Subscriber access provided by Eastern Michigan University | Bruce T. Halle Library
Biotechnology and Biological Transformations
Effect of N-linked glycosylation of recombinant windmill palm tree peroxidase on its activity and stability Bo Fu, Margaret R. Baker, and Qing X. Li J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 12 Apr 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 12, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Manuscript revised according to editor’s and reviewers’ comments for possible publication in Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Effect of N-linked glycosylation of recombinant windmill palm tree peroxidase on its activity and stability
Bo Fu, Margaret R. Baker, Qing X. Li*
Department of Molecular Biosciences and Bioengineering, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, United States
Correspondence: *Qing X. Li Tel: (808) 956-2011 Fax: (808) 956-3542 Email:
[email protected] 1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
ABSTRACT
2
Plant secretory peroxidases are valuable commercial enzymes. The windmill palm tree
3
Trachycarpus fortunei produces one of the most stable and fastest peroxidases (WPTP)
4
characterized to date, however, an economical source is needed. Pichia pastoris has been used as
5
an expression system for WPTP and other peroxidases. However, yeast and plants synthesize
6
different types of N-linked glycan structures and may differ the level of glycosylation at each site.
7
Such non-native glycosylation can have unwanted consequences. Glycosylation site N256 was
8
under-glycosylated in the wild-type (1.5%) compared to the native enzyme (55%); therefore, we
9
mutated WPTP to promote glycosylation at this site (WPTP E254G). Glycosylation increased 4-
10
fold, as measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The mutation did not
11
change the substrate specificity and optimal pH- and thermo-stability ranges, but increased the
12
catalytic activity 2-3 fold. In comparison with wild-type WPTP, WPTP E254G showed a shift of
13
the most stable pH from 7 to 9, making it suitable for applications under alkaline conditions.
14 15
KEYWORDS: Peroxidase; Windmill palm tree; Glycosylation; Glyco-engineering; Substrate
16
specificity; Stability
17
2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 31
Page 3 of 31
18 19
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Introduction Plant secretory peroxidases (EC 1.11.1.7) are enzymes that catalyze the oxidation of a broad
20
range of aromatic compounds by reducing hydrogen peroxide to water. The aromatic radical
21
products of the reaction go on to polymerize, and result in a quantitative color change. Thus,
22
peroxidases are frequently used in enzyme immunoassays, chemiluminescence assays,
23
construction of biosensors, organic and polymer synthesis, and wastewater treatment in which
24
polymerization of toxic phenolic compounds renders them insoluble and less toxic.1-6
25
Palm is among the top 10 produce crops in the world. Palm plays important roles in daily
26
life because it produces palm oil that has nutritional benefits and versatility.7 Palm oil is readily
27
available and is the second largest vegetable oil in the world.8, 9 Nowadays, approximately 50%
28
of traded oils is palm oil.8 Palm tree peroxidases, such as windmill palm tree peroxidase (WPTP),
29
exhibit extremely high stability under a broader range of pH and at higher temperatures than the
30
widely used horseradish peroxidase (HRP).10-12 Those characteristics make WPTP more robust
31
and therefore more suited for applications requiring acidic or alkaline conditions and high
32
temperature.
33
Plant secretory peroxidases, including WPTP, are highly N-glycosylated. N-Linked glycans
34
play an important role on enzyme substrate affinity, catalytic turnover, and pH and temperature
35
stability.13, 14 One potential mechanism for these phenomena is that N-glycosylation of a folded
36
protein can reduce the backbone flexibility, and thus have a significant stabilizing effect on large
37
regions of the backbone structure.15 Mature native peroxidase from the windmill palm tree
38
Trachycarpus fortunei (WPTP) contains 306 amino acid residues. There are 13 N-linked
39
glycosylation sites (N-X-S/T, X is not P) on WPTP and its carbohydrate content ranges from 21%
40
to 29%.16 The function of these glycans has not been studied to date.
3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
41
Glyco-engineering to change properties of peroxidase and other enzymes has been
42
performed in some studies. Glycosylation at individual sites showed different effects on the
43
enzyme activity. In the majority of cases, elimination of glycosylation sites resulted in decrease
44
in the enzyme activity and thermal stability.17-19 In the converse case, unglycosylated RNase A
45
had greater than three times activity than its glycosylated variant RNase B.20 Less glycosylated
46
variants of HRP from P. pastoris were engineered. Great differences were found in catalytic
47
activity and stability among wild-type HRP and its variants.18 Four mutants carrying Asn to Ala
48
substitutions in potential glycosylation sites of cellobiohydrolase I was produced by site-directed
49
mutagenesis. Three of the mutants showed different activity from the wild type against natural
50
and synthetic substrates.19 On the other hand, promoting glycosylation at naïve or
51
underglycosylated sites often enhances the enzyme characteristics.21
52
Pichia pastoris is an economical organism to produce industrial or commercial enzymes,
53
however, differences from native glycosylation may have unintended consequences on the
54
enzyme characteristics. Non-native glycosylation includes both differences in the glycan
55
structure and the level of glycosylation at that site. We recently expressed WPTP in P. pastoris.22
56
While exploring structural differences between native and recombinant WPTP, we noted that the
57
degree of glycosylation at N256 was significantly lower in recombinant WPTP (1.5%) than
58
native WPTP (55%).23 We hypothesized that changing the amino acid sequence to promote
59
glycosylation of this site would restore some of the properties of the native enzyme. The amino
60
acids flanking the glycosylation site in part determine whether or not that site will be
61
glycosylated, perhaps by influencing the interactions between the nascent polypeptide and the
62
oligosaccharyltransferase complex.24 It was observed that glycosylation sites with an acidic
63
residue 1 or 2 amino acids upstream of the glycosylation site are unglycosylated more frequently
4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 31
Page 5 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
64
than expected, whereas a non-polar amino acid upstream of the glycosylation site tends to
65
promote glycosylation.24
66
In the present study, a WPTP variant (WPTP E254G) was constructed via site-directed
67
mutagenesis. Recombinant wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were expressed in P. pastoris
68
and their glycosylation level was investigated. We determined and compared the catalytic
69
activity, pH stability and thermal stability of the two enzymes. We found that WPTP E254G was
70
more stable than the wild-type and had faster rates of catalysis. The results indicated that WPTP
71
E254G has potential for applications requiring alkaline conditions.
72 73
Materials and Methods
74
Strains, plasmids and media
75
E. coli DH5α (Invitrogen, Waltham, MA) was used as the host strain for cloning vectors.
76
pPICZαA vector (Invitrogen) was used as the vector for expression of WPTP in P. pastoris
77
GS115 (his4) (Invitrogen). Yeast extract peptone dextrose medium containing sorbitol (YPDS),
78
YPDS (+Zeocin), buffered glycerol-complex medium (BMGY) and buffered methanol-complex
79
medium (BMMY) were prepared according to the recipes in EasySelectTM Pichia Expression Kit
80
instruction (Invitrogen). Phusion High-Fidelity DNA polymerase, 5 × Phusion High-Fidelity
81
buffer and Endoglycosidase H (Endo H) were purchased from New England Biolabs (Ipswich,
82
MA, USA). Restriction enzymes SacI and DpnI were purchased from Fisher Bioreagents (Fair
83
Lawn, NJ).
84 85 86
Construction of WPTP E254G In order to increase the glycosylation level at glycosylation site N256, Glu at site 254 was
5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
87
mutated to Gly to form WPTP E254G. The gene encoding WPTP E254G was produced by site-
88
directed mutagenesis. Primers containing mutational bases were: 254-F 5ʹ-CT TTG GTT ACA
89
GGA GCA AAC TTA TCA GCA GCC G-3ʹ, 254-R 5ʹ-C GGC TGC TGA TAA GTT TGC TCC
90
TGT AAC CAA AG-3ʹ. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification was performed in a 50
91
µL reaction volume with 5 × Phusion High-Fidelity buffer, 6% DMSO, 10 µM dNTPs mixture,
92
10 µM of each primer, 1 U Phusion High-Fidelity DNA polymerase and 0.01 ng plasmid wptp-
93
pPICZαA used as template. The amplification was performed at 98 °C for 2 min, then 30 cycles
94
at 98 °C for 10 s, 55 °C for 30 s, 72 °C for 4 min, and an extension period of 10 min at 72 °C.
95
DpnI was used for digestion of residual template. Ligation was performed with the CloneEZ
96
PCR Cloning Kit (GenScript, Piscataway, NJ, USA) to produce plasmid wptpE254G-pPICZαA.
97 98 99
Transformation Plasmid wptpE254G-pPICZαA was transformed into E. coli DH5α. Plasmids were extracted
100
from transformants using QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) and linearized
101
using SacI. Linearized plasmid was electro-transformed into P. pastoris GS115.
102
Electrotransformation was performed at 1500 V, 200 Ω, and 25 µF in a 0.2 cm cuvette. Gene
103
pulser II (BioRad, Hercules, CA) was used for electrotransformation. The transformants were
104
selected on an YPDS plate with 100 µg/mL zeocin.
105 106 107
Expression and purification The EasySelectTM Pichia expression kit was used for expression of wild-type WPTP and
108
WPTP E254G according to the procedure previously described with some modifications.22 All
109
transformants were expressed first in a small-scale system (10 mL). Each one of wild-type
6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 31
Page 7 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
110
WPTP and WPTP E254G transformants were screened based on their highest activities toward 3,
111
3ʹ, 5, 5ʹ-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB). The recombinant wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were
112
individually inoculated in a 250 mL flask containing 100 mL BMGY culture medium and
113
cultured at 28 °C until the optical density reached 4 at 600 nm. The cells were harvested by
114
centrifuging at 6000g for 5 min, then transferred into 2-L flask containing 400 mL of BMMY
115
expression medium. Methanol was added into the medium at a final concentration of 0.5% every
116
24 h to induce wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G expression. The fermentation broths were
117
collected by centrifuging at 6000g for 15 min, and purified with Ni-NTA agarose (Qiagen), then
118
ultrafiltered with 15 mL (30 K) and 0.5 mL (3 K) centrifugal filter devices (Amicon Ultra, EMD
119
Millipore) for desalting and concentration.
120
Purified wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were deglycosylated by Endo H at 37 °C for 16
121
h. The deglycosylated products were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
122
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) which was performed on 12% polyacrylamide gel. Protein staining
123
was performed with Coomassie brilliant blue R-250.
124 125
Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis of wild-type
126
WPTP and WPTP E254G
127
In order to validate amino acid sequences and determine glycosylation level at glycosylation
128
site 256 of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G, they were in-gel digested and analyzed by LC-
129
MS/MS. The SDS-PAGE bands containing wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were cut for in-
130
gel digestion. The two proteins were reduced using 10 mM dithiothreitol at 37 °C for 40 min,
131
then alkylated using 55 mM iodoacetamide at room temperature for 45 min in dark. The reduced
132
and alkylated proteins were digested with Asp-N (Promega, Madison, WI) at 37 °C for 16 h. The
7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
133
digests were extracted from the gel by adding ammonium bicarbonate, formic acid and
134
acetonitrile followed by bath sonication. The extracted peptides were concentrated with an
135
Eppendorf Vacufuge plus (Eppendorf, Hauppauge, NY).
136
Digests of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were dissolved in 0.1% formic acid/5%
137
acetonitrile/94.9% water. All chromatographic separations were performed on a nanoAdvanced
138
LC (Bruker Daltonics, Billerica, MA). For each analysis, 5 µL of sample was injected and loaded
139
onto a nano-trap column (3 µm 200 Å ProntoSIL C18AQ, NanoLCMS Solutions) at a flow rate
140
of 5 µL/min with 100% Solvent A (0.1% formic acid, 5% acetonitrile, 94.9% water (v/v/v)).
141
After a washing period of a total volume of 20 µL, the trap column was placed in-line with an
142
analytical column (ProntoSIL C18AQ, 25 cm × 100 µm, 3 µm, 120 Å, NanoLCMS Solutions).
143
The peptides were separated using a linear gradient of 5−45% Solvent B (0.1% formic acid, 5%
144
water, 94.9% acetonitrile (v/v/v)) at a flow rate of 500 nL/min over 120 min followed by an
145
increase to 95% B and held at 95% B for 15 min before returning to initial conditions of 5% B
146
for 21 min.
147
The samples were analyzed on an amaZon speed ETD ion trap mass spectrometer (Bruker
148
Daltonics). Data were collected using a data-dependent method with a scanning window of
149
400−1400 m/z. The averages and rolling averages were set as 5 and 2, respectively. Full-scan
150
spectra were acquired in enhanced resolution mode (8,100 m/z s-1), and the top 10 most abundant
151
ions were selected for fragmentation in ultrascan mode (32,500 m/z s-1). For MS, maximum
152
accumulation time was set to 50 ms and the accumulation target was 400,000, and for the
153
MS/MS scans, maximum accumulation time was set to 100 ms and the accumulation target was
154
500,000. The absolute and relative thresholds of precursor were set at 30,000 and 0.2%,
155
respectively, and an isolation width of 2.2 m/z was used. For tandem mass spectra the scan began
8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 31
Page 9 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
156
at 100 m/z and ended at 2x the precursor mass. Exclusion was active after 2 spectra and the
157
excluded spectra were released after 0.8 min. However, when the intensity of a current precursor
158
was 5 times greater than that of the previous precursor, the current precursor would be
159
fragmented. Each sample was injected and analyzed three times.
160 161 162
LC-MS/MS data analysis DataAnalysis 4.1 (Bruker) was used for peak list generation. The intensity threshold was
163
100,000 au. The Apex algorithm (Bruker) was used to pick peaks with a peak width of 0.1 m/z
164
for MS and MS/MS spectra, a signal to noise ratio of 0.1, relative intensity threshold of 0.1% of
165
the base peak and an absolute intensity threshold of 50.
166
ProteinScape 3.1 (Bruker) was used for data search through Mascot 2.5.1 (Matrix Science,
167
London, UK). Data were searched against a custom database containing WPTP wild-type and
168
mutant sequences as well as a list proteins including keratins, proteases, and other common
169
contaminants. Up to 2 missed cleavages were allowed for Asp-N peptides, global modification
170
included carbamidomethyl Cys, and variable modifications included HexNAc on Asn and
171
oxidation of Met. The precursor and fragmentation mass tolerances were both set to 0.6 Da for
172
the monoisotopic mass.
173
The EICs for detected and sequenced Asp-N peptides were obtained with an m/z tolerance
174
of 0.5 Da. The mass spectrum was summed for major peaks in the EIC to identify the
175
compound’s expected isotope pattern (i.e., correct monoisotopic m/z value and charge state). The
176
peak area of the monoisotopic peak was used to calculate the relative abundance of glycosylation
177
in the glycosylated and unglycosylated moieties. The reported abundance is the average and
178
standard deviation of three replicates.
9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
179 180 181
WPTP structure modeling A three-dimensional (3D) structure of wild-type WPTP was constructed according to the
182
homology modeling method on SWISS-MODEL.25 The crystal structure of peroxidase from the
183
palm tree Chamaerops excelsa (PDB accession: 4USC), which is 98% identical in amino acid
184
sequence to WPTP, was used as a template.26 Pymol (version 1.6 Schrödinger, LLC) was used
185
for analysis of the WPTP structure and for graphical presentation. Secondary structure
186
predictions of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were conducted with PredictProtein, Jpred4
187
and YASPIN.27-29
188 189 190
Determination of substrate specificity Substrate specificity of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G was studied with ABTS,
191
guaiacol, o-dianisidine and o-phenylenediamine as substrates (Table 1). Optimal conditions for
192
catalysis of each substrate by wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were determined. The
193
optimum of pH was first resolved under pH values ranging from 2.2 - 8.0. Determination of
194
optimal concentration of buffer, substrate and H2O2 in the reaction medium was carried out
195
under a ranged from 0.01 - 0.1 mM, 0.01 - 7 mM, 0.1 - 20 mM, respectively. The changing rates
196
of absorbance at 414, 470, 420, 445 nm were measured for ABTS, guaiacol, o-dianisidine and o-
197
phenylenediamine, respectively. The extinction coefficient of each substrate was listed in Table 1.
198
The substrate specificity of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were determined under the
199
optimal condition of each substrate. The reactions were performed in 200 µL of citric acid-
200
Na2HPO4 buffer at 25 °C. The concentrations of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G in the
201
reaction buffer were 10-8 M.
10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 31
Page 11 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
202 203
Effect of pH on enzyme activity and stability
204
The pH stability of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were measured. One microliter of
205
each enzyme (concentration of 10-4 M) was incubated with 99 µL of buffers with pHs ranging
206
from 1 - 12 for 24 h at 4 °C. The buffers used were glycine-HCl (pH 1 - 3), citric acid-Na2HPO4
207
(pH 3 - 8), Tris-HCl (pH 8 - 9) and glycine-NaOH (pH 9 - 12). The assays were performed in
208
200 µL 0.04 M citric acid-Na2HPO4 containing 0.04 mM ABTS and 1.4 mM H2O2 at 25 °C. The
209
final concentrations of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G in the reactions were 10-8 M. The
210
isoelectric point was predicted with ProtParam.30
211 212
Effect of temperature on enzyme activity and stability
213
The thermal stability of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G was studied. One microliter of
214
each enzyme (concentration of 10-4 M) was incubated with 99 µL of 10 mM Tris-HCl at a range
215
of temperatures (50 - 90 °C) for 1 h. The assays were performed as described above for the pH
216
stability study. The final concentrations of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G in the reactions
217
were 10-8 M. The data were analyzed according to the first-order reaction rate equation:31
218
lnAt / A0=-kinact
219
where A0 and At are original enzyme activity and activity measured at moment t, respectively,
220
(1)
and kinac is inactivation constant.
221 222 223 224
Statistical analysis SPSS Statistics 23.0 (IBM, Armonk, NY) was used for the statistical analysis. Independentsample t-tests (two-tailed) were used at a significant level of 0.05 to compare differences
11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
225
between the values of residual activities of wile-type WPTP and WPTP E254G.
226 227
Results and Discussion
228
Rationale for the choice of mutation and computational analyses to assess the impact of the
229
mutation
230
Preliminary mass spectrometry analysis indicated that glycosylation site N256 in wild-type
231
WPTP was underglycosylated (described below) compared to the native enzyme produced in
232
plants.23 There is evidence, from HRP expressed in P. pastoris, that this site could be important
233
for thermostability and substrate binding; deletion of this site destabilized the enzyme and
234
increased the Km value for ABTS.18 We wanted to test the hypothesis that increasing the level of
235
glycosylation at this site would improve enzyme stability and modulate substrate binding. Two
236
residues upstream of N256 is an acidic Glu residue. Presence of an acidic residue (e.g., Asp or
237
Glu) in the -1 or -2 position of a glycosylation site is associated with underglycosylation,
238
whereas presence of a non-polar residue (e.g., Gly, Ala, Leu, Ile, Met, Phe, Tyr, or Tryp) is
239
associated with glycosylation at the glycosylation site.24 Therefore, mutation of E254 to a non-
240
polar amino acid should increase the glycosylation level of site N256. Gly was found in the -1
241
and -2 position of some glycosylated sites of native WPTP that have high glycosylation level.23
242
Therefore, we mutated the Glu254 to Gly254 of WPTP to promote glycosylation.
243
Computational homology modeling was used to assess potential unwanted consequences of
244
changing the amino acid sequence. The 3D structure of WPTP showed that E254 is located on
245
the loop between α-helix H and I (Fig. 3). Because E254 is not located in a restrictive secondary
246
structure, such as α-helix, it is presumed that mutation of this residue would not cause a change
247
in the secondary structure. This was confirmed with computational secondary structure
12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 31
Page 13 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
248
prediction. Analysis with PredictProtein, Jpred4 and YASPIN, suggested that the E254G
249
mutation itself would not change the secondary structure meaning it should not cause major
250
conformational changes to WPTP.
251 252 253
Expression and purification of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G Wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were successfully expressed in P. pastoris GS115. Ten
254
and 14 transformants of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G, respectively, were screened. The
255
two transformants (one of each wild-type and mutant) with the highest activity toward the
256
substrate TMB were selected for further study. Expression, driven by the AOX1 promoter, was
257
induced by methanol. After expression for 96 h, fermentation broth was collected and then
258
purified using Ni-NTA agarose followed by concentration and desalting using centrifugal filter
259
devices.
260
Following digestion with Endo H, both purified wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G showed
261
two bands on an SDS-PAGE gel (Fig. 1). The lower band of each lane was Endo H whose
262
molecular weight is 29 kDa. The upper band in each lane was observed around 35 kDa, which is
263
slightly larger than the theoretical mass (32.2 kDa) of WPTP. The discrepancy in mass can be
264
attributed to the presence of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) which remains attached to
265
glycosylation sites after deglycosylation by Endo H.
266 267
LC-MS/MS analysis of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G
268
Extracted ion chromatography (EIC) was used to measure the relative abundance of
269
glycoforms in wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G. Proteolytic digestion of Endo H digested
270
samples with AspN, which cleaves at the N-terminus of Asp, resulted in generation of a single
13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
271
peptide containing the glycosylation site N256 for both mutant and wild-type samples. In both
272
cases, the glycosylated version of the peptide eluted approximately 2 min before its
273
unglycosylated counterpart, which is expected for reverse phase chromatography of
274
glycopeptides. Comparison of the peak areas in the EIC of the glycosylated variant of wild-type
275
WPTP (EIC 1016.51, Fig. 2A) to the unglycosylated variant (EIC 914.97) revealed that wild-
276
type WPTP was underglycosylated at site N256 (1.5% ± 0.3%) compared to the native enzyme
277
(55% ± 10%).23
278
EIC revealed that the mutant had a 4.3-fold increase in glycosylation (6.4% ± 0.5%) relative
279
to the wild-type enzyme (1.5% ± 0.3%) (Fig. 2B). Each structure represented in the EICs was
280
verified by LC-MS/MS. Fig. 2C shows a representative fragmentation spectrum of a
281
glycopeptide containing the mutation (DAQALVTGAN*LSAAVKNNA, where * is a GlcNAc
282
residue remaining after Endo H digestion). The present work shows that mutation of acidic
283
amino acid residue at -1 or -2 position of glycosylation site could be a strategy to generate
284
proteins with a higher degree of glycosylation.
285 286 287
Substrate specificity of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G The substrate specificity of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G was analyzed with ABTS,
288
guaiacol, o-dianisidine and o-phenylenediamine as substrates under optimal conditions. The
289
conditions, including substrate concentration, H2O2 concentration, buffer concentration and
290
buffer pH, were optimized for each substrate (Table 1).
291 292 293
Peroxidases catalyze the oxidation of substrates by the “ping-pong” mechanism, in a threestep catalytic cycle:11, 32 E + H2O2 → compound I + H2O
(2)
14
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 31
Page 15 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
294
compound I + AH2 → compound II + AH
295
• compound II + AH2 → E + AH + H2O
•
(3) (4)
296
where E is the enzyme in resting form, and compounds I and II are the oxidized intermediates of
297
• peroxidase. AH2 and AH are the electron-donor substrate and free radical product, respectively.
298
The reduction of compound I (eq 2) is the rate-limiting step in WPTP catalysis.12 Therefore,
299
the values of the second-order rate constant (kapp) for the reaction between compound I and the
300
hydrogen donor substrate (AH2) were used to evaluate the catalytic efficiency of wild-type
301
WPTP and WPTP E254G using eq 5.12
302
rate = kapp[compound I][AH2]
303
Among the four substrates, the best substrate for both wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G
(5)
304
was ABTS and the worst was guaiacol (Table 1). The catalytic efficiency of WPTP E254G
305
toward ABTS, guaiacol, o-dianisidine and o-phenylenediamine was 2.4, 3.0, 1.9 and 1.9-fold
306
higher than by wild-type WPTP (Table 1). The results demonstrated that the higher degree of
307
glycosylation at N256 of WPTP did not change the substrate specificity, but increased the
308
catalytic efficiency up to 3-fold toward those four substrates.
309
Glycosylation may have a direct or indirect effect on catalytic efficiency depending on the
310
distance from the active site. NMR studies of HRP with a bound substrate suggested that
311
residues within 12 Å of the heme iron could directly interact with the substrate.33 In order to
312
investigate the observed effects in the present study, we used the 3D homology model to measure
313
the distance from N256 to the active site. We found that N256 is 19.2 Å from the heme iron and
314
17.9 Å from the heme-binding site, H169. This suggests that site N256 is not likely to have a
315
direct effect on the catalytic efficiency.
15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
316
Glycans that are farther away may have an indirect effect by influencing the overall
317
conformation of the enzyme. For instance, cationic peanut peroxidase (cPrx) with site N60
318
glycosylated showed 1.4-fold higher activity than its non-glycosylated site-directed mutation
319
variant.17 This glycosylation site is located on the loop between α-helices B and C which is far
320
away from the active site. Glycosylation of this site was proposed to cause the flanking helices to
321
bend to a greater extent, leading to a more compactly folded active site.17, 34
322
In another example, enzymatic removal of all six N-linked glycans of Russell’s viper venom
323
factor X activator (RVV-X) (PDB accession: 2E3X), which are all distant from the active site,
324
resulted in almost total loss of the ability of RVV-X to activate factor X to factor Xa.35, 36
325
Deglycosylation resulted in changes to the secondary structure which significantly affected the
326
overall conformation of the enzyme.36 It is possible that the glycan attached to site N256 of
327
WPTP induces conformational changes that result in an enzyme with higher catalytic activity
328
than the unglycosylated variant.
329
Glycans that were beneficial for catalytic activity were also found in other enzymes.
330
Deleting the glycosylation site at N255 in HRP caused somewhat lower affinity to ABTS.18
331
N255 of HRP shares a similar position with N256 of WPTP in their 3D structures.37 Therefore,
332
the glycan attached to this specific site of WPTP may have an advantageous influence on
333
catalytic activity. The kcat and kcat/Km values of Rhizopus chinensis lipase (RCL) mutant
334
proRCLCN14Q that lost the N14 glycan were much lower than that of its wild-type,
335
proRCLCNQ, which suggests that the glycan attached to N14 of proRCLCNQ was beneficial for
336
its catalytic activity.38
337
Analysis of the homology model of WPTP as well as secondary structure prediction, as
338
previously mentioned suggest that the increased activity was due to the increased glycosylation
16
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 31
Page 17 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
339
level of site N256 of WPTP as opposed to the mutation itself. Resolving the crystal structure of
340
wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G could help to better explain the observed effect of the
341
mutation and glycosylation on catalytic activity observed in this study.
342 343 344
Effect of pH on enzyme activity and stability Peroxidases are useful in various applications that demand acidic conditions, such as
345
synthesis of semiconductive polyaniline, and alkaline conditions such as some wastewater
346
treatment environments. To monitor irreversible inactivation due to buffer pH, the wild-type and
347
mutant enzymes were incubated in buffers with pH values varying from pH 1 to pH 12 for 24 h,
348
and then tested for residual activity.
349
The optimal pH range for both enzymes was the same; however, WPTP E254G had higher
350
activity in all buffers from pH 4 to pH 12 (Fig. 4). Wild-type WPTP was most stable at pH 7,
351
whereas WPTP E254G was most stable at pH 9. Both enzymes showed minimal activity from
352
pH 1 to pH 3. WPTP E254G maintained 66% of the maximal activity when it was stored at pH 5.
353
However, it showed higher stability under basic conditions, retaining as high as 80% of maximal
354
activity after it was stored at pH 12 for 24 h. The enhanced pH stability of WPTP E254G
355
compared to wild-type WPTP makes WPTP E254G more applicable in alkaline conditions, such
356
as alkali wastewater treatment.
357
Like WPTP, other palm tree peroxidases are maximally stable under neutral to slightly
358
alkaline conditions and tend to have a wide range of pH values in which they are stable. Royal
359
palm tree peroxidase was most stable at pH 8 and maintained above 75% of its maximal activity
360
from pH 4 – 10 under the experimental conditions in that study.10 African oil palm tree
361
peroxidase (AOPTP) has high stability from pH 2 to pH 12 at 25 °C, and maintained high
17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
362
stability from pH 5 to pH 10 when the temperature increased up to 70 °C. The most stable pH
363
condition for AOPTP shifted from pH 7 to pH 8 when the temperature changed from 25 °C to
364
70 °C.31 In contrast, HRP is stable in a narrower range, from pH 4 - 8.39
365
In other cases, glycosylation was important for pH stability. When compared with wild-type
366
xylanase (Af-XYNA), its mutant N124T exhibited a narrower pH adaptation range and worse pH
367
stability.40 It is suggested that glycans attached to N124 play an important role on its pH
368
adaptation and pH stability although this site is far away from the active site. Glycans that
369
contributed to stability under alkaline conditions were found in human mast cell chymase. The
370
deglycosylated chymase was less stable than its wild-type counterpart from pH 9 to 10.41
371
The results indicated that the higher degree of glycosylation at site N256 may have
372
contributed to the observed stability under basic conditions compared with wild-type WPTP
373
which was most stable under neutral conditions. However, it is likely that the mutation itself of
374
Glu to Gly could have an impact on the observed results. The E254G mutation will cause a
375
change in the net charge relative to wild-type WPTP. The E254G mutation increases the
376
theoretical isoelectric point of wild-type WPTP from 5.54 to 5.79 of WPTP E254G. Therefore,
377
the observed shift of the most stable pH from 7 of wild-type WPTP to 9 of WPTP E254G might
378
be attributed to both increased glycosylation level and E254G mutation.
379 380 381
Effect of temperature on enzyme activity and stability The effects of temperature on wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G were determined from 50
382
to 90 °C. The inactivation constants (kinac) of wild-type WPTP at 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90 °C were
383
0.052, 0.030, 0.014, 0.0006 and 0.0002, respectively, while the respective kinac of WPTP E254G
384
were 0.062, 0.034, 0.011, 0.0007 and 0.0003. These kinac values indicated no apparent difference
18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 31
Page 19 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
385
in thermal stability between wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G. However, WPTP E254G had
386
1.2 - 2.5-fold higher catalytic activity than wild-type WPTP in the temperature range of 50-80 °C,
387
which the differences were statistically significant (p < 0.05) (Fig. 5). WPTP E254G retained
388
above 50% of its original activity under 50 °C - 70 °C, and declined to 13% after being stored at
389
80 °C for 1 h (Fig. 5).
390
Glyco-engineering has been useful in other studies to improve the thermostability of
391
industrial enzymes.41, 42 Addition of a glycosylation site in fungal cutinase heterologously
392
expressed in P. pastoris improved the thermal stability.42 It was thought that loss of enzyme
393
activity was due to aggregation upon unfolding at high temperature. One site on barley α-
394
glucosidase resulted in an increase in thermal stability; however, addition at another site did not
395
show any improvements.43 In both of those studies, the chosen site for addition of a
396
glycosylation site was based on homology to orthologous enzymes.
397
In some cases, glycosylation of a single site had effects on different properties.
398
Glycosylation at N255 of HRP was not only related to catalytic activity, but also had a notable
399
influence on enzyme thermal stability. Glyco-variant N255D of HRP produced in P. pastoris had
400
a significant decrease in thermal stability.18 Glycosylation of N124 of Af-XYNA played an
401
important role on both pH and thermal stability. When Af-XYNA and its counterpart mutant
402
N124T were incubated at 70 °C for 1 h, N124T had much lower activity than wild type. They
403
found that a higher degree of glycosylation resulted in higher thermal stability.40
404
The results obtained in this study indicated that the degree of glycosylation influenced
405
catalytic activity, as well as activity under stringent pH and temperature conditions. The study
406
implies a strategy to generate desirable proteins with a higher degree of glycosylation by glyco-
407
engineering. The most stable pH condition of WPTP E254G differing from wild-type WPTP
19
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
408
provides potential broader application of WPTP in alkaline wastewater treatment.
409 410
ABBREVIATIONS
411
WPTP, windmill palm tree peroxidase; ABTS, 2,2′-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulphonate
412
acid); HRP, horseradish peroxidase; YPDS, yeast extract peptone dextrose medium; BMMY,
413
buffered methanol-complex medium; BMGY, buffered glycerol-complex medium; TMB, 3, 3ʹ, 5,
414
5ʹ-tetramethylbenzidine; Endo H, Endoglycosidase H; LC-MS, liquid chromatography-mass
415
spectrometry; GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; EIC, extracted ion chromatography; SDS-PAGE,
416
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
417 418
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
419
We are grateful to Dr. Ivan Yu. Sakharov of Lomonosov Moscow State University for helpful
420
suggestion and discussion.
421
FUNDING
422
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Research Centers in Minority
423
Institutions Program grant no. G12 MD007601 and by the USDA National Institute of Food and
424
Agriculture Hatch project HAW5032-R,managed by the College of Tropical Agriculture and
425
Human Resources, University of Hawaii at Manoa and grant no. 2018-67012-28082.
426
NOTES
427
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
20
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 31
Page 21 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
428
References
429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470
1. Cooper, V. A.; Nicell, J. A. Removal of phenols from a foundry wastewater using horseradish peroxidase. Water Res. 1996, 30, 954-964. 2. Gorton, L.; Lindgren, A.; Larsson, T.; Munteanu, F. D.; Ruzgas, T.; Gazaryan, I. Direct electron transfer between heme-containing enzymes and electrodes as basis for third generation biosensors. Anal. Chim. Acta 1999, 400, 91-108. 3. Sakharov, I. Y. Long-term chemiluminescent signal is produced in the course of luminol peroxidation catalyzed by peroxidase isolated from leaves of african oil palm tree. Biochemistry (Moscow) 2001, 66, 515-519. 4. Caramyshev, A. V.; Evtushenko, E. G.; Ivanov, V. F.; Barcelo, A. R.; Roig, M. G.; Shnyrov, V. L.; van Huystee, R. B.; Kurochkin, I. N.; Vorobiev, A.; Sakharov, I. Y. Synthesis of conducting polyelectrolyte complexes of polyaniline and poly(2-acrylamido-3-methyl-1propanesulfonic acid) catalyzed by pH-stable palm tree peroxidase. Biomacromolecules 2005, 6, 1360-1366. 5. Kawakita, H.; Hamamoto, K.; Ohto, K.; Inoue, K. Polyphenol polymerization by horseradish peroxidase for metal adsorption studies. Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2009, 48, 4440-4444. 6. Zhang, H.; Lu, Y.; Ushio, H.; Shiomi, K. Development of sandwich ELISA for detection and quantification of invertebrate major allergen tropomyosin by a monoclonal antibody. Food Chem. 2014, 150, 151-157. 7. Ong, A. S.; Goh, S. H. Palm oil: a healthful and cost-effective dietary component. Food Nutr. Bull 2002, 23, 11-22. 8. Schroeder, M. T.; Becker, E. M.; Skibsted, L. H. Molecular mechanism of antioxidant synergism of tocotrienols and carotenoids in palm oil. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2006, 54, 34453453. 9. Zhang, L.; Wu, G.; Wu, Y.; Cao, Y.; Xiao, L.; Lu, C. The gene MT3-B can differentiate palm oil from other oil samples. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2009, 57, 7227-7232. 10. Sakharov, I. Y.; Vesgac B, M. K.; Galaev, I. Y.; Sakharova, I. V.; Pletjushkina, O. Y. Peroxidase from leaves of royal palm tree Roystonea regia: purification and some properties. Plant Sci. 2001, 161, 853-860. 11. Sakharov, I. Y.; Vesga Blanco, M. K.; Sakharova, I. V. Substrate specificity of african oil palm tree peroxidase. Biochemistry (Mosc) 2002, 67, 1043-1047. 12. Caramyshev, A. V.; Firsova, Y. N.; Slastya, E. A.; Tagaev, A. A.; Potapenko, N. V.; Lobakova, E. S.; Pletjushkina, O. Y.; Sakharov, I. Y. Purification and characterization of windmill palm tree (Trachycarpus fortunei) peroxidase. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2006, 54, 9888-9894. 13. Nagai, K.; Ihara, Y.; Wada, Y.; Taniguchi, N. N-Glycosylation is requisite for the enzyme activity and Golgi retention of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase III. Glycobiology 1997, 7, 769-776. 14. Guo, S.; Skala, W.; Magdolen, V.; Briza, P.; Biniossek, M. L.; Schilling, O.; Kellermann, J.; Brandstetter, H.; Goettig, P. A Single glycan at the 99-loop of human kallikrein-related peptidase 2 regulates activation and enzymatic activity. J. Biol. Chem. 2016, 291, 593-604. 15. Wormald, M. R.; Dwek, R. A. Glycoproteins: glycan presentation and protein-fold stability. Structure 1999, 7, R155-R160.
21
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516
16. Baker, M. R.; Zhao, H.; Sakharov, I. Y.; Li, Q. X. Amino acid sequence of anionic peroxidase from the windmill palm tree Trachycarpus fortunei. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2014, 62, 11941-11948. 17. Lige, B.; Ma, S.; van Huystee, R. B. The effects of the site-directed removal of Nglycosylation from cationic peanut peroxidase on its function. Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 2001, 386, 17-24. 18. Capone, S.; Pletzenauer, R.; Maresch, D.; Metzger, K.; Altmann, F.; Herwig, C.; Spadiut, O. Glyco-variant library of the versatile enzyme horseradish peroxidase. Glycobiology 2014, 24, 852-863. 19. Dotsenko, A. S.; Gusakov, A. V.; Volkov, P. V.; Rozhkova, A. M.; Sinitsyn, A. P. N-linked glycosylation of recombinant cellobiohydrolase I (Cel7A) from Penicillium verruculosum and its effect on the enzyme activity. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016, 113, 283-291. 20. Rudd, P. M.; Joao, H. C.; Coghill, E.; Fiten, P.; Saunders, M. R.; Opdenakker, G.; Dwek, R. A. Glycoforms modify the dynamic stability and functional activity of an enzyme. Biochemistry 1994, 33, 17-22. 21. Culyba, E. K.; Price, J. L.; Hanson, S. R.; Dhar, A.; Wong, C. H.; Gruebele, M.; Powers, E. T.; Kelly, J. W. Protein native-state stabilization by placing aromatic side chains in Nglycosylated reverse turns. Science 2011, 331, 571-575. 22. Wen, B.; Baker, M. R.; Zhao, H.; Cui, Z.; Li, Q. X. Expression and characterization of windmill palm tree (Trachycarpus fortunei) peroxidase by Pichia pastoris. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2017, 65, 4676-4682. 23. Baker, M. R.; Tabb, D. L.; Ching, T.; Zimmerman, L. J.; Sakharov, I. Y.; Li, Q. X. Sitespecific N-glycosylation characterization of windmill palm tree peroxidase using novel tools for analysis of plant glycopeptide mass spectrometry data. J. Proteome Res. 2016, 15, 20262038. 24. Petrescu, A. J.; Milac, A. L.; Petrescu, S. M.; Dwek, R. A.; Wormald, M. R. Statistical analysis of the protein environment of N-glycosylation sites: implications for occupancy, structure, and folding. Glycobiology 2004, 14, 103-114. 25. Arnold, K.; Bordoli, L.; Kopp, J.; Schwede, T. The SWISS-MODEL workspace: a webbased environment for protein structure homology modelling. Bioinformatics 2006, 22, 195201. 26. Bernardes, A.; Textor, L. C.; Santos, J. C.; Cuadrado, N. H.; Kostetsky, E. Y.; Roig, M. G.; Bavro, V. N.; Muniz, J. R.; Shnyrov, V. L.; Polikarpov, I. Crystal structure analysis of peroxidase from the palm tree Chamaerops excelsa. Biochimie 2015, 111, 58-69. 27. Yachdav, G.; Kloppmann, E.; Kajan, L.; Hecht, M.; Goldberg, T.; Hamp, T.; Honigschmid, P.; Schafferhans, A.; Roos, M.; Bernhofer, M.; Richter, L.; Ashkenazy, H.; Punta, M.; Schlessinger, A.; Bromberg, Y.; Schneider, R.; Vriend, G.; Sander, C.; Ben-Tal, N.; Rost, B. PredictProtein--an open resource for online prediction of protein structural and functional features. Nucleic Acids Res. 2014, 42, W337-W343. 28. Drozdetskiy, A.; Cole, C.; Procter, J.; Barton, G. J. JPred4: a protein secondary structure prediction server. Nucleic Acids Res. 2015, 43, W389-W394. 29. Lin, K.; Simossis, V. A.; Taylor, W. R.; Heringa, J. A simple and fast secondary structure prediction method using hidden neural networks. Bioinformatics 2005, 21, 152-159. 30. Gasteiger, E.; Hoogland, C.; Gattiker, A.; Duvaud, S.; Wilkins, M.R.; Appel, R.D.; Bairoch, A. Protein identification and analysis tools on the ExPASy server. John M. Walker (ed): The Proteomics Protocols Handbook, Humana Press 2005, 571-607.
22
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 31
Page 23 of 31
517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
31.Sakharov, I. Y.; Sakharova, I. V. Extremely high stability of African oil palm tree peroxidase. Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 2002, 1598, 108-114. 32. Cuadrado, N. H.; Arellano, J. B.; Calvete, J. J.; Sanz, L.; Zhadan, G. G.; Polikarpov, I.; Bursakov, S.; Roig, M. G.; Shnyrov, V. L. Substrate specificity of the Chamaerops excelsa palm tree peroxidase. A steady-state kinetic study. J. Mol. Catal. B: Enzym. 2012, 74, 103108. 33. Veitch, N. C. Aromatic donor molecule binding sites of haem peroxidases. Biochem. Soc. Trans. 1995, 23, 232-240. 34.Imperiali, B.; Rickert, K. W. Conformational implications of asparagine-linked glycosylation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 1995, 92, 97-101. 35. Takeda, S.; Igarashi, T.; Mori, H. Crystal structure of RVV-X: an example of evolutionary gain of specificity by ADAM proteinases. FEBS Lett. 2007, 581, 5859-5864. 36. Gowda, D. C.; Jackson, C. M.; Kurzban, G. P.; McPhie, P.; Davidson, E. A. Core sugar residues of the N-linked oligosaccharides of Russell's viper venom factor X-activator maintain functionally active polypeptide structure. Biochemistry 1996, 35, 5833-5837. 37. Berglund, G. I.; Carlsson, G. H.; Smith, A. T.; Szoke, H.; Henriksen, A.; Hajdu, J. The catalytic pathway of horseradish peroxidase at high resolution. Nature 2002, 417, 463-468. 38. Yang, M.; Yu, X. W.; Zheng, H.; Sha, C.; Zhao, C.; Qian, M.; Xu, Y. Role of N-linked glycosylation in the secretion and enzymatic properties of Rhizopus chinensis lipase expressed in Pichia pastoris. Microb. Cell Fact. 2015, 14, 40. 39. Ryan, B. J.; Carolan, N.; O'Fagain, C. Horseradish and soybean peroxidases: comparable tools for alternative niches? Trends Biotechnol. 2006, 24, 355-363. 40. Chang, X.; Xu, B.; Bai, Y.; Luo, H.; Ma, R.; Shi, P.; Yao, B. Role of N-linked glycosylation in the enzymatic properties of a thermophilic GH 10 xylanase from Aspergillus fumigatus expressed in Pichia pastoris. PLoS One 2017, 12, e0171111. 41. Takao, K.; Takai, S.; Shiota, N.; Song, K.; Nishimura, K.; Ishihara, T.; Miyazaki, M. Lack of effect of carbohydrate depletion on some properties of human mast cell chymase. BBA- Gen. Subjects 1999, 1427, 74-81. 42. Shirke, A. N.; Su, A.; Jones, J. A.; Butterfoss, G. L.; Koffas, M. A.; Kim, J. R.; Gross, R. A. Comparative thermal inactivation analysis of Aspergillus oryzae and Thiellavia terrestris cutinase: Role of glycosylation. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017, 114, 63-73. 43. Clark, S. E.; Muslin, E. H.; Henson, C. A. Effect of adding and removing N-glycosylation recognition sites on the thermostability of barley alpha-glucosidase. Protein Eng. Des. Sel. 2004, 17, 245-249.
23
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
FIGURE CAPTIONS Figure 1. SDS-PAGE analysis of purified deglycosylated wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G. Molecular weight protein markers from top to bottom are 250, 150, 100, 75, 50, 37, 25 and 20 kDa. A shows deglycosylated wild-type WPTP; B shows deglycosylated WPTP E254G; C shows glycosidase endoglycosidase H (Endo H). Figure 2. Extracted ion chromatograms of (A) m/z 914.97 and m/z 1016.51 of the unglycosylated and glycosylated peptide, respectively, containing glycosylation site N256 on wild-type WPTP and (B) m/z 878.96 and m/z 980.50 of the unglycosylated and glycosylated peptide, respectively, containing glycosylation site N256 on WPTP E254G. (C) Fragmentation spectrum of parent ion at m/z 980.94 (+2) was interpreted to be the peptide (DAQALVTGAN*LSAAVKNNA, where * is a GlcNAc residue remaining after EndoH digestion) from an AspN digest of WPTP E254G. The glycopeptide fragmented into b- (red), y- (blue), and b-17- (pink) ions. The parent ion, after neutral loss of water (-18 Da), was also observed (light blue). Figure 3. Position of amino acid residue Glu254 of wild-type WPTP (A) and Gly254 of WPTP E254G (B) on the protein structure. The α-helices are in cyan. Side chains of Glu254 and Asn256 are in sticks, where atom C, O and N are in cyan, red and blue, respectively. The main chain of Gly254 is in magenta. Figure 4. Catalytic efficiency of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G after storage in buffers with pHs ranging from 1 - 12 for 24 h. Figure 5. Catalytic efficiency of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G after incubation at different temperatures for 1 h. Values with different lower case letters were significantly different (p < 0.05).
24
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 31
Page 25 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 1. SDS-PAGE analysis of purified deglycosylated wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G. Molecular weight protein markers from top to bottom are 250, 150, 100, 75, 50, 37, 25 and 20 kDa. A shows deglycosylated wild-type WPTP; B shows deglycosylated WPTP E254G; C shows glycosidase endoglycosidase H (Endo H).
25
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 2. Extracted ion chromatograms (EIC) of (A) m/z 914.97 and m/z 1016.51 of the unglycosylated and glycosylated peptide, respectively, containing glycosylation site N256 on wild-type WPTP and (B) m/z 878.96 and m/z 980.50 of the unglycosylated and glycosylated peptide, respectively, containing glycosylation site N256 on WPTP E254G. (C) Fragmentation spectrum of parent ion at m/z 980.94 (+2) was interpreted to be the peptide (DAQALVTGAN*LSAAVKNNA, where * is a GlcNAc residue remaining after EndoH digestion) from an AspN digest of WPTP E254G. The glycopeptide fragmented into b- (red), y(blue), and b-17- (pink) ions. The parent ion, after neutral loss of water (-18 Da), was also observed (light blue).
26
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 31
Page 27 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 3. Position of amino acid residue Glu254 of wild-type WPTP (A) and Gly254 of WPTP E254G (B) on the protein structure. The α-helices are in cyan. Side chains of Glu254 and Asn256 are in sticks, where atom C, O and N are in cyan, red and blue, respectively. The main chain of Gly254 is in magenta.
27
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 4. Catalytic efficiency of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G after storage in buffers with pHs ranging from 1 - 12 for 24 h.
28
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 28 of 31
Page 29 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 5. Catalytic efficiency of wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G after incubation at different temperatures for 1 h. Values with different lower case letters were significantly different (p < 0.05).
29
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 30 of 31
Table 1. Optimal conditions for substrate specificity determinations and comparison of substrate specificity (kapp) between wild-type WPTP and WPTP E254G substrate (AH2)
λ, nm
߳, M-1 cm-1
[AH2], mM
[H2O2], mM
pH
kapp (M-1 s-1) [buffer]2, M wild-type WPTP WPTP-E254G
ABTS1
414
31100
0.04
1.4
2.4
0.04
1.3×104
3.1×104
guaiacol
470
5200
5
2
5.2
0.1
2.7×102
8.0×102
o-dianisidine
420
30000
0.1
4.5
5
0.09
3.3×103
6.2×103
o-phenylenediamine 445
11100
0.7
0.8
5.4
0.09
5.1×102
9.8×102
1 2
ABTS: 2, 2′-azinobis (3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) Citrate-Na2HPO4 buffer was used.
30
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 31 of 31
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
TABLE OF CONTENT GRAPHIC
31
ACS Paragon Plus Environment