Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
17745 Enzyme and Microbial Technology 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Phanerochaete chrysosporium is widely used as a model organism to understand the physiology, enzymology, and genetics of lignin degradation by white rot fungi and is known for its ability to metabolize and detoxify a wide range of environmental chemicals. Our pre-genomic efforts and the recent whole genome sequencing by the Joint Genome Institute of the US-DOE have revealed that this fungus carries a well-developed P450 enzyme system, consisting of multiple P450 monooxygenases and a common P450 oxidoreductase. The entire P450ome of this organism comprises of ∼150 cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, mostly arranged in gene clusters and classifiable into multigene families. Except for the structurally and functionally conserved fungal P450 families such as CYP51, CYP61, and CYP53, other P450 enzymes in this organism have largely unknown function and will require functional characterization. These new P450 enzymes may likely have roles in biodegradation activity and physiology of this ligninolytic fungus. Our pre- and post-genomic efforts to understand the functional role of P450 enzyme systems in P. chrysosporium have focused on the regulation of expression of the first identified family of P450 enzymes, the CYP63 family, and genome-wide regulation of the other P450 families using a custom-designed P450 microarray. The genomically linked CYP63 member P450s were found to be differentially regulated under varying physiological and/or biodegradation conditions. Results on the heterologous expression of this family of monooxygenases in different prokaryotic and eukaryotic expression systems are presented and the inherent problems associated with the expression of these membrane proteins are discussed. Further, we report the expression and purification of the white rot fungal cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (POR), the electron transfer component of its P450 enzyme system, required for P450 catalysis. The reported studies have uncovered the hitherto unknown regulatory aspects of the P450 enzyme system in P. chrysosporium and generated useful expression tools and knowledge base to pursue further studies on functional analysis of the P450 contingent in this model white rot fungus.

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