Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8327012 | International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Used as model for sandwich fusion, a mesophilic Aspergillus niger GH11 xylanase (Xyn) was fused into C2-Xyn-C2 with a thermophilic Thermotaga maritima GH10 xylanase carbohydrate-binding module CBM9_2 (C2). Linearized plasmids C2-pET20b-C2-Xyn were amplified from template pET20b-Xyn-C2 with a 4.3â¯kb C2-pET20b megaprimer, ligated into circular plasmids in blunt-end ligation, and transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells. The C2-Xyn-C2 had optimum activity at 45â¯Â°C and pHâ¯4.2, a 2.85â¯h thermal inactivation half-life at 80â¯Â°C and a 8.69â¯h at 50â¯Â°C, with the 8.69â¯h value 24.8-, 7.5-, and 7.1-fold longer than the Xyn and single terminal fusion enzymes Xyn-C2, and C2-Xyn. Thermodynamics showed that the enzyme had a 1.8â¯Â°C higher melting temperature, lower values ÎS, ÎÎG, and a denser structure than the Xyn. Kinetics showed that the C2-Xyn-C2 catalytic efficiency was 1.2-~6-fold and 2.7-~7.9-fold higher on beechwood and oat-spelt xylan than those of the enzymes Xyn, Xyn-C2, and C2-Xyn. The sandwich fusion evolved the xylanase with “armor-hands” to enhance simultaneously thermostability and activity in quality.
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Biochemistry
Authors
Ang Yang, Jinsheng Cheng, Meng Liu, Yunjie Shangguan, Liangwei Liu,