Cellulose degradation by brown rot fungi, such as Postia placenta, is poorly understood relative to the phylogenetically related white rot basidiomycete, Phanerochaete chrysosporium. To elucidate the number, structure, and regulation of genes involved in lignocellulosic cell wall attack, secretome and transcriptome analyses were performed on both wood decay fungi cultured for 5 days in media containing ball-milled aspen or glucose as the sole carbon source. Using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), a total of 67 and 79 proteins were identified in the extracellular fluids of P. placenta and P. chrysosporium cultures, respectively. Viewed together with transcript profiles, P. chrysosporium employs an array of extracellular glycosyl hydrolases to simultaneously attack cellulose and hemicelluloses. In contrast, under these same conditions, P. placenta secretes an array of hemicellulases but few potential cellulases. The two species display distinct expression patterns for oxidoreductase-encoding genes. In P. placenta, these patterns are consistent with an extracellular Fenton system and include the upregulation of genes involved in iron acquisition, in the synthesis of low-molecular-weight quinones, and possibly in redox cycling reactions.
The wood decay basidiomycete Phanerochaete chrysosporium was grown under standard ligninolytic or cellulolytic conditions and subjected to whole-genome expression microarray analysis and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry of extracellular proteins. A total of 545 genes were flagged on the basis of significant changes in transcript accumulation and/or peptide sequences of the secreted proteins. Under nitrogen or carbon limitation, lignin and manganese peroxidase expression increased relative to nutrient replete medium. Various extracellular oxidases were also secreted in these media, supporting a physiological connection based on peroxide generation. Numerous genes presumed to be involved in mobilizing and recycling nitrogen were expressed under nitrogen limitation, and among these were several secreted glutamic acid proteases not previously observed. In medium containing microcrystalline cellulose as the sole carbon source, numerous genes encoding carbohydrate-active enzymes were upregulated. Among these were six members of the glycoside hydrolase family 61, as well as several polysaccharide lyases and carbohydrate esterases. Presenting a daunting challenge for future research, more than 190 upregulated genes are predicted to encode proteins of unknown function. Of these hypothetical proteins, approximately one-third featured predicted secretion signals, and 54 encoded proteins detected in extracellular filtrates. Our results affirm the importance of certain oxidative enzymes and, underscoring the complexity of lignocellulose degradation, also support an important role for many new proteins of unknown function.
Identification of specific genes and enzymes involved in conversion of lignocellulosics from an expanding number of potential feedstocks is of growing interest to bioenergy process development. The basidiomycetous wood decay fungi Phanerochaete chrysosporium and Postia placenta are promising in this regard because they are able to utilize a wide range of simple and complex carbon compounds. However, systematic comparative studies with different woody substrates have not been reported. To address this issue, we examined gene expression of these fungi colonizing aspen (Populus grandidentata) and pine (Pinus strobus). Transcript levels of genes encoding extracellular glycoside hydrolases, thought to be important for hydrolytic cleavage of hemicelluloses and cellulose, showed little difference for P. placenta colonizing pine versus aspen as the sole carbon source. However, 164 genes exhibited significant differences in transcript accumulation for these substrates. Among these, 15 cytochrome P450s were upregulated in pine relative to aspen. Of 72 P. placenta extracellular proteins identified unambiguously by mass spectrometry, 52 were detected while colonizing both substrates and 10 were identified in pine but not aspen cultures. Most of the 178 P. chrysosporium glycoside hydrolase genes showed similar transcript levels on both substrates, but 13 accumulated >2-fold higher levels on aspen than on pine. Of 118 confidently identified proteins, 31 were identified in both substrates and 57 were identified in pine but not aspen cultures. Thus, P. placenta and P. chrysosporium gene expression patterns are influenced substantially by wood species. Such adaptations to the carbon source may also reflect fundamental differences in the mechanisms by which these fungi attack plant cell walls.
This study examined the ligninase-catalysed degradation of lignin model compounds representing the arylglycerol beta-aryl ether substructure, which is the dominant one in the lignin polymer. Three dimeric model compounds were used, all methoxylated in the 3- and 4-positions of the arylglycerol ring (ring A) and having various substituents in the beta-ether-linked aromatic ring (ring B), so that competing reactions involving both rings could be compared. Studies of the products formed and the time courses of their formation showed that these model compounds are oxidized by ligninase (+ H2O2 + O2) in both ring A and ring B. The major consequence with all three model compounds is oxidation of ring A, leading primarily to cleavage between C(alpha) and C(beta) (C(alpha) being proximal to ring A), and to a lesser extent to the oxidation of the C(alpha)-hydroxy group to a carbonyl group. Such C(alpha)-oxidation deactivates ring A, leaving only ring B for attack. Studies with C(alpha)-carbonyl model compounds corresponding to the three basic model compounds revealed that oxidation of ring B leads in part to dealkoxylations (i.e. to cleavage of the glycerol beta-aryl ether bond and to demethoxylations), but that these are minor reactions in the model compounds most closely related to lignin. Evidence is also given that another consequence of oxidation of ring B in the C(alpha)-carbonyl model compounds is formation of unstable cyclohexadienone ketals, which can decompose with elimination of the beta-ether-linked aromatic ring. The mechanisms proposed for the observed reactions involve initial formation of aryl cation radicals in either ring A or ring B. The cation radical intermediate from one of the C(alpha)-carbonyl model compounds was identified by e.s.r. spectroscopy. The mechanisms are based on earlier studies showing that ligninase acts by oxidizing appropriately substituted aromatic nuclei to aryl cation radicals [Kersten, Tien, Kalyanaraman & Kirk (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 2609-2612; Hammel, Tien, Kalyanaraman & Kirk (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 8348-8353].
bThe white-rot basidiomycetes efficiently degrade all wood cell wall polymers. Generally, these fungi simultaneously degrade cellulose and lignin, but certain organisms, such as Ceriporiopsis subvermispora, selectively remove lignin in advance of cellulose degradation. However, relatively little is known about the mechanism of selective ligninolysis. To address this issue, C. subvermispora was grown in liquid medium containing ball-milled aspen, and nano-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify and estimate extracellular protein abundance over time. Several manganese peroxidases and an aryl alcohol oxidase, both associated with lignin degradation, were identified after 3 days of incubation. A glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 51 arabinofuranosidase was also identified after 3 days but then successively decreased in later samples. Several enzymes related to cellulose and xylan degradation, such as GH10 endoxylanase, GH5_5 endoglucanase, and GH7 cellobiohydrolase, were detected after 5 days. Peptides corresponding to potential cellulose-degrading enzymes GH12, GH45, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase, and cellobiose dehydrogenase were most abundant after 7 days. This sequential production of enzymes provides a mechanism consistent with selective ligninolysis by C. subvermispora.
A GH5 hyperthermostable endoglucanase from the archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii (Ph-GH5) and a commercial endoglucanase FR were used to treat bleached eucalyptus pulp (BEP) fibers to produce cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) through subsequent microfluidization. Enzymatic treatments facilitated CNF production due to the reduced degree of polymerization (DP) of the fibers. SEM imaging indicated that FR reduced fiber DP drastically and resulted in much shorter fibers than with Ph-GH5, even at very low dosages (1 mg protein/g fiber) of FR treatment compared with a high dosage (10 mg protein/g fiber) of Ph-GH5. The fibers treated with FR were much more uniform in length perhaps due to the presence of exoglucanase and beta-glucosidase saccharifying short microfibers into glucose. TEM imaging indicated that Ph-GH5 produced longer and entangled CNFs than FR with the same number of microfluidization passes. However, the CNF diameters were approximately the same for all CNFs from enzyme-treated fibers using both endoglucanases at two dosages (1 or 10 mg protein/g fiber). CNFs produced from BEP fibers without enzymatic treatment showed larger diameters than those with enzymatic treatment.
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