Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
17051 Enzyme and Microbial Technology 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Performance of extremophilic xylanase was studied at high pressure and temperature.•In pressure inactivation high temperature had stronger role than high pressure itself.•High pressure and high temperature had an effect on the hydrolysis pattern.•Disulphide bridge mutant was stable even at 93 °C by CD spectroscopy.

The functional properties of extremophilic Dictyoglomus thermophilum xylanase (XYNB) and the N-terminal disulphide-bridge mutant (XYNB-DS) were studied at high pressure and temperature. The enzymes were quite stable even at the pressure of 500 MPa at 80 °C. The half-life of inactivation in these conditions was over 30 h. The inactivation at 80 °C in atmospheric pressure was only 3-times slower. The increase of pressure up to 500 MPa at 80 °C decreased only slightly the enzyme's stability, whereas in 500 MPa the increase of temperature from 22 to 80 °C decreased significantly more the enzyme's stability. While the high temperature (80–100 °C) decreased the enzyme reaction with short xylooligosaccharides (xylotetraose and xylotriose), the high pressure (100–300 MPa) had an opposite effect. The temperature of 100 °C strongly increased the Km but did not affect the kcat to the same extent, thus indicating that the interaction of the substrate with the active site suffers before the catalytic reaction begins to decrease as the temperature rises. Circular dichroism spectroscopy showed the high structural stability of XYNB and XYNB-DS at 93 °C.

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