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Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system

Authorized Users Only
2020
Authors
Ilić Đurđić, Karla
Ece, Selin
Ostafe, Raluca
Vogel, Simon
Schillberg, Stefan
Fischer, Rainer
Prodanović, Radivoje
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Pleurotus eryngii wild-type versatile peroxidase (wtVP) oxidizes structurally diverse substrates in an H2O2-dependent manner, but its ability to oxidize many pollutants is limited by suicidal enzyme inactivation in the presence of excess H2O2. To address this drawback, we generated random mutagenesis libraries containing 3 × 106 mutated VP genes and screened for enzymes with higher oxidative stability expressed on the surface of yeast cells. This was achieved by flow cytometry using the substrate fluorescein tyramide. After two rounds of sorting, the percentage of cells expressing variants with improved oxidative stability had increased from 1 % to 56 %. The most stable variants featured 3–5 amino acid substitutions and retained up to 70 % of their initial activity after incubation for 1 h in 30 mM H2O2 (conditions that completely inactivate wtVP). Selected variants were extracted from yeast cell walls and purified for kinetic characterization. We also prepared yeast cell walls with wt...VP and the three most stable VP variants for multiple cycles of azo dye (Reactive black 5) degradation. After 10 cycles of 12 h, two of the variants retained more than 97 % of their initial activity, whereas the activity of wtVP declined by ∼30 %. These results confirm that our high-throughput screening system can improve the oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase, providing a source of novel enzymes for remediation applications.

Keywords:
Yeast surface display / Directed evolution / Hydrogen-peroxide stability / FACS
Source:
Biochemical Engineering Journal, 2020, 157
Publisher:
  • Elsevier
Funding / projects:
  • Allergens, antibodies, enzymes and small physiologically important molecules: design, structure, function and relevance (RS-172049)
  • Novel encapsulation and enzyme technologies for designing of new biocatalysts and biologically active compounds targeting enhancement of food quality, safety and competitiveness (RS-46010)

DOI: 10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555

ISSN: 1369-703X

WoS: 000527325100023

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85081216986
[ Google Scholar ]
3
2
URI
https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3888
Collections
  • Publikacije
Institution/Community
Hemijski fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ilić Đurđić, Karla
AU  - Ece, Selin
AU  - Ostafe, Raluca
AU  - Vogel, Simon
AU  - Schillberg, Stefan
AU  - Fischer, Rainer
AU  - Prodanović, Radivoje
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3888
AB  - Pleurotus eryngii wild-type versatile peroxidase (wtVP) oxidizes structurally diverse substrates in an H2O2-dependent manner, but its ability to oxidize many pollutants is limited by suicidal enzyme inactivation in the presence of excess H2O2. To address this drawback, we generated random mutagenesis libraries containing 3 × 106 mutated VP genes and screened for enzymes with higher oxidative stability expressed on the surface of yeast cells. This was achieved by flow cytometry using the substrate fluorescein tyramide. After two rounds of sorting, the percentage of cells expressing variants with improved oxidative stability had increased from 1 % to 56 %. The most stable variants featured 3–5 amino acid substitutions and retained up to 70 % of their initial activity after incubation for 1 h in 30 mM H2O2 (conditions that completely inactivate wtVP). Selected variants were extracted from yeast cell walls and purified for kinetic characterization. We also prepared yeast cell walls with wtVP and the three most stable VP variants for multiple cycles of azo dye (Reactive black 5) degradation. After 10 cycles of 12 h, two of the variants retained more than 97 % of their initial activity, whereas the activity of wtVP declined by ∼30 %. These results confirm that our high-throughput screening system can improve the oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase, providing a source of novel enzymes for remediation applications.
PB  - Elsevier
T2  - Biochemical Engineering Journal
T1  - Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system
VL  - 157
DO  - 10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ilić Đurđić, Karla and Ece, Selin and Ostafe, Raluca and Vogel, Simon and Schillberg, Stefan and Fischer, Rainer and Prodanović, Radivoje",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Pleurotus eryngii wild-type versatile peroxidase (wtVP) oxidizes structurally diverse substrates in an H2O2-dependent manner, but its ability to oxidize many pollutants is limited by suicidal enzyme inactivation in the presence of excess H2O2. To address this drawback, we generated random mutagenesis libraries containing 3 × 106 mutated VP genes and screened for enzymes with higher oxidative stability expressed on the surface of yeast cells. This was achieved by flow cytometry using the substrate fluorescein tyramide. After two rounds of sorting, the percentage of cells expressing variants with improved oxidative stability had increased from 1 % to 56 %. The most stable variants featured 3–5 amino acid substitutions and retained up to 70 % of their initial activity after incubation for 1 h in 30 mM H2O2 (conditions that completely inactivate wtVP). Selected variants were extracted from yeast cell walls and purified for kinetic characterization. We also prepared yeast cell walls with wtVP and the three most stable VP variants for multiple cycles of azo dye (Reactive black 5) degradation. After 10 cycles of 12 h, two of the variants retained more than 97 % of their initial activity, whereas the activity of wtVP declined by ∼30 %. These results confirm that our high-throughput screening system can improve the oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase, providing a source of novel enzymes for remediation applications.",
publisher = "Elsevier",
journal = "Biochemical Engineering Journal",
title = "Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system",
volume = "157",
doi = "10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555"
}
Ilić Đurđić, K., Ece, S., Ostafe, R., Vogel, S., Schillberg, S., Fischer, R.,& Prodanović, R.. (2020). Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system. in Biochemical Engineering Journal
Elsevier., 157.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555
Ilić Đurđić K, Ece S, Ostafe R, Vogel S, Schillberg S, Fischer R, Prodanović R. Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system. in Biochemical Engineering Journal. 2020;157.
doi:10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555 .
Ilić Đurđić, Karla, Ece, Selin, Ostafe, Raluca, Vogel, Simon, Schillberg, Stefan, Fischer, Rainer, Prodanović, Radivoje, "Improvement in oxidative stability of versatile peroxidase by flow cytometry-based high-throughput screening system" in Biochemical Engineering Journal, 157 (2020),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bej.2020.107555 . .

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