Abstract

Cellulosic biomass is an abundant and promising energy source. To make cellulosic biofuels competitive against conventional fuels, conversion of rigid plant materials into sugars must become efficient and cost-effective. During cellulose degradation, cellulolytic enzymes generate cellobiose (β-(1→4)-glucose dimer) molecules, which in turn inhibit such enzymes by negative feedback. β-Glucosidases (BGLs) cleave cellobiose into glucose monomers, assisting overall cellulolytic activities. Therefore, BGLs are essential for efficient conversion of cellulosic biomass into biofuels, and it is important to characterize newly isolated BGLs for useful traits. Here, we report our discovery that the indigenous Taiwanese fungus Chaetomella raphigera strain D2 produces two molecular weight variants of a single BGL, D2-BGL (shortened to “D2”), which differ in O-glycosylation. The more extensively O-glycosylated form of native D2 (nD2L) has increased activity toward the natural substrate, cellobiose, compared to the less O-glycosylated form (nD2S). nD2L is more stable at 60°C, in acidic pH, and in the presence of the ionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate than nD2S. Furthermore, unlike nD2S, nD2L does not display substrate inhibition by an artificial substrate p-nitrophenyl glucopyranoside (pNPG), and the glucose feedback inhibition kinetics of nD2L is competitive (while it is non-competitive for nD2S), suggesting that these two glycovariants of D2 bind substrates differently. Interestingly, D2 produced in a heterologous system, Pichia pastoris, closely mimics properties of nD2S. Our studies suggest that O-glycosylation of D2 is important in determining its catalytic and biochemical properties.

Highlights

  • Cellulosic biomass is an abundant and promising feedstock for next-generation biofuels in many countries [1,2,3]

  • Since D2-BGL was the most abundant secretory protein from the fungus C. raphigera strain D2, it was purified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) followed by zymography (see Enzyme assays, (c) methylumbelliferyl b-Dglucopyranoside (MUG) in gel assay in Materials and Method)

  • We found that the major differences among the glycovariants are the substrate inhibition by p-nitrophenyl glucopyranoside (pNPG) and comparative activity toward cellobiose; nD2L had a higher ratio of cellobiose to pNPG activity compared to smaller glycovariants (Figure 8, open bars)

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Summary

Introduction

Cellulosic biomass is an abundant and promising feedstock for next-generation biofuels in many countries [1,2,3]. Conventional biomass such as starch can be readily degraded to sugar monomers in an industrial scale. Endo-b-(1R4)-glucanases digest cellulose from inner regions of cellulose chains, and exo-b(1R4)-glucanases digest cellulose chains from the reducing or nonreducing ends [6]. These processes release oligosaccharides and cellobiose, a b-(1R4)-glucose dimer, which strongly inhibits most glucanase activities, but may be digested to glucose monomers by b-glucosidases (BGLs) [6]. Most bacterial and fungal BGLs belong to the GH3 family, with specificities to myriad substrates [7]

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