Abstract

Degradation of polysaccharides is central to numerous biological and industrial processes. Starch-active polysaccharide monooxygenases (AA13 PMOs) oxidatively degrade starch and can potentially be used with industrial amylases to convert starch into a fermentable carbohydrate. The oxidative activities of the starch-active PMOs from the fungi Neurospora crassa and Myceliophthora thermophila, NcAA13 and MtAA13, respectively, on three different starch substrates are reported here. Using high-performance anion-exchange chromatography coupled with pulsed amperometry detection, we observed that both enzymes have significantly higher oxidative activity on amylose than on amylopectin and cornstarch. Analysis of the product distribution revealed that NcAA13 and MtAA13 more frequently oxidize glycosidic linkages separated by multiples of a helical turn consisting of six glucose units on the same amylose helix. Docking studies identified important residues that are involved in amylose binding and suggest that the shallow groove that spans the active-site surface of AA13 PMOs favors the binding of helical amylose substrates over nonhelical substrates. Truncations of NcAA13 that removed its native carbohydrate-binding module resulted in diminished binding to amylose, but truncated NcAA13 still favored amylose oxidation over other starch substrates. These findings establish that AA13 PMOs preferentially bind and oxidize the helical starch substrate amylose. Moreover, the product distributions of these two enzymes suggest a unique interaction with starch substrates.

Highlights

  • Degradation of polysaccharides is central to numerous bio- [11, 12]

  • Past research showed that the Polysaccharide monooxygenases (PMOs)3 are copper-dependent enzymes that use an oxidative mechanism to hydroxylate the glycosidic bond of polysaccharides, including cellulose [1, 2], hemicellulose [3,4,5,6], chitin [7, 8], xylan [9, 10], and starch crystalline nature of amylose leads to a dense, insoluble, and hydrolytically resistant biopolymer [21, 25,26,27]

  • The data establish that AA13 PMOs preferentially oxidize the nonbranched helical polysaccharide amylose over ␣(136)-branched starch polysaccharides and identify residues within the catalytic domain involved in substrate binding that are conserved among AA13 PMOs

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Summary

ARTICLE cro Substrate selectivity in starch polysaccharide monooxygenases

Past research showed that the Polysaccharide monooxygenases (PMOs) are copper-dependent enzymes that use an oxidative mechanism to hydroxylate the glycosidic bond of polysaccharides, including cellulose [1, 2], hemicellulose [3,4,5,6], chitin [7, 8], xylan [9, 10], and starch crystalline nature of amylose leads to a dense, insoluble, and hydrolytically resistant biopolymer [21, 25,26,27]. 60% of putative AA13 PMOs contain the starch-specific CBM20 domain, suggesting

Starch PMO substrate selectivity
Results
Amylose docking model
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Polysaccharide oxidation assay
Sequence logo
Polysaccharide binding assays
Docking studies
Full Text
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