Abstract

BackgroundEnzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose involves the spatiotemporally correlated action of distinct polysaccharide chain cleaving activities confined to the surface of an insoluble substrate. Because cellulases differ in preference for attacking crystalline compared to amorphous cellulose, the spatial distribution of structural order across the cellulose surface imposes additional constraints on the dynamic interplay between the enzymes. Reconstruction of total system behavior from single-molecule activity parameters is a longstanding key goal in the field.ResultsWe have developed a stochastic, cellular automata-based modeling approach to describe degradation of cellulosic material by a cellulase system at single-molecule resolution. Substrate morphology was modeled to represent the amorphous and crystalline phases as well as the different spatial orientations of the polysaccharide chains. The enzyme system model consisted of an internally chain-cleaving endoglucanase (EG) as well as two processively acting, reducing and non-reducing chain end-cleaving cellobiohydrolases (CBHs). Substrate preference (amorphous: EG, CBH II; crystalline: CBH I) and characteristic frequencies for chain cleavage, processive movement, and dissociation were assigned from biochemical data. Once adsorbed, enzymes were allowed to reach surface-exposed substrate sites through “random-walk” lateral diffusion or processive motion. Simulations revealed that slow dissociation of processive enzymes at obstacles obstructing further movement resulted in local jamming of the cellulases, with consequent delay in the degradation of the surface area affected. Exploiting validation against evidence from atomic force microscopy imaging as a unique opportunity opened up by the modeling approach, we show that spatiotemporal characteristics of cellulose surface degradation by the system of synergizing cellulases were reproduced quantitatively at the nanometer resolution of the experimental data. This in turn gave useful prediction of the soluble sugar release rate.ConclusionsSalient dynamic features of cellulose surface degradation by different cellulases acting in synergy were reproduced in simulations in good agreement with evidence from high-resolution visualization experiments. Due to the single-molecule resolution of the modeling approach, the utility of the presented model lies not only in predicting system behavior but also in elucidating inherently complex (e.g., stochastic) phenomena involved in enzymatic cellulose degradation. Thus, it creates synergy with experiment to advance the mechanistic understanding for improved application.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-016-0463-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose involves the spatiotemporally correlated action of distinct polysaccharide chain cleaving activities confined to the surface of an insoluble substrate

  • Here for the first time, that observable characteristics of cellulose surface degradation by the synergizing set of cellulases were reproduced in useful quantitative agreement with the experiment [14]

  • Total system behavior is successfully reconstructed by combining kinetic data sets from high-resolution single-molecule studies

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Summary

Introduction

Enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose involves the spatiotemporally correlated action of distinct polysaccharide chain cleaving activities confined to the surface of an insoluble substrate. Reconstruction of total system behavior from single-molecule activity parameters is a longstanding key goal in the field. Regarding only a single chain, the enzymatic hydrolysis might appear as a fairly simple transformation. Its kinetics involves an array of heavily entangled, enzyme- and substrate-related complexities appearing at different length scales in dependence of time and conversion [5, 8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. Despite much progress made in delineating function of individual elements [1,2,3, 15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22], coherent description of the degradation process as a whole proved elusive. Bottom-up reconstruction of total cellulose/cellulase system behavior constitutes an increasingly important research aim of high fundamental and practical significance

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