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Enzyme kinetics by GH7 cellobiohydrolases on chromogenic substrates is dictated by non-productive binding : insights from crystal structures and MD simulation

Authors :
Haataja, Topi
Gado, Japheth E.
Nutt, Anu
Anderson, Nolan T.
Nilsson, Mikael
Momeni, Majid Haddad
Isaksson, Roland
Valjamae, Priit
Johansson, Gunnar
Payne, Christina M.
Stahlberg, Jerry
Haataja, Topi
Gado, Japheth E.
Nutt, Anu
Anderson, Nolan T.
Nilsson, Mikael
Momeni, Majid Haddad
Isaksson, Roland
Valjamae, Priit
Johansson, Gunnar
Payne, Christina M.
Stahlberg, Jerry
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Cellobiohydrolases (CBHs) in the glycoside hydrolase family 7 (GH7) (EC3.2.1.176) are the major cellulose degrading enzymes both in industrial settings and in the context of carbon cycling in nature. Small carbohydrate conjugates such as p-nitrophenyl-beta-d-cellobioside (pNPC), p-nitrophenyl-beta-d-lactoside (pNPL) and methylumbelliferyl-beta-d-cellobioside have commonly been used in colorimetric and fluorometric assays for analysing activity of these enzymes. Despite the similar nature of these compounds the kinetics of their enzymatic hydrolysis vary greatly between the different compounds as well as among different enzymes within the GH7 family. Through enzyme kinetics, crystallographic structure determination, molecular dynamics simulations, and fluorometric binding studies using the closely related compound o-nitrophenyl-beta-d-cellobioside (oNPC), in this work we examine the different hydrolysis characteristics of these compounds on two model enzymes of this class, TrCel7A from Trichoderma reesei and PcCel7D from Phanerochaete chrysosporium. Protein crystal structures of the E212Q mutant of TrCel7A with pNPC and pNPL, and the wildtype TrCel7A with oNPC, reveal that non-productive binding at the product site is the dominating binding mode for these compounds. Enzyme kinetics results suggest the strength of non-productive binding is a key determinant for the activity characteristics on these substrates, with PcCel7D consistently showing higher turnover rates (k(cat)) than TrCel7A, but higher Michaelis-Menten (K-M) constants as well. Furthermore, oNPC turned out to be useful as an active-site probe for fluorometric determination of the dissociation constant for cellobiose on TrCel7A but could not be utilized for the same purpose on PcCel7D, likely due to strong binding to an unknown site outside the active site.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1387017079
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111.febs.16602