August 20, 2012
Journal Article

Identifying and characterizing the most significant ß-glucosidase of the novel species Aspergillus saccharolyticus

Abstract

A newly discovered fungal species, Aspergillus saccharolyticus, was found to produce a culture broth rich in beta-glucosidase activity. In this present work, the main beta-glucosidase of A. saccharolyticus responsible for the efficient hydrolytic activity was identified, isolated, and characterized. Ion exchange chromatography was used to fractionate the culture broth, yielding fractions with high beta-glucosidase activity and only one visible band on an SDS-PAGE gel. Mass spectrometry analysis of this band gave peptide matches to beta-glucosidases from aspergilli. Through a PCR approach using degenerate primers and genome walking, a 2919 base pair sequence encoding the 860 amino acid BGL1 polypeptide was determined. BGL1 of A. saccharolyticus has 91% and 82% identity with BGL1 from Aspergillus aculeatus and BGL1 from Aspergillus niger, respectively, both belonging to Glycoside hydrolase family 3. Homology modeling studies suggested beta-glucosidase activity with preserved retaining mechanism and a wider catalytic pocket compared to other beta-glucosidases. The bgl1 gene was heterologously expressed in Trichoderma reesei QM6a, purified, and characterized by enzyme kinetics studies. The enzyme can hydrolyze cellobiose, pNPG, and cellodextrins. The enzyme showed good thermostability, was stable at 50°C, and at 60°C it had a half-life of approximately 6 hours.

Revised: December 27, 2012 | Published: August 20, 2012

Citation

Sorensen A., B.K. Ahring, M. Lubeck, W. Ubhayasekera, K.S. Bruno, D.E. Culley, and P.S. Lubeck. 2012. Identifying and characterizing the most significant ß-glucosidase of the novel species Aspergillus saccharolyticus. Canadian Journal of Microbiology 58, no. 9:1035-1046. PNNL-SA-86631. doi:10.1139/w2012-076