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Processive Degradation of Crystalline Cellulose by a Multimodular Endoglucanase via a Wirewalking Mode Kun-Di Zhang, Wen Li, Yefei Wang, Yan-Lin Zheng, Fang-Cheng Tan, Xiao-Qing Ma, Lishan Yao, Edward A. Bayer, Lushan Wang, and Fuli Li Biomacromolecules, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.8b00340 • Publication Date (Web): 04 Apr 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 8, 2018
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Biomacromolecules
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Processive Degradation of Crystalline Cellulose by a
2
Multimodular Endoglucanase via a Wirewalking
3
Mode
4
Kun-Di Zhanga,b, Wen Lib, Ye-Fei Wanga, Yan-Lin Zhengc, Fang-Cheng Tana, Xiao-Qing Mae,
5
Li-Shan Yaoa, Edward A. Bayerd, Lu-Shan Wangb,*, Fu-Li Lia,*
6
a
7
Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 266101
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Qingdao, P. R. China; bState Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology, Shandong University,
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Jinan, 250100, P. R. China; cCollege of Mathematics and Systems Science, Shandong University
Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Energy Genetics, Key Laboratory of Biofuels, Qingdao
10
of Science and Technology, Qingdao, 266590, P. R. China; dDepartment of Biomolecular
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Sciences, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 76100, Israel; eShandong Provincial Key
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Laboratory of Synthetic Biology
13
KEYWORDS: GH9, CBM3, Open cleft, Cellotetraose, Clostridium cellulosi
14
15
ABSTRACT: Processive hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose by cellulases is a critical step for
16
lignocellulose deconstruction. The classic Trichoderma reesei exoglucanase TrCel7A, which has
17
a closed active-site tunnel, starts each processive run by threading the tunnel with a cellulose
18
chain. Loop regions are necessary for tunnel conformation, resulting in weak thermostability of
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fungal exoglucanases. However, endoglucanase CcCel9A, from the thermophilic bacterium
2
Clostridium cellulosi, comprises a glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 9 module with an open cleft
3
and five carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) and hydrolyzes crystalline cellulose
4
processively. How CcCel9A and other similar GH9 enzymes bind to the smooth surface of
5
crystalline cellulose to achieve processivity is still unknown. Our results demonstrate that the C-
6
terminal CBM3b and three CBMX2s enhance productive adsorption to cellulose, while the
7
CBM3c adjacent to the GH9 is tightly bound to 11 glucosyl units, thereby extending the catalytic
8
cleft to 17 subsites, which facilitates decrystallization by forming a supramodular binding
9
surface. In the open cleft, the strong interaction forces between substrate-binding subsites and
10
glucosyl rings enable cleavage of the hydrogen bonds and extraction of a single cellulose chain.
11
In addition, subsite −4 is capable of drawing the chain to its favored location. Cellotetraose is
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released from the open cleft as the initial product to achieve high processivity, which is further
13
hydrolyzed to cellotriose, cellobiose and glucose by the catalytic cleft of the endoglucanase. On
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this basis, we propose a wirewalking mode for processive degradation of crystalline cellulose by
15
an endoglucanase, which provides insights for rational design of industrial cellulases.
16
Introduction
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Cellulose is the earth’s most abundant biopolymer and is responsible for the structural
18
integrity of plants 1. Processive cellulases degrade crystalline cellulose and are defined
19
by their ability to remain bound to their substrates and continuously repeat cycles of
20
catalysis before dissociating
21
reacting with adjacent sites without dissociating from the cellulose chain
22
two types of processive cellulases: exoglucanases and processive endoglucanases.
23
Generally, their structures are similar and consist of a glycoside hydrolase (GH) module
2-3
. They do so by binding and sliding along substrates and 4-6
. There are
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and one or more carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). The cellulases attach to the
2
hydrophobic surface of the crystalline substrate by the CBMs, thus forming an enzyme–
3
substrate complex that produces cello-oligosaccharides in a successive stepwise
4
manner as the enzyme slides along a single cellulose chain. However, there is a
5
distinguishing structural feature of active-site architecture between the two processive
6
enzyme types – exoglucanases have a closed tunnel while endoglucanases have an
7
open cleft.
8
One of the best studied exocellulases is Cel7A of the fungus, Trichoderma reesei
9
(TrCel7A). It is composed of a GH7 catalytic module and a CBM1. An early molecular
10
dynamics study suggested that the enzyme–substrate interactions produced forces that
11
enabled the enzyme to slide along the cellulose surface with a single substrate chain
12
channeled through its catalytic tunnel, which was referred to as threading mode
13
visual study using high-speed atomic force microscopy suggested that the movement
14
was accompanied by catalytic activity and that the CBM enhanced the concentration of
15
enzyme molecules on the substrate 10. Other studies have highlighted the importance of
16
hydrophobic interactions between amino acid residues in the tunnel and the cellulose
17
chain
18
processivity of GHs is directly related to oligosaccharide binding free energy, and a
19
mathematical model has been derived to quantify the binding free energy of the enzyme
20
to the cello-oligosaccharide 6, 13-17.
7-9
.A
10-12
. Recently, more detailed theories have been proposed that suggest the
21
It has been reported that deletions in the loop regions of the catalytic tunnel in Cel7D
22
from Phanerochaete chrysosporium (PcCel7D) created a long cellulose-binding groove,
23
which resulted in more binding sites compared to that of TrCel7A
18
. In addition,
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cellobiohydrolase Cel6A (E2) from the bacterium Thermobifida fusca (TfCel6A) had
2
enhanced endoglucanase activity after deletion of a surface loop
3
temperatures protein loops tend to be denatured; hence the loops are considered
4
unstable “hotspots” on proteins. As a result, the reported thermostability of
5
cellobiohydrolases, in which the catalytic tunnel is rich in loops, was relatively low
6
However, the surface of crystalline cellulose was described as so smooth that the
7
salient points could only be observed at near-atomic resolution by atomic force
8
microscopy
9
become the challenge for cellulose hydrolysis, especially at high temperatures, and
10
novel modes for crystalline cellulose degradation are currently being studied. A
11
subsequent advancement in this field of research is the discovery of processive
12
endoglucanases that can hydrolyze crystalline cellulose.
13
21
19
, and it was thus difficult for cellulases without loops to bind
. At elevated
20
.
22-23
. This has
The first processive endoglucanase TfCel9A was identified from the filamentous soil 24
14
bacterium T. fusca, and it had the ability to degrade cellulose
15
GH9 catalytic module with a family 3c CBM fused to its C-terminal end, which is
16
essential for processivity, and a family 3b CBM at the C-terminus of the intact protein,
17
which is essential for binding to crystalline cellulose. TfCel9A-68, generated from
18
TfCel9A by limited proteolysis, contained only the GH9 and CBM3c modules. Its crystal
19
structure revealed that these two modules provided an elongated flat face, to which
20
linear cellulose chains can adhere. When binding to a cellopentaose molecule, there
21
was clear electron density for six glucosyl units in two clearly separate segments in its
22
active-site architecture: a four-glucosyl segment with a reducing end that had an α-
23
configuration and a two-glucosyl segment. The six glucosyl binding sites in the cleft
. The enzyme contains a
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were numbered from −4 to +2 from the nonreducing to the reducing end. Dozens of
2
amino acid residues that interacted with glucosyl subsites −4 to +2 of the active site
3
were mutated to analyze the mechanism of action of TfCel9A. It was found that E424
4
and D58 were the catalytic acid and base, respectively 25-26. The processivity of mutants
5
R378K and D261A, as well as the double mutant D261A/R378K, was examined and
6
found to be improved, reduced, and even more reduced, respectively. This suggests
7
that processivity requires a precise balance between the catalytic cleft binding on the
8
two sides of the cleavage site, as R378 interacted with subsites +1 and +2, while D261
9
interacted with subsites −1 to −4
26
. Interestingly, at the nonreducing end of the active-
10
site cleft of TfCel9A, there is a blockage formed by residues 245–255. This block of
11
residues leaves insufficient space for a hypothetical subsite −5 to bind in a linear cleft,
12
which leads to product yields no longer than cellotetraose
13
TfCel9A was deduced whereby the enzyme is bound to the surface of the crystalline
14
substrate via CBM2, whereas CBM3c together with GH9 adheres to the extracted single
15
chain
16
have been reported, most from cellulosome-producing Clostridium spp. (Fig. 1). For
17
example, Cel9G from C. cellulolyticum consists of GH9, CBM3c, and a dockerin domain
18
instead of a cellulose-targeting CBM3b. This and other dockeirn-bearing enzymes rely
19
on the CBM3a or CBM3b of the cellulosomal scaffoldin subunit for the cellulose-
20
targeting property. The crystal structure of C. cellulolyticum Cel9G is very similar to that
21
of TfCel9A, and further analysis revealed complementary surfaces between the flat
22
surface of crystalline cellulose and Cel9G
23
belong to noncellulosomal cellulases and cellulosomal components of this species,
24
. The productivity state of
27
. In addition to TfCel9A, several other GH9/CBM3c processive endoglucanases
28
. Cel9I and Cel9R from C. thermocellum
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. Both of them exhibit the GH9/CBM3c modular scheme, and both
1
respectively
2
release cellotetraose as their initial product.
3
Clostridium cellulosi is a thermophilic, Gram-positive obligate anaerobe, which can
4
ferment a broad range of carbon sources and generate ethanol, acetate, CO2, and
5
hydrogen
6
cell-free extracts of Geobacillus toebii DSM 14590 to the medium of the bacterium
7
utilizing lignocellulose as a sole carbon source at an optimal temperature of 60°C.
8
Zymography analysis revealed that two GHs, ORF3880 and ORF3883, play key roles in
9
the hydrolysis of lignocellulose. ORF3880 and ORF3883 are both multimodular
10
endocellulases that consist of one GH9 module and several CBMs (Fig. 1), and were
11
thus named CcCel9A and CcCel9B, respectively
12
understanding how CcCel9A with an open cleft maintains processivity by analyzing its
13
multimodular structure and active-site architecture.
14
Experimental Section
31
. C. cellulosi CS-4-4 was isolated from decayed corn stalk by addition of
32
. In this study, we focus on
15
Cloning of the gene encoding CcCel9A and its truncated mutants-Genomic DNA
16
of C. cellulosi CS-4-4 was extracted according to Andreou et al (2013) 33. The ORF3880
17
gene product (GenBank accession number LM995447) was designated CcCel9A. The
18
coding sequences for wild-type CcCel9A and its truncated mutants (Fig. 2, TM1–TM5)
19
were amplified from the genomic DNA of C. cellulosi CS-4-4 by PCR using Pyrobest
20
DNA polymerase (Takara, Dalian, Japan). Genes of mutants TM14, TM15 and TM16
21
were obtained by fusing two crude fragments amplified from the wild-type CcCel9A
22
gene. The PCR products were cloned into the pEASY-E2 vector according to the
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Biomacromolecules
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protocols described by the manufacturer (TransGen Biotech, Beijing, China), and the
2
correct colonies were selected based on DNA sequencing.
3
Assay of enzymatic activity-The specific enzyme activities for carboxymethyl
4
cellulose (CMC), regenerated amorphous cellulose (RAC), and microcrystalline cellu-
5
lose (Avicel) were assayed as previously described
6
mM CaCl2 to the reaction buffer. Avicel PH-101 and CMC were purchased from Sigma
7
(Beijing, China); RAC was prepared according to Zhang et.al (2006)
8
values of CcCel9A and its mutants toward CMC, RAC, and Avicel were determined by
9
fitting the initial velocities at different substrate concentrations using the Michaelis–
10
Menten equation. The assays were performed in triplicate with at least five substrate
11
concentrations, varying from approximately 1/10 to 20-fold of the Km values, under
12
optimal conditions.
34
with a modification of adding 1
36
. The Km and kcat
13
Measurement of processivity-Processivity was determined by using a protocol
14
described by Ozdemir, et al (2012) 37 with modifications. Single discs of Whatman No. 1
15
filter paper (GE Healthcare, China) with a radius of 5 mm and total weight of 3 mg were
16
incubated with 9 µM purified proteins at 60°C in PC buffer (50 mM phosphate, 12 mM
17
citrate, 1 mM sodium azide, pH 6.5) for 16 h except for TM4 and TM5 which were
18
incubated in 50 mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 5). Then the supernatant fluids were
19
transferred to another tube, and 150 µL were taken for measuring the amount of
20
reducing sugars. The filter paper discs were washed with PC buffer or acetate buffer
21
three times. After washing, 150 µL of the same buffer were added to the discs. Two
22
hundred µL of 3,5-Dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS) reagent were added to the supernatant
23
fluids and to the filter paper tubes. Reducing sugars were determined as described in
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the enzyme assay methods. The ratio of soluble sugars (found in the supernatant
2
fraction) to insoluble sugars (found on the filter paper) was calculated as processivity. All
3
of the reactions were performed in triplicate.
4
Binding of CcCel9A and its truncated mutants to cellulose-The potential of wild-
5
type and mutant CcCel9A to bind to cellulose was quantitatively measured at 60°C as
6
previously described 32.
7
Thermostability assay-The thermostability of CcCel9A and its mutants was
8
determined by incubating 1 µM of each enzyme at temperatures between 50°C and
9
75°C for 1 h. Residual activity was expressed as the ratio of specific activity on Avicel to
10
the activity of proteins without incubation measured at optimal temperature.
11
Computational simulation-In order to discern the three-dimensional structure of
12
CcCel9A, homology modeling was conducted using the X-ray crystal structure of Cel9G
13
from Clostridium cellulolyticum as the template. We searched the Protein Data Bank
14
(PDB) at National Center for Biotechnology and Information using BLAST with the
15
amino acid sequence of CcCel9A. The results showed that C. cellulolyticum Cel9G had
16
the highest sequence identity (63%) with the query sequence. Its X-ray crystal structure
17
(PDB ID: 1KFG) was selected as the template for homology modeling and the three-
18
dimensional structure of CcCel9A was constructed using Discovery Studio 2.5 based on
19
the MODELER program. The structure of the modeled protein was viewed using PyMol
20
1.5. The cellohexaose structure was extracted from the crystal structure of TfCel9A
21
(PDB ID: 4TF4) and docked into the cleft of CcCel9A according to the hotspots of the
22
substrate and enzyme using Libdock. Amino acid residues within 5 Å to cellohexaose
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were considered capable of interacting with the substrate. Then, the residues of
2
CcCel9A were aligned with TfCel9A
3
and CcCel9B as previously described 38. All highly conserved residues were selected as
4
targets in the site-directed mutagenesis test.
5
24
, CtCel9I
29
, CtCel9R
30
, CpCel9
35
, CtCel9N
29
,
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations-MD simulations were performed using 39
40
6
Gromacs 4.5
7
force field
8
adding 12.5 Å TIP3P water in a cubic box, and sodium ions were used to neutralize the
9
system. Before free energy calculations, 5,000 steps of energy minimization followed by
10
1 ns MD simulation at constant pressure (1 atm) and temperature (300 K) were
11
performed to equilibrate the system. The pressure was regulated using the extended
12
ensemble Parrinello–Rahman approach
13
modified Berendson thermostat
14
evaluate the contribution of the long-range electrostatic interactions. A non-bonded pair
15
list cutoff of 12.0 Å was used, and the non-bonded pair list was updated every five steps.
16
All bonds involving hydrogen in proteins were constrained using the LINC algorithm
17
whereas bonds and angles of water molecules were forced by the SETTLE algorithm 49,
18
allowing a time step of 0.002 ps.
41
, with the Amber ff99SB force field
for the cello-oligomer in TIP3P water
for the protein and GLYCAM06
42
. The protein was solvated by
43-44
, and the temperature was controlled by a
45
. The Particle Mesh Ewald Method
46-47
was used to
48
,
19
Site-directed mutagenesis-Several aromatic amino acid residues located in each
20
subsite were selected (Table S2) for the deletion of their functional side chain, because
21
they had been previously identified as crucial for substrate interactions
22
directed mutagenesis, 100 ng of plasmid encoding CcCel9A was used as a template for
23
PCR amplification, and the steps were performed using KAPA HiFi HotStart polymerase
50-52
. For site-
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(Kapa Biosystems, MA) as follows: initial denaturation at 94°C for 3 min, followed by 18
2
cycles of 98°C for 30 s, 63°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 2.5 min (Primers are listed in Table
3
S3). The PCR product was digested using DpnI (New England Biolabs, MA) at 37°C for
4
4 h to degrade the template plasmid DNA. Further, the digestion product was
5
transformed into E. coli DH5α competent cells, and the competent cells were plated on
6
Luria-Bertani agar containing 100 µg/mL of ampicillin, using the spread-plate technique,
7
and the plates were incubated overnight at 37°C. Single colonies were propagated to
8
extract plasmids. The inserts were then sequenced (Genwiz Inc., Beijing, China) to
9
confirm the presence of the correct mutation. Gene expression and protein purification
10
were performed as previously described 32.
11
Analysis of hydrolysis products- The hydrolysis reaction mixture (150 µL)
12
consisted of 0.2 µM enzymes and 100 µL of 1% RAC in PC buffer. Aliquots of the
13
reaction mixture were removed at intervals and boiled for 10 min to inactivate the
14
enzyme. The enzymatic hydrolysis products of soluble cello-oligosaccharides were
15
analyzed by fluorescence-assisted carbohydrate electrophoresis (FACE). The gray
16
values of each band were acquired from the peaks generated using ImageJ k 1.45 and
17
extracted quantitatively53.
18
Calculation of affinity constants-The binding abilities of the wild-type and mutant 54
19
enzymes were evaluated using fluorescence spectra as previously described
20
(0.1 mg/mL) was mixed with 0–1.0% (w/v) CMC (0.1% interval) in 50 mM PBS buffer
21
(pH 6.5) for 30 min, which was then used to test the quenching of fluorescence using a
22
fluorescence spectrophotometer (Hitachi F-4600, Japan). All samples were excited at
. Protein
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295 nm and scanned from 300–500 nm to integrate the spectra. CMC without protein
2
was used as control. Data were fit with non-linear regression: y = 1 / (a + bx)
3 (Eq. 1)
4 5
where y and x represent fluorescence intensity and CMC concentration (mM),
6
respectively. Ka (affinity constant) was calculated by b/a.
7
Results
8
Enzymatic characterization of truncated mutants of CcCel9A-Nine different
9
constructs containing the Cel9A catalytic module were cloned and expressed in
10
Escherichia coli (Fig. 2), using the primers listed in Table S1. The catalytic efficiencies of
11
mutants TM1, TM2, and TM3 that do not contain the cellulose-targeting CBM3b showed
12
higher activities towards CMC than those of CcCel9A, whereas those of mutants TM14,
13
TM15, and TM16, which possess the CBM3b, were higher on RAC and Avicel. The
14
processivities of mutants TM14, TM15 and CcCel9A with 1–3 CBMX2s were similar,
15
while the processivity of TM16 that lacks the CBMX2 was significantly lower. The Km
16
values on insoluble substrates (RAC and Avicel) of CBM3b-lacking mutants were
17
increased as the CBMX2 was deleted one by one from TM1–TM3 (Table S4).
18
Binding affinity of CcCel9A and its CBMX2-lacking mutants-To test whether the
19
CBMX2 is necessary for binding of the wild-type CcCel9A to cellulose, the binding
20
isotherms of the wild-type and CcCel9A mutants TM14, TM15, and TM16 were
21
compared. The dissociation constant (Kd) of wild-type CcCel9A was the lowest and the
22
maximum binding (qmax) was the highest, compared to the those of the mutants (Fig.
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3A). The partition coefficient (α), which reflects the binding ability of an enzyme, showed
2
that CcCel9A exhibited the highest binding to Avicel, whereas the binding of mutants
3
TM14 and TM15 was similar but 25% higher than that of TM16, suggesting that the
4
three CBMX2s contributed approximately 50% to the binding of insoluble substrates
5
(Fig. 3A).
6
Thermostability of CcCel9A and its CBMX2 mutants-To test whether the CBMX2 is
7
crucial for the thermostability of wild-type CcCel9A, the relative activities of each protein,
8
after incubating at different temperatures for 1 h, were determined (Fig. 3B). At
9
temperatures below 60°C, the relative activity of wild-type CcCel9A was 30%–100%
10
higher than those of the mutant TM14, TM15, and TM16 enzymes. In contrast, above
11
60°C, wild-type CcCel9A exhibited lower activity, and the thermostabilities of mutant
12
enzymes were indistinguishable from one another. These results suggest that the
13
CBMX2 does not play a key role in maintaining the thermostability of CcCel9A.
14
Key amino acid residues in the active-site architecture-A structural model of 24
and C.
15
CcCel9A TM4 was obtained by homologous modeling with TfCel9A
16
cellulolyticum Cel9G
17
catalytic cleft by molecular docking (Fig. 4A). Six glucosyl units, located in the active-
18
site architecture, were categorized as substrate-binding subsites +1/+2 and product-
19
releasing sites −1 to −4, according to their electron density. Aromatic amino acid
20
residues interacted with each catalytic subsite, and several highly conserved residues
21
were selected and ex-changed with alanine in order to remove the functional group (Fig.
22
5 & 4B). Overall, the product-releasing subsite-directed mutants exhibited similar or
23
improved activity on soluble substrates, compared to the wild type. All of the mutants
28
, with a 17-glucosyl unit single cellulose chain embedded in its
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lost some activity on insoluble substrates, yet the substrate-binding subsite-directed
2
mutants exhibited a greater loss of activity (Table S5). However, an exception to these
3
observations was the specific activity of the −1 subsite-directed mutant on Avicel, which
4
was low, indicating that the −1 subsite was essential for degrading the crystalline
5
substrate. Importantly, though the activity and processivity of mutant Y253A remained at
6
the same level as those of the wild-type enzyme, their values decreased significantly in
7
the double mutant Y253A/D259A, indicating a sophisticated architecture of subsite −4
8
that is crucial for processivity. Analysis of the kinetic parameters revealed that the kcat
9
values of most mutants at subsites −1 to −4 were either improved or equal to that of wild
10
type, owing to their higher product-releasing velocity.
11
The processivity of double mutants at subsites −1 and +1/+2, which nearly lost activity
12
on Avicel, were particularly low, demonstrating that processivity was directly linked to
13
the ability of a cellulase to act on the crystalline substrate 6. The affinity constant for
14
Y253A was the lowest, followed by Y415A, indicating stronger interaction between the
15
substrate and subsites −4 and +1/+2 (Fig. 4D). The interaction forces between the
16
substrate and subsites (Fig.4C) suggest that subsites +1/+2 and −4 bind more tightly
17
than the others, confirming their key role in processivity.
18
Product-releasing
patterns
of
various
mutants
demons-
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trate that those mutated at subsites −1 to −4 were unable to secure relevant lengths of
2
cello-oligosaccharides (Fig. 6). The concentrations of released glucose (G1) and
3
cellotriose (G3) were higher than that of cellobiose (G2) for the subsite −2 mutant,
4
whereas for the subsite −3 mutant, the concentration of cellobiose (G2) was higher than
5
those of glucose (G1) and cellotriose (G3), which showed a similar pattern to that of the
6
subsite −1 mutant (Table S6). In Fig. 6E, no cellotetraose (G4) was detected after
7
hydrolysis by the subsite −4 mutant. As for the substrate-binding site mutants, G4
8
accumulated increasingly with extended reaction times, because it could not be further
9
hydrolyzed by these mutants.
10
Discussion
11
C. cellulosi is a thermophilic cellulolytic microbe that produces a series of extracellular GHs
12
and is capable of fermenting some difficult substrates that other thermophilic Clostridium spp.
13
are unable to utilize, including glycogen, inulin, mannitol, and sucrose, to produce
14
acetylmethylcarbinol
15
cellulosi CS-4-4, comprising a family 9 GH module and five CBMs 32. Recombinant CcCel9A is
16
active on CMC, RAC, Avicel, and xylan at 60°C.
31
. CcCel9A is one of the most abundant GH enzymes secreted by C.
17
Structural studies of processive glycoside hydrolases revealed that the polysaccharide-binding
18
sites form a groove or ring, suggesting that partial or complete substrate enclosure is a
19
prerequisite for processivity 5. Many cellulases contain large grooves, and, in general,
20
exoglucanases have evolved loops that fold over their active sites, resulting in an enclosed
21
substrate-binding tunnel
22
elevated temperatures. Instead, family 9 processive endoglucanases like TfCel9A do not possess
55-57
. However, these loops create structural instability for enzymes at
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Biomacromolecules
24
1
mobile loops, but their active sites reside in a long, open cleft
. It is assumed that a cellulose
2
chain binds to the long cleft, where the initial cleavage occurs. CcCel9A, a homologue of
3
TfCel9A, possesses higher processivity at 60°C. The absence of the loops serves to improve
4
thermostability, but in exchange, the basic element for forming a closed tunnel is lost. In order to
5
remedy the loss of affinity to the substrate in the cleft, CcCel9A has developed a unique
6
supramodular structure to achieve processivity on a crystalline substrate.
7
CcCel9A contains an unusually high number of five CBMs, each serving a different function.
8
Molecular docking results show that, in addition to the catalytic subsites +2 to −4, CBM3c
9
extends the catalytic cleft to subsite +13, in order to stabilize the single cellulose chain in the
10
open cleft (Fig. 4A). Intriguingly, several conserved residues in the CBM3c of TfCel9A were
11
also found to be well aligned to interact with the cellulose chain, leading into the catalytic cleft,
12
which would increase the potential binding sites along CBM3c to render the binding in the cleft
13
more favorable 58. Biochemical data revealed that the processivity and activity on Avicel of the
14
CBM3c-deletion mutant (TM5) were undetectable, indicating that CBM3c is crucial for
15
hydrolyzing crystalline substrates. It has been proposed that CBM3c could feed a single cellulose
16
chain into the active-site architecture of TfCel9A 59. It was also confirmed that there was a strong,
17
selective non-covalent binding interaction between GH9 and CBM3c via physical association
18
and co-crystallization of the two modules60-61.
19
The processivity of CcCel9A was improved by 40% after adding a CBMX2 to the
20
GH9/CBM3c unit and by 2.36 times for further addition of CBM3b. Adding a second CBMX2 to
21
these proteins resulted in an increase of 84% and 4.73 times in the absence and the presence of
22
the substrate-targeting CBM3b module, respectively (Fig. 2). Furthermore, the activity on
23
crystalline substrates and processivity of enzymes with the CBM3b, including the wild type and
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Page 16 of 38
1
mutants TM14, TM15, and TM16, were significantly higher than related enzymes without the
2
CBM3b. The characteristics of TM1 and the wild type revealed that the CBM3b contributed
3
25%–45% toward the maintenance of processivity, demonstrating that the CBM3b is necessary
4
for processivity and hydrolysis of insoluble substrates (Fig. 2). Subfamilies of family 3 CBMs
5
had been verified to play an eminent cellulose-binding role in bacterial cellulases from early on,
6
as CBM3a and 3b were found associated with cellulosomes and/or free cellulases, respectively62-
7
66
8
lacks all three CBMX2, decreased by 70%. However, the processivity of the wild type or
9
mutants lacking one or two CBMX2s were similar, thus indicating little or no cumulative effect
10
of CBMX2 on processivity. Nevertheless, with three CBMX2s a cumulative effect is observed as
11
the binding to Avicel was improved by 64% from TM14 to the wild-type enzyme (Fig. 3A). The
12
gradual increase in Km values of CBM3b-lacking mutants (TM1–TM3) on RAC and Avicel
13
indicates the contribution of CBMX2 to substrate affinity (Table S4).
. The CBMX2 was also necessary for processivity, because the processivity of TM16, which
14
Site-directed mutants designed for each catalytic subsite were constructed and characterized.
15
The data revealed that the substrate-binding subsites play a vital role in processivity. Regardless
16
of specific activity, the processivity or catalytic efficiency of subsite +1/+2 mutants were all
17
decreased significantly, compared to those of the wild type and other subsite-directed mutants
18
(Fig. 5A and Table S5). The activities of the mutants on Avicel as substrate, including
19
Y203A/Y424A, Y253A/D259A, Y415A, H372A/Y415A, H123A, and R374A, decreased more
20
than 90%, while in each case their processivity was almost completely lost, thus revealing the
21
relationship between processivity and ability to degrade crystalline cellulose. Double mutants
22
Y203A/Y424A, Y253A/D258A, and R374A/Y415A of subsites −1, −4, and +1/+2, respectively,
23
had a clear additive effect on the characteristics of CcCel9A, because they comprise highly
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Biomacromolecules
1
conserved amino acids residues: Y203, D258, and R374. Most of the amino acid residues that
2
interacted with subsites −2 and −3 were not conserved, except for the aromatic residues such as
3
W257, Y202, and Y315.
4
Interestingly, the specific activity and processivity of M384A was similar or slightly higher
5
than that of the wild type, because of its weak binding to the glucan chain (Table S5). Although
6
the affinity between Y253 and the glucan chain was the strongest among the aromatic amino acid
7
residues distributed in the glucosyl subsites (Fig. 4D), especially those forming hydrogen bonds
8
with subsite −3 and stacking interactions with subsite −4 (Fig. 4B), the characteristics of Y253A
9
were barely altered (Fig.4A & Table S5). It is possible that some water molecules exist within
10
the site of Y253, as the cleft opening was relatively near to the exit, which would help retract the
11
cellulose chain, and therefore, maintain high processivity. The Ka of Y415A also decreased,
12
which highlighted the importance of substrate-binding subsites +1/+2. Taken together with the
13
strong interactive forces observed between the substrate and subsites +1/+2 (Fig. 4C), we can
14
conclude that both subsites +1 and +2 form strong hydrophobic interactions with the cellulose
15
chain and play a role similar to that of W38 and W40, which are located at the entrance of the
16
active-site tunnel of TrCel7A7, 10-11, 67.
17
The hydrolysis product patterns revealed that CcCel9A initially produced cellotetraose (G4)
18
(Fig. 6A). Compared to TrCel7A, four glucosyl units bound more tightly than cellobiose to the
19
enzyme, which prevented the cellulose chain from drawing back. Following this, G4 was
20
subsequently hydrolyzed to glucose (G1), cellobiose (G2), and cellotriose (G3) as secondary
21
reaction products. Additionally, the ability to produce smaller oligosaccharides consistent with
22
subsite −4 to −1 mutants was reduced, whereas G4 was accumulated by subsite +1/+2 mutants
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Page 18 of 38
1
(Fig. 6F). Since G4 is a competitive inhibitor of CcCel9A 27, the increasing amounts of G4 could
2
not be further hydrolyzed, and therefore, repressed catalysis. In summary, subsites +1/+2 are
3
instrumental in disrupting the hydrogen bonds between the substrate and CBM, whereas subsites
4
−4 to −1 are responsible for drawing the single chain and moving it through the catalytic cleft.
5
These two processes are cooperative, allowing the enzyme to slide along the cellulose chain
6
processively.
7
Hydrolyzing recalcitrant crystalline cellulose has posed a general bottleneck for cellulase
8
application. Other than the cellobiohydrolases that possess a structural advantage for processivity,
9
the thermophilic processive endoglucanase, CcCel9A, has evolved a novel mode to accomplish
10
this process. In this context, multiple CBMs (3 × CBMX2 + CBM3b) improve the affinity to the
11
flat surface of crystalline cellulosic substrates. In addition, CBM3c extends the binding cleft of
12
GH9 module during decrystallization, and the strong interactive forces between subsites +1/+2
13
and the glucosyl rings of the substrate enable disruption of hydrogen bonds and physical
14
extension of the single cellulose chain. Then the chain is drawn to subsite −4 via interaction
15
between the glucosyl rings and the product-releasing subsites, and finally cellotetraoses are
16
released from the catalytic cleft as an initial product in order to achieve high processivity. In
17
contrast to the tunnel-threading mode of cellobiohydrolases, we propose a “wirewalking mode”
18
as a descriptive term for the GH9 processive endoglucanases that underscores their open cleft-
19
like structure at the active center (presented schematically in Fig. 7).
20
Conclusion
21
CcCel9A recruits multiple modules, whereby the GH9 and CBM3c together form an open
22
cleft and four product-releasing glucosyl sites, consisting of up to 17 glucosyl binding subsites,
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Biomacromolecules
1
to achieve processivity. Additional modules coordinate separate functions, whereby CBM3b
2
serves as a targeting agent that also promotes decrystallization of the cellulosic substrate, while
3
the CBMX2s assist in the stripping out of the single cellulose chain from the crystalline region.
4
In the open cleft, the substrate chain is first bound tightly by 13 subsites (i.e., subsites +1 through
5
+13) and is then drawn forwards to the location of subsite −4 by the product-releasing subsites.
6
Consequently, the enzyme “walks” 4 glucosyl units along the cellulose chain, which constitutes a
7
proposed “wirewalking mode” of action. The two sides of the cleavage site work synergistically,
8
producing cellotetraose in assembly-line fashion. Because of the open cleft formed in CcCel9A,
9
cellotetraose is further hydrolyzed to cellotriose, cellobiose, and glucose, by working in a manner
10
similar to that of a typical endoglucanase. Multiple CBMs, the long binding cleft, and larger
11
product size are all unique and advantageous features of endoglucanases to achieve processivity.
12
These findings provide a potential platform for construction of potent industrial cellulases.
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Page 20 of 38
1
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
2
Supporting Information. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at
3
http://pubs.acs.org.
4
Figure S1. Amino acids sequence alignment of GH9 cellulases from different strains shown in
5
Figure 1. Table S1. PCR primers used for amplification of truncated mutants of CcCel9A.
6
Underlined portions are overlapping regions for isothermal assembly. Table S2. The amino acids
7
that interacted with the glucosyl subsites in the active-site architecture. Table S3. PCR primers
8
used for construction of site-directed mutants. Table S4. Kinetic parameters of wild-type
9
CcCel9A and its truncated mutants on CMC, RAC and Avicel. Table S5. Characteristics of wild-
10
type CcCel9A and its active-site mutants. Table S6. Gray values of the cellooligosaccharide
11
bands in Figure 6.
12
AUTHOR INFORMATION
13
Corresponding Author
14
*
[email protected] 15
*
[email protected] 16
ORCID
17
Kun-Di Zhang: 0000-0003-0320-5979
18
Lu-Shan Wang:0000-0002-9625-0359
19
Fu-Li Li: 0000-0003-0381-2234
20
Notes
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Biomacromolecules
1
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
2
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
3
We thank Dr. Ely Morag from the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, for helpful discussions
4
and suggestions. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation of China
5
(31600050, 31600051, 31770077 and 31770054), the Shandong Province Natural Science Funds
6
for Distinguished Young Scholar (JQ201507), and the Key Scientific and Technological Project
7
of Shandong province (2015ZDXX0403A01).
8
ABBREVIATIONS
9
GH, glycoside hydrolase; CBM, carbohydrate-binding module; TrCel7A, Cel7A from
10
Trichoderma reesei; CcCel9A, Cel9A from Clostridium cellulosi; TfCel9A, Cel9A from
11
Thermobifida fusca; CtCel9I&CtCel9R, Cel9I&Cel9R from Clostridium thermocellum; CpCel9,
12
Cel9 from Clostridium phytofermentans; CMC, carboxymethyl cellulose; RAC, regenerated
13
amorphous cellulose; DNS, 3,5-Dinitrosalicylic acid; TM, truncated mutant; MD, molecular
14
dynamics;
FACE,
fluorescence-assisted
carbohydrate
electrophoresis.
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1 2
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Figure 1. The schematic structures of GH9+CBM3c-bearing cellulases from different strains. Cc, Clostridium cellulosi, this study; Tf, Thermobifida fusca24; Ct, Clostridium thermocellum29-30; Cp, Clostridium phytofermentans35. SP, signal peptide; GH, glycoside hydrolase; CBM, carbohydrate-binding module; Doc, dockerin. 172x78mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 2. Schematic modular architectures and characteristics of the wild-type (WT) CcCel9A and its truncated mutants (TMs). Processivities and specific activities towards Avicel and CMC were all shown as % of those of the wild-type enzyme. 173x79mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 3. Characteristics of wild-type and mutants of CcCel9A. Quantitative studies of the binding of CcCel9A and truncated mutants TM14, TM15 and TM16 to Avicel at 60°C. Avicel was mixed with various concentrations of the designated proteins, and the binding activities were estimated as described in Experimental procedures. The graphs showed the binding isotherms between bound proteins (nmol/g of Avicel) and free proteins (A). Thermostability of wild-type (WT) and mutant (TM14, TM15 and TM16) proteins. Proteins were incubated for 1 h at the indicated temperatures, and the residual enzyme activity was assayed. Results represent the means and standard deviations from three independent experiments (B). 76x33mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 4. Modelled crystal structure of CcCel9A mutant TM4 with the docking of a cellulose chain in the catalytic cleft. Molecular surface of TM4 (A). The megascopic active-site architecture of the GH9 module. The cellulose chain is colored green, and amino acid residues that interact with the glucosyl ring are colored red. The 17 glucosyl binding sites in the cleft, are numbered from subsite −4 to +13, from the non-reducing to the reducing end (A), and subsites −4 to +2 constitute the active-site architecture (B). Interaction forces between substrate and subsites in the active-site architecture by molecular dynamics (C). Affinity constants (Ka) of aromatic amino acid-directed mutants compared to the wild type determined for CMC (D). 173x110mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 5. Processivities (% of wild type) of site-directed mutants (A), related to 6 subsites, and analysis of the conserved sites based on the amino acid sequences of enzymes shown in Fig. 1 using WebLogo (B). CS, cleavage sites. 115x77mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 6. Hydrolysis patterns of wild-type CcCel9A (A), site-directed mutants of subsites −1 (B), −2 (C), −3 (D), −4 (E) and +1/+2 (F) on RAC. Enzymes (0.3 µM) were incubated with 5 mg/ml RAC at 60°C, and samples were collected at the indicated time intervals. The subsite −1, −2, −3, −4 and +1/+2 mutants represent Y203A/Y424A, Y202A/W257A, Q308A/Y315A, Y253A/D258A and H372A/Y415A, respectively. 173x120mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Figure 7. Working model of the “wirewalking” mode of CcCel9A action. The CBM3b module recognizes the gap on the surface of crystalline cellulose (A); CBM3b binds to the non-reducing end of the gap (B); CBM3b decrystallizes the substrate with the aid of the CBMX2s (C); A single cellulose chain is extracted and fed into the catalytic cleft by CBM3c (D); Subsites +1/+2 enable extension of the cellulose chain into the active-site cleft (E); The non-reducing end of the chain is drawn to the position of subsite −4 (F); Cleavage occurs between subsites +1 and −1 (G); Cellotetraose is produced and released through the exit of cleft (H). 173x116mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Table of contents use only 70x35mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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