberated from methylglucuronoxylan by xylanases.
274
ThXylC-ELK could not hydrolyze MeGlcAXyl3 neither.
21
the depolymerization of
26, 27
However, the
275
After 60 h hydrolysis, the reducing sugar catalyzed only by XynA∆SLH was
276
recorded as 0.065 mmol⋅g-1 sugarcane bagasse (Figure 4). When the reaction was
277
supplemented with the purified ThXylC-ELK, the produced sugar was increased to
278
0.233 mmol⋅g-1 sugarcane bagasse. And the similar increase of final hydrolysis
279
product was observed from 0.366 mmol⋅g-1 catalyzed by the combination of
280
XynA∆SLH with purchased cellulase (Cellic CTec2, from Novozyme) to 0.460
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mmol⋅g-1 supplemented with ThXylC-ELK.
282
DISCUSSION
283
In this study, we cloned the xylC gene, encoding β-xylosidase in T. aotearoense
284
P8G3#4. The native β-xylosidase, designated as ThXylC was expressed primarily as a
285
soluble protein (Figure 1a and 1b). Through overexpression and affinity purification,
286
the ThXylC was obtained from the soluble fractions of the recombinant E. coli
287
BL21(DE3) cells. When the ELK16 short peptide was introduced to the C-terminus of
288
ThXylC, the recombinant protein, ThXylC-ELK, was found to be predominantly in
289
insoluble fraction with relative high β-xylosidase activity (Figure 1c). Differing from
290
the previous study,18 the introduction of the ELK16 peptide to the C terminus of
291
ThXylC did not disturb the cell growth. After three-step purification and HRV 3C
292
protease cleavage, the final activity recovery yield of ThXylC was about 54.37%.
293
However, the particles of ThXylC-ELK could be easily collected only by buffer
294
washing and centrifugation with outstanding high activity recovery rate (92.57%) and
295
purity (~95%) (Table 1 and Figure 1c). Using the thermally driven, phase transition
296
property of the elastin-like peptides (ELPs), it allows the target protein fused with
297
ELPs to be isolated from cell contaminants by the phase change from soluble
298
monomers to insoluble aggregates, which was termed Inverse Transition Cycling
299
(ITC).16, 17 Both the ELK16 mediated purification method and the ITC protocol do not
300
require the use of chromatography, and are all cost effective and easy to scale up. It
301
should be noted that the ITC method needs 3-5 rounds of “hot-spin” and “cold-spin”
302
to attain the desired purity, which is dependent on the protein.16 However, the
303
ELK16-fusion protein was expressed as insoluble aggregates with good catalytic
304
activity, and two-time buffer wash with one centrifugation are enough to obtain the
305
desired purity. 13
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The recombinant ThXylC exhibited the highest activity at 65 °C. It is exciting to
307
find that when the ELK16 peptide was attached to the terminus of ThXylC, relative
308
activities at the pH values investigated and the heat tolerance were both improved
309
(Figure 2 and Table 2). For example, the optimal temperature of fusion ThXylC-ELK
310
was increased by 5°C compared to that of ThXylC. And the half-life at 65 °C was also
311
elongated from 8.9 h for ThXylC to 54.8 h for ThXylC-ELK. The vast enhancement
312
of thermostability should be attributed to the aggregate formation.19 According to the
313
previous studies, thermal stability and specific activity of lipoxygenase was enhanced
314
by fusing with SAP,12 and the operational stability of nitrilase from Alcaligenes
315
faecalis JM3 was also dramatically improved by the introduction of the 18A peptide.19
316
However to our best knowledge, this is the first report that the terminal SAP
317
attachment to an enzyme could increase its optimal temperature.
318
Another attractive aspect is that the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of ThXylC-ELK
319
was increased 1.51-fold compared with that of ThXylC (Table 2). In our previous
320
result,19 the Km value was increased from 25.6 mM to 33.0 mM because of the
321
attachment of 18A peptide at the nitrilase C-terminus. Similarly in this study, the
322
introduction of ELK16 to the ThXylC enhanced the Km by about 35%. It was reported
323
that the less hydrophobic peptide EAK16 originated from Zuotin protein, could
324
spontaneously form a β-sheet structure.28 In contrast, the 18A peptide would
325
self-assemble into coiled-coil structure in aqueous solution.29 However, the
326
differences of the secondary structure for ELK16 and 18A did not cause changes in
327
trend of Km values between the native and fusion enzymes.
328
The synergy in the degradation of beechwood xylan by XynA∆SLH and
329
ThXylC-ELK offered the possibility to degrade lignocellulosic biomass for industrial
330
applications. The amount of released reducing sugars is one of the most important 14
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aspects in the lignocellulosic biomass hydrolysis. The results indicate that the
332
recombinant ThXylC-ELK could degrade short xylooligosaccharides to xylose.
333
However, it could not attack a site containing glucuronic acid as a substituted residue
334
deduced from the fact that ThXylC-ELK did not degrade MeGlcAXyl3.
335
The XynA∆SLH is an endoxylanase that randomly cleaves the internal linkages
336
in xylan. And β-xylosidase cleaves the nonreducing termini of xylobiose and
337
xylooligosaccharide segments into xylose. Complete degradation of xylan requires the
338
synergistic action of various enzymes.30 The sugarcane bagasse hydrolysis showed
339
that ThXylC-ELK supplementation in the reaction resulted in the enhanced
340
production of reducing sugar production (Figure 4). The final concentration of
341
reducing sugar catalyzed by the additional ThXylC-ELK was improved by 3.6-fold
342
and 1.3-fold relative to the counterparts catalyzed by the XynA∆SLH alone and the
343
combination of XynA∆SLH with Cellic CTec2, respectively. The results indicate that
344
the supplementation of ThXylC-ELK is beneficial to releasing the polysaccharide
345
releasing in the lignocellulosic biomass degradation.
346
In this study, introduction of a short ELK16 peptide to the β-xylosidase
347
C-terminus gave a facile protein purification scheme with high activity recovery and
348
purity. Taking into account its inherent good heat tolerance of ThXylC, 5 °C increase
349
of optimal temperature and significant improvement of thermostability were still
350
achieved by simple attachment of an ELK16 peptide at its C-terminus. When used in
351
sugarcane bagasse hydrolysis, approximately 25.7% increase in the production of
352
reducing sugars was observed in the Cellic CTec2 and XynA∆SLH supplemented
353
with ThXylC-ELK compared to that without ThXylC-ELK.
354 355
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 15
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This work was financial supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundations
357
of China (U1701243), the Project on the Integration of Industry, Education and
358
Research of Guangzhou, China (201704020183), the Science and Technology Planning
359
Project of Guangdong Province, China (2017A010105019), and the Fundamental
360
Research Funds for the Central Universities, SCUT (2015ZZ108).
361
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Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2: potential roles in processing glucuronoxylans. Appl.
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Z-DNA binding protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. EMBO. J. 1992, 11, 3787-3796.
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(29) Anantharamaiah, G. M.; Jones, J. I.; Brouillette, C. G.; Schmidt, C. F.; Chung, B.
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characterization of a GH43 family β-xylosidase/α-arabinofuranosidase from a
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compost microbial metagenome. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 2015, 99, 8943-8954.
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(31) Falck, P.; Linares-Pasten, J. A.; Adlercreutz, P.; Karlsson, E. N., Characterization
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of a family 43 β-xylosidase from the xylooligosaccharide utilizing putative probiotic
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Weissella sp. strain 92. Glycobiology 2016, 26, 193-202.
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(32) Wongwisansri, S.; Promdonkoy, P.; Matetaviparee, P.; Roongsawang, N.;
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Eurwilaichitr, L.; Tanapongpipat, S., High-level production of thermotolerant
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β-xylosidase of Aspergillus sp BCC125 in Pichia pastoris: Characterization and its
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T.; Kaneko, S.; Yaoi, K.,
Screening,
477
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and
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
479
Figure 1. SDS-PAGE analysis of the recombinant β-xylosidase. (a) Expression and
480
purification of ThXylC-HRV-His. M, protein marker; 1, supernatants of cell lysates
481
after sonication; 2, heat-treated crude extracts; 3, flow-through fractions loading on
482
HiTrap
483
ThXylC-HRV-His after desalting; (b) Purification of ThXylC from ThXylC-HRV-His
484
by HRV 3C protease cleavage. M, protein marker; 1, reaction solution after cleavage
485
with HRV 3C protease at 4 oC for 16 h; 2, flow-through fractions containing ThXylC
486
loading
487
ThXylC-HRV-His and HRV 3C protease. (c) Expression and purification of
488
ThXylC-ELK16. M, protein marker; 1, supernatants of lysates after sonication; 2,
489
insoluble pellets of the lysates; 3, cell pellets recovered by two-step wash. 19
column;
on
4,
HiTrap
eluent
column;
possessing
3,
β-xylosidase
elution
fractions
activity;
including
5,
purified
un-cleaved
490 491
Figure 2. pH and temperature profiles on ThXylC, ThXylC-HRV-His and
492
ThXylC-ELK. (a) Effect of pH on enzyme activity measured at 65 °C using sodium
493
acetate buffer (pH 4.0 to 5.5) and potassium phosphate buffer (pH 5.5 to 8.0). (b)
494
Effect of temperature on enzyme activity measured at pH 6.5 in potassium phosphate
495
buffer, pH 6.5. (c) Thermostability incubated at 65 and 70 °C in potassium phosphate
496
buffer (pH 6.5) for various periods of time. Samples were withdrawn at each time
497
point and assayed at optimal conditions. Error bars represent standard deviation of
498
triplicate assays.
499 500
Figure 3. Thin-layer chromatography (TLC) of sugars produced during hydrolysis. (a)
501
Xylooligosaccharide hydrolysis by the recombinant ThXylC-ELK. Lane M, mixture
502
of xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3), xylotetraose (X4) and xylopentaose 21
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503
(X5). Lanes 2, 3, 4 and 5 represent standard samples of X2, X3, X4 and X5,
504
respectively. Lanes 0 represent the degradation products of X2, X3, X4 and X5 by the
505
recombinant ThXylC-ELK. Xylooligosaccharides at concentrations of 1 mg·mL-1
506
were incubated with 0.5 U of purified ThXylC-ELK for 3 h at 65 °C in 80 mM
507
phosphate buffer, pH 6.5. (b) Xylan hydrolysis products. Beechwood xylan (1.5
508
mg⋅mL-1) was hydrolyzed for 24 h at 65 °C in 100 µL of 80 mM phosphate buffer, pH
509
6.5. Lane 1, Xylan was hydrolyzed only by 0.5 U of recombinant XynA∆SLH
510
Lane 2, Xylan was degraded by the combination of 0.5 U XynA∆SLH and 1.0 U
511
ThXylC-ELK.
21
.
512 513
Figure 4. Synergistic hydrolysis of sugarcane bagasse by combinations of
514
ThXylC-ELK, XynA∆SLH and Cellic CTec2. ■, hydrolyzed by XynA∆SLH only;
515
●, hydrolyzed by XynA∆SLH and ThXylC-ELK; ▲, hydrolyzed by XynA∆SLH
516
and Cellic CTec2; ▼, hydrolyzed by the combination of XynA∆SLH, ThXylC-ELK
517
and Cellic CTec2. Different enzyme combinations were added into the 20 mL reaction
518
mixture containing 0.2 g of sugarcane bagasse in 0.1 M Bis-Tris-HCl buffer system,
519
pH 6.5. The amounts of added enzymes are 10 U, 20 U and 0.2 FPU for XynA∆SLH,
520
ThXylC-ELK and Cellic Ctec2, respectively.
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TABLES Table 1 Purification of different forms of β-xylosidase a. Specific Enzymes
Fraction
Total Protein (mg)
Total Activity (U)
Activity
Purification Fold
% Yield
(U·mg-1)
ThXylC-HRV-His Crude extracts
ThXylC b
250.00
1808.40
7.23
1.00
100. 00
Heat treatments
122.31
1563.45
12.78
1.77
86.45
Ni-affinity
17.09
1281.13
74.96
10.36
70.84
Desalting
15.98
1130.26
70.71
9.78
62.50
13.93
983.22
71.04
9.76
54.37
Crude extracts
235.15
1739.30
7.40
1.00
100
Two-step buffer washing
14.88
1610.07
108.19
14.62
92.57
HRV 3C protease cleavage and IMAC purification
ThXylC-ELK
a
The β-xylosidase activity was determined using pNPX as substrate at 65 °C, pH 6.5. Each value is the mean of three preparations. Standard
deviation was less than 5% and has been omitted. 23
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b
ThXylC was purified from ThXylC-HRV-His by HRV 3C protease cleavage.
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Table 2 Comparison of the Enzymatic Properties of Thermostable β-xylosidase
ThXylC-HRV-Hi Name
WSUCF1
Xyl43A
Xyl43B
WXyn43
β-xylosidase
ThXylC
ThXylC-ELK s
Geobacill us
sp Humicola
Humicola
Weissella
sp. Aspergillus
sp. T. aotearoense T.
aotearoense T. aotearoense
insolens
insolens
strain 92
BCC125
P8G3#4
P8G3#4
P8G3#4
GH39
GH3
GH43
GH43
GH3
GH120
GH120
GH120
133
11.6
1.7
11.2
156
71.04
70.71
108.19
6.5
6.0
7.0
6.0-6.5
4.0-5.0
6.5
6.5
6.5
70
60
50
55
60
65
65
70
3.5 h at 60°C a
8.9 h at 65°C
8.7 h at 65°C
54.8 h at 65°C
Source strain WSUCF1 GH family
Specific activity (U·mg-1) Optimum pH Optimum Temperature (°C)
Thermostability
9
d
at 2.8 h at 50°C a
34 h at 50°C a 4 min at 55°C
25
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70°C
Km (mM)
2.38
2.51
1.29
7.4
1.7
20.37
20.62
27.67
Vmax (U·mg-1)
147
37.33
2.18
N.A.b
211.5
434.10
437.50
890.70
Kcat/Km (mM-1s-1 )
-
-
-
34.9
198.8
21.31
21.22
32.19
Reference
23
22
22
31
32
This study
This study
This study
a
, calculated from the reported data
b
, N.A. not analyzed
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Figure 1
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a 120 100
ThXylC ThXylC-HRV-His ThXylC-ELK
80 60 40 20 0 4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
8.0
pH
b 120 100
ThXylC ThXylC-HRV-His ThXylC-ELK
80 60 40 20 0 40
50
60
70
80
90
Temperature (°C)
c 120
ThXylC, 65°C ThXylC-HRV-His, 65°C ThXylC-ELK, 65°C ThXylC, 70°C ThXylC-HRV-His, 70°C ThXylC-ELK, 70°C
100 80 60 40 20 0 0
10
20
30
40
Time (h)
Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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Affinity & desalting chromatography protease cleavage
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
>95% purity ~50% recovery Lower cataly�c efficiency Poorer heat tolerance
Soluble expression
Enzyme expression
Cell lysis
Centrifugation Two-time buffer wash
Ac�ve aggregates
ThXylC
ThXylC-ELK
different contaminates
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>95% purity >90% recovery Facile scheme Higher cataly�c efficiency Be�er heat tolerance
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