Abstract

Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are redox-enzymes involved in biomass degradation. All characterized LPMOs possess an active site of two highly conserved histidine residues coordinating a copper ion (the histidine brace), which are essential for LPMO activity. However, some protein sequences that belong to the AA9 LPMO family display a natural N-terminal His to Arg substitution (Arg-AA9). These are found almost entirely in the phylogenetic fungal class Agaricomycetes, associated with wood decay, but no function has been demonstrated for any Arg-AA9. Through bioinformatics, transcriptomic, and proteomic analyses we present data, which suggest that Arg-AA9 proteins could have a hitherto unidentified role in fungal degradation of lignocellulosic biomass in conjunction with other secreted fungal enzymes. We present the first structure of an Arg-AA9, LsAA9B, a naturally occurring protein from Lentinus similis The LsAA9B structure reveals gross changes in the region equivalent to the canonical LPMO copper-binding site, whereas features implicated in carbohydrate binding in AA9 LPMOs have been maintained. We obtained a structure of LsAA9B with xylotetraose bound on the surface of the protein although with a considerably different binding mode compared with other AA9 complex structures. In addition, we have found indications of protein phosphorylation near the N-terminal Arg and the carbohydrate-binding site, for which the potential function is currently unknown. Our results are strong evidence that Arg-AA9s function markedly different from canonical AA9 LPMO, but nonetheless, may play a role in fungal conversion of lignocellulosic biomass.

Highlights

  • Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are redoxenzymes involved in biomass degradation

  • To assess the phylogenetic distribution of fungal AA9 family sequences with N-terminal Arg (Arg-AA9s), we analyzed AA9 sequences belonging to cluster 63 [5] in the CAZy database [36], which we found were restricted to species of the Polyporales, Agaricales, and Russulales orders

  • The sequence alignment showed that residues critical for function in canonical AA9 LPMOs (His-1, His-68, His-142, Gln-151, and Tyr-153 in TtAA9E [14]) were all changed in the Arg-AA9 sequences (Fig. S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are redoxenzymes involved in biomass degradation. We have obtained a complex structure of LsAA9B with xylotetraose (Xyl4) bound at the protein surface in a conserved cleft near the speculated phosphorylation site.

Results
Conclusion
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