Abstract

The glycoside hydrolases (GH) of Caldicellulosiruptor bescii are thermophilic enzymes, and therefore they can hydrolyze plant cell wall polysaccharides at high temperatures. Analyses of two C. bescii glycoside hydrolases, CbCelA-TM1 and CbXyn10A with cellulase and endoxylanase activity, respectively, demonstrated that each enzyme is highly thermostable under static incubation at 70°C. Both enzymes, however, rapidly lost their enzymatic activities when incubated at 70°C with end-over-end shaking. Since crowding conditions, even at low protein concentrations, seem to influence enzymatic properties, three non-glycoside hydrolase proteins were tested for their capacity to stabilize the thermophilic proteins at high temperatures. The three proteins investigated were a small heat shock protein CbHsp18 from C. bescii, a histone MkHistone1 from Methanopyrus kandleri, and bovine RNase A, from a commercial source. Fascinatingly, each of these proteins increased the thermostability of the glycoside hydrolases at 70°C during end-over-end shaking incubation, and this property translated into increases in hydrolysis of several substrates including the bioenergy feedstock Miscanthus. Furthermore, MkHistone1 and RNase A also altered the initial products released from the cello-oligosaccharide cellopentaose during hydrolysis with the cellodextrinase CbCdx1A, which further demonstrated the capacity of the three non-GH proteins to influence hydrolysis of substrates by the thermophilic glycoside hydrolases. The non-GH proteins used in the present report were small proteins derived from each of the three lineages of life, and therefore expand the space from which different polypeptides can be tested for their influence on plant cell wall hydrolysis, a critical step in the emerging biofuel industry.

Highlights

  • Plant cell wall polysaccharides, a promising resource for producing renewable biofuels, are the most abundant biomass on earth [1]

  • It has been reported that the polypeptide from which CbCelA-TM1 is derived, i.e., CbCel9A/ Cel48A is the most abundant glycoside hydrolase in Avicel-induced C. bescii culture supernatant [21]

  • The hydrolysis products after 24 hr were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)

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Summary

Introduction

A promising resource for producing renewable biofuels, are the most abundant biomass on earth [1]. The plant cell wall is recalcitrant, and requires an array of glycoside hydrolases to deconstruct it into simple sugars for fermentation to biofuels [2,3]. Extracellular and intracellular microbial glycoside hydrolases function synergistically to release sugars from biomass [4,5]. The secreted enzymes break down the polysaccharides into oligosaccharides with different degrees of polymerization. The oligosaccharides are transported into the cell by transporters embedded in the cell wall. Intracellular glycoside hydrolases degrade the oligosaccharides into simple sugars, which are readily utilized by the organism

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