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An investigation into the synergistic action of exo and endo-type cellulases on the hydrolysis of complex substrates

An investigation into the synergistic action of exo and endo-type cellulases on the hydrolysis of complex substrates. Mariska Thoresen. Energy Postgraduate Conference 2013. Introduction. DEPLETION OF FOSSIL FUELS Need for alternative energy sources BIOMASS. Large scale availability

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An investigation into the synergistic action of exo and endo-type cellulases on the hydrolysis of complex substrates

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  1. An investigation into the synergistic action of exo and endo-type cellulases on the hydrolysis of complex substrates MariskaThoresen Energy Postgraduate Conference 2013

  2. Introduction DEPLETION OF FOSSIL FUELS • Need for alternative energy sources BIOMASS • Large scale availability • Low cost

  3. Plant cell Cellulose Hydrogen bonding with and between cellulose chains • cd Microfibrils RECALCITRANT Macrofibrils Enzymes Cellulose Fiber β-1,4 glycosidic bonds

  4. Cellulases 2. Cellobiohydrolases: release cellobiose from chain. • Endoglucanases: cut at random sites along the cellulose chain. 3. β-glucosidases: conversion of cellobiose to glucose. CBHI CBHII NR R Crystalline Amorphous Crystalline β-glucosidase

  5. What is Synergy? • Understanding how enzymes cooperate to degrade complex substrates • Synergy = Enzymes working together display a higher activity than when used individually • Degree of synergy or synergism = (Actual observed activity of enzymes in combination ) (Theoretical sum of activities of individual enzymes) • Basis of synergy • Enzymes target different parts of the substrate, removing obstacles and creating new sites for other enzymes

  6. Enzyme 2 Synergy Assays Enzyme 1 Enzyme 3 Enzyme 1 Designer enzyme cocktails Synergy >1 Synergy Synergy <1 Competition Synergy =1 No synergy

  7. Synergistic relationships Exo Endo Synergy Endo Exo

  8. Methodology • Enzymes Obtained from Stellenbosch University • Assessment of protein purity (SDS-PAGE) • Protein determination (Bradford Assay) • Enzyme activity assays (DNS method) • Synergy Studies (Bi-synergy) • Enzyme ratios ranging from 0-100% were tested. Total protein concentration in all assays were kept constant (40 ug) • Avicel • Time studies (24h, 48h, 72h)

  9. CBHII:EGII CBHII:EGII CBHI:EGII CBHI:EGII Results CBHII:EGI CBHI:EGI CBHII:EGI CBHI:EGI Activity (mg/ml) supplemented with additional β-glucosidase (dotted lines) and the corresponding degrees of synergy (solid lines) on Avicelover 72 hours. The enzyme assays were set up using different combinations of CBHI, CBHII, EGI, EGII and BGL with a total protein concentration of 20 ug/ml Values are shown as the average SD. (A): CBHI/EGII; (B); CBHII/EGII; (C): CBHI/EGI; (D): CBHII/EGI

  10. Conclusions • CBHI and CBHII are key enzymes in cellulose hydrolysis • Degree of Synergy increases over time • Major gaps in our understanding of the mechanism by which cellulasescatalyze the hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose • By gaining a comprehensive understanding of the enzyme synergy that exists between different cellulases, we could optimise enzyme cocktail design for cellulose hydrolysis • Defined vs complex substrates?

  11. Prof. B.I. Pletschke (Rhodes University) • Dr. J.S. Van Dyk (Rhodes University) • Prof. W.H Van Zyl (Stellenbosch University) • Dr. Rden Haan (Stellenbosch University) • Lab 410 (Rhodes University) Acknowledgments

  12. Amano, Y., Shiroishi, M., Nisizawa, K., Hoshino, E. and Kanda, T. (1996). Fine substrate specificities of four exo-type cellulases produced by Aspergillusniger, Trichodermareesei, and Irpexlacteuson (1-3),(l-4)-D-Glucans and Xyloglucan1. Biochemistry. 120:1123-1129. Anderson, N., Johansen, K.S., Michelsen, M., Stenby, E.H, Krogh, K.N.R.M. and Olsson, L. (2008). Hydrolysis of cellulose using mono-component enzymes shows synergy during hydrolysis of phosphoric acid swollen cellulose (PASC), but competition on Avicel. Microbial Technology. 42: 362-370. Bai, A., Zhao, X., Jin, Y., Yanga, G. Fenga, Y. (2013). A novel thermophilicglucosidase from Caldicellulosiruptorbescii: Characterisation and its synergistic catalysis with other cellulases. Molecular Catlaysis. 85-86: 248-256. Beukes, N., Chan, H., Doi, R.H. and Pletschke, B.I. (2008). Synergistic associations between Clostridium cellulovorans enzymes XynA, ManA and EngE against sugarcane bagasse. Enzyme Microbobial Technology. 42:492–498. Doi, R.H. (2008). Cellulases of mesophilic microorganisms: cellulosome and noncellulosome producers. New York academy of sciences. 1125:267-269.  Gottschalk, L.M.F., Oliveira, R.A. and de Silva Bon, E.P. (2010). Cellulases, xylanases, B-glucosidases and ferulic acid esterase produced by Trichodermaand Aspergillusact synergistically in the hydrolysis of sugar cane bagasse. Biochemical engineering. 72-78. Gusakov, A.V., Salanovich, T., Antonov, A.I., Ustinov, B.B., Okunec, O.N., Burlingame, R., Emalfarb, M., Baez, M. and Sinitsyn. (2006). Design of highly efficient cellulase mixtures for enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose. Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 1-11. Henrissat, B., Claeysenns, M., Tomme, P., Lemesle, L. and Mornon, J.P. (1989). Cellulase families revealed by hydrophobic cluster analysis. 81: 83-95. Hoshino, E., Shirishi, M., Amano, Y., Nomura, M and Kanda, T. (1997). Synergistic actions of Exo-type cellulases in the hydrolysis of cellulose with different crystallinities. Fermentation and Bioengineering. 84 (4): 300-306. Hu, J., Arantes, V. and Saddler, J.N. (2011). The enhancement of enzymatic hydrolysis of lignocellulosic substrates by the addition of accessory enzymes such as xylanase: is it an additive or synergistic effect? Biotechnology for Biofuels. 4-36. Jager, G., Wu, Z., Garschhammer, K., Engel, P., Klement, T, Rinaldi., Spiess, A.C. and Buchs, J. (2010). Practical screening of purified   Ramirez, M.T. and Fraga, E.S. (2009). Mathematical modelling of feed pretreatment for bioethanol production from biomass, 1st edition: 19th European Symposium on Computer Aided Process Engineering, Computer-Aided Chemical Engineering 26: 1299-1304. Shi, J., Ebrik., M.A., Yang, B., Garlock., R.J., Balan, V., Dale, B.E., Pallapolu, V.M., Lee, Y.Y., Kim, Y., Moiser, N.S., Ladisch, M.R., Holtzapple, M.T., Falls, M., Sierra-Ramirez, R., Donhoe, B.S., Vinzant, T.B., Elander, R.T., Hames, B., Thomas, S., Warner, R.E. and Wyman, C.E. (2011). Application of cellulases and hemicellulases to pure xylan, pure cellulose and switchgrass solids from leading pretreatments. Bioresource Technology. 102: 11080–11088. References

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