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Cloning, sequence analysis, expression of Cyathus bulleri laccase in Pichia pastoris and characterization of recombinant laccase

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TLDR
A detailed study of thermostability, chloride and solvent tolerance of the rLac indicated improvement in the first two properties when compared to the native laccase (nLac), and altered glycosylation pattern, identified by peptide mass finger printing, was proposed to contribute to altered properties of therLac.
Abstract
Laccases are blue multi-copper oxidases and catalyze the oxidation of phenolic and non-phenolic compounds. There is considerable interest in using these enzymes for dye degradation as well as for synthesis of aromatic compounds. Laccases are produced at relatively low levels and, sometimes, as isozymes in the native fungi. The investigation of properties of individual enzymes therefore becomes difficult. The goal of this study was to over-produce a previously reported laccase from Cyathus bulleri using the well-established expression system of Pichia pastoris and examine and compare the properties of the recombinant enzyme with that of the native laccase. In this study, complete cDNA encoding laccase (Lac) from white rot fungus Cyathus bulleri was amplified by RACE-PCR, cloned and expressed in the culture supernatant of Pichia pastoris under the control of the alcohol oxidase (AOX)1 promoter. The coding region consisted of 1,542 bp and encodes a protein of 513 amino acids with a signal peptide of 16 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence of the matured protein displayed high homology with laccases from Trametes versicolor and Coprinus cinereus. The sequence analysis indicated the presence of Glu 460 and Ser 113 and LEL tripeptide at the position known to influence redox potential of laccases placing this enzyme as a high redox enzyme. Addition of copper sulfate to the production medium enhanced the level of laccase by about 12-fold to a final activity of 7200 U L-1. The recombinant laccase (rLac) was purified by ~4-fold to a specific activity of ~85 U mg-1 protein. A detailed study of thermostability, chloride and solvent tolerance of the rLac indicated improvement in the first two properties when compared to the native laccase (nLac). Altered glycosylation pattern, identified by peptide mass finger printing, was proposed to contribute to altered properties of the rLac. Laccase of C. bulleri was successfully produced extra-cellularly to a high level of 7200 U L-1 in P. pastoris under the control of the AOX1 promoter and purified by a simple three-step procedure to homogeneity. The kinetic parameters against ABTS, Guaiacol and Pyrogallol were similar with the nLac and the rLac. Tryptic finger print analysis of the nLac and the rLac indicated altered glycosylation patterns. Increased thermo-stability and salt tolerance of the rLac was attributed to this changed pattern of glycosylation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A novel multicopper oxidase (laccase) from cyanobacteria: Purification, characterization with potential in the decolorization of anthraquinonic dye.

TL;DR: It is concluded that cyanobacterial laccase can be efficiently used to decolorize synthetic dye and help in waste water treatment and its biodegradation studies was monitored by UV visible spectra, FTIR and HPLC.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lignocellulose degrading extremozymes produced by Pichia pastoris: current status and future prospects

TL;DR: This review article reviews extremophilic lignocellulosic enzymes with special interest on xylanases, β-mannanases, laccases and finally cellulases produced by Pichia pastoris, and discusses characteristics of recombinant and native enzymes, and their expression levels and applied strategies to increase the enzyme expression yield.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural and Functional Roles of Glycosylation in Fungal Laccase from Lentinus sp.

TL;DR: Molecular dynamics simulations analyses of various states of (de-)glycosylation in nLcc support the kinetic results and suggest that the local H-bond networks between the domain connecting loop D2-D3 and the glycan moieties play a crucial role in the laccase activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combination of chemical and enzymatic treatment for efficient decolorization/degradation of textile effluent: High operational stability of the continuous process

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of mediator assisted laccase and chemical treatment was used for decolorization of effluent from a local textile mill in a continuous enzyme membrane reactor (EMR).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A new method for predicting signal sequence cleavage sites.

TL;DR: A new method for identifying secretory signal sequences and for predicting the site of cleavage between a signal sequence and the mature exported protein is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laccases: blue enzymes for green chemistry

TL;DR: A brief discussion of laccases, a group of enzymes that work with air and produce water as the only by-product, and their uses span from the textile to the pulp and paper industries, and from food applications to bioremediation processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of a laccase from the fungus Trametes versicolor at 1.90-A resolution containing a full complement of coppers.

TL;DR: This work presents the first crystal structure of an active laccase containing a full complement of coppers, the complete polypeptide chain together with seven carbohydrate moieties, and a mechanism is presented to explain how laccases could tune their redox potential by as much as 200 mV.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decolorization and detoxification of textile dyes with a laccase from Trametes hirsuta.

TL;DR: Tametes hirsuta and a purified laccase from this organism were able to degrade triarylmethane, indigoid, azo, and anthraquinonic dyes and reduced their toxicities by up to 80%.
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