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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1996, 4417-4427, Vol 62, No. 12
BP Roy, T Dumonceaux, AA Koukoulas and FS Archibald
The white rot fungus Trametes versicolor degrades lignocellulosic material
at least in part by oxidizing the lignin via a number of secreted oxidative
and peroxidative enzymes. An extracellular reductive enzyme, cellobiose
dehydrogenase (CDH), oxidizes cellobiose and reduces insoluble
Mn(IV)O(inf2), commonly found as dark deposits in decaying wood, to form
Mn(III), a powerful lignin-oxidizing agent. CDH also reduces ortho-quinones
and produces sugar acids which can promote manganese peroxidase and
therefore ligninolytic activity. To better understand the role of CDH in
lignin degradation, proteins exhibiting cellobiose-dependent
quinone-reducing activity were isolated and purified from cultures of T.
versicolor. Two distinct proteins were isolated; the proteins had apparent
molecular weights of 97,000 and 81,000 and isoelectric points of 4.2 and
6.4, respectively. The larger CDH (CDH 4.2) contained both flavin and heme
cofactors, whereas the smaller contained only a flavin (CDH 6.4). These CDH
enzymes were rapidly reduced by cellobiose and lactose and somewhat more
slowly by cellulose and certain cello-oligosaccharides. Both glycoproteins
were able to reduce a very wide range of quinones and organic radical
species but differed in their ability to reduce metal ion complexes.
Temperature and pH optima for CDH 4.2 were affected by the reduced
substrate. Although CDH 4.2 showed rather high substrate specificity among
the ortho-quinones, it could also rapidly reduce a structurally very
diverse collection of other species, from negatively charged triiodide ions
to positively charged hexaquo ferric ions. CDH 6.4 showed a higher K(infm)
and a lower V(infmax) and turnover number than did CDH 4.2 for all
substrates tested. Furthermore, CDH 6.4 did not reduce the transition
metals Fe(III), Cu(II), and Mn(III) at concentrations likely to be
physiologically relevant, while CDH 4.2 was able to rapidly reduce even
very low concentrations of these ions. The reduction of Fe(III) and Cu(II)
by CDH 4.2 may be important in sustaining a Fenton's-type reaction, which
produces hydroxyl radicals that can cleave both lignin and cellulose.
Unlike the CDH proteins from Phanerochaete chrysosporium, CDH 4.2 and CDH
6.4 are unable to produce hydrogen peroxide.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Purification and Characterization of Cellobiose Dehydrogenases from the White Rot Fungus Trametes versicolor
Research and Development II, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., Allentown, Pennsylvania 18195-1501; Pulp and Paper Research Institute of Canada (Paprican), Pointe Claire, Quebec H9R 3J9, and the Department of Natural Resource Sciences, Microbiology Section, McGill University, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec H9X 1C0, Canada; and International Paper, Tuxedo, New York 10987
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