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result(s) for
"Asther, Marcel"
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Automated assay for screening the enzymatic release of reducing sugars from micronized biomass
by
Asther, Marcel
,
Navarro, David
,
Damasceno da Silva, Gabriela Ghizzi
in
Agricultural sciences
,
Alcohol
,
Alcohol, Denatured
2010
Background
To reduce the production cost of bioethanol obtained from fermentation of the sugars provided by degradation of lignocellulosic biomass (
i.e
., second generation bioethanol), it is necessary to screen for new enzymes endowed with more efficient biomass degrading properties. This demands the set-up of high-throughput screening methods. Several methods have been devised all using microplates in the industrial SBS format. Although this size reduction and standardization has greatly improved the screening process, the published methods comprise one or more manual steps that seriously decrease throughput. Therefore, we worked to devise a screening method devoid of any manual steps.
Results
We describe a fully automated assay for measuring the amount of reducing sugars released by biomass-degrading enzymes from wheat-straw and spruce. The method comprises two independent and automated steps. The first step is the making of \"substrate plates\". It consists of filling 96-well microplates with slurry suspensions of micronized substrate which are then stored frozen until use. The second step is an enzymatic activity assay. After thawing, the substrate plates are supplemented by the robot with cell-wall degrading enzymes where necessary, and the whole process from addition of enzymes to quantification of released sugars is autonomously performed by the robot. We describe how critical parameters (amount of substrate, amount of enzyme, incubation duration and temperature) were selected to fit with our specific use. The ability of this automated small-scale assay to discriminate among different enzymatic activities was validated using a set of commercial enzymes.
Conclusions
Using an automatic microplate sealer solved three main problems generally encountered during the set-up of methods for measuring the sugar-releasing activity of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes: throughput, automation, and evaporation losses. In its present set-up, the robot can autonomously process 120 triplicate wheat-straw samples per day. This throughput can be doubled if the incubation time is reduced from 24 h to 4 h (for initial rates measurements, for instance). This method can potentially be used with any insoluble substrate that is micronizable. A video illustrating the method can be seen at the following URL:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFg6TxjuMWU
Journal Article
Secretome analysis of Phanerochaete chrysosporium strain CIRM-BRFM41 grown on softwood
by
Asther, Marcel
,
Bertaud, Frédérique
,
Mollé, Daniel
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
biopulping
2008
Proteomic analysis was performed to determine and differentiate the composition of the secretomes of Phanerochaete chrysosporium CIRM-BRFM41, a peroxidase hypersecretory strain grown under ligninolytic conditions and on softwood chips under biopulping conditions. Extracellular proteins from both cultures were analyzed by bidimensional gel electrophoresis and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 37 spots were identified. The secretome in liquid synthetic medium comprised mainly peroxidases, while several wood-degrading enzymes and enzymes involved in fungal metabolism were detected in biopulping cultures on softwood. This prompted an analysis of the impact of secretome modulation in the presence of softwood chips. Biotreated wood was submitted to kraft cooking and chemical bleaching using chlorine dioxide. The fungal pre-treatment led to a significant increase in pulp yield and a better bleachability of the pulp. This bleachability improvement could be explained by the production of specific lignocellulose-degrading enzymes.
Journal Article
Cloning and characterization of a tyrosinase gene from the white-rot fungus Pycnoporus sanguineus, and overproduction of the recombinant protein in Aspergillus niger
2006
A new tyrosinase-encoding gene (2,204 bp) and the corresponding cDNA (1,857 nucleotides) from the white-rot fungus Pycnoporus sanguineus BRFM49 were cloned. This gene consisted of seven exons and six introns and encoded a predicted protein of 68 kDa, exceeding the mature tyrosinase by 23 kDa. P. sanguineus tyrosinase cDNA was over-expressed in Aspergillus niger, a particularly suitable fungus for heterologous expression of proteins of biotechnological interest, under the control of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase promoter as strong and constitutive promoter. The glucoamylase preprosequence of A. niger was used to target the secretion. This construction enabled the production of recombinant tyrosinase in the extracellular medium of A. niger. The identity of the purified recombinant protein was confirmed by N-terminal amino acid sequencing. The maturation process was shown to be effective in A. niger, and the recombinant enzyme was fully active, with a molecular mass of 45 kDa. The best transformant obtained, A. niger D15#26-e, produced extracellular tyrosinase activities of 534 and 1,668 U l−1 for monophenolase and diphenolase, respectively, which corresponded to a protein yield of ca. 20 mg l−1.
Journal Article
biotechnological process involving filamentous fungi to produce natural crystalline vanillin from maize bran
by
Roller, M
,
Asther, M
,
Lesage-Meessen, L
in
Acids
,
Aspergillus niger
,
Aspergillus niger - metabolism
2002
A new process involving the filamentous fungi Aspergillus niger and Pycnoporus cinnabarinus has been designed for the release of ferulic acid by enzymic degradation of a cheap and natural agricultural byproduct (autoclaved maize bran) and its biotransformation into vanillic acid and/or vanillin with a limited number of steps. On the one hand, the potentialities of A. niger I-1472 to produce high levels of polysaccharide-degrading enzymes including feruloyl esterases and to transform ferulic acid into vanillic acid were successfully combined for the release of free ferulic acid from autoclaved maize bran. Then vanillic acid was recovered and efficiently transformed into vanillin by P. cinnabarinus MUCL39533, since 767 mg/L of biotechnologic vanillin could be produced in the presence of cellobiose and XAD-2 resin. On the other hand, 3-d-old high-density cultures of P. cinnabarinus MUCL39533 could be fed with the autoclaved fraction of maize bran as a ferulic acid source and A. niger I-1472 culture filtrate as an extracellular enzyme source. Under these conditions, P. cinnabarinus MUCL39533 was shown to directly biotransform free ferulic acid released from the autoclaved maize bran by A. niger I-1472 enzymes into 584 mg/L of vanillin. These processes, involving physical, enzymic, and fungal treatments, permitted us to produce crystallin vanillin from autoclaved maize bran without any purification step.
Journal Article
Overproduction of the Aspergillus niger feruloyl esterase for pulp bleaching application
by
Asther, M.
,
Haon, M.
,
Asther, Marcel
in
Aspergillus
,
Aspergillus niger
,
Aspergillus niger - enzymology
2003
A well-known industrial fungus for enzyme production, Aspergillus niger, was selected to produce the feruloyl esterase FAEA by homologous overexpression for pulp bleaching application. The gpd gene promoter was used to drive FAEA expression. Changing the nature and concentration of the carbon source nature (maltose to glucose; from 2.5 to 60 g l(-1)), improved FAEA activity 24.5-fold and a yield of 1 g l(-1) of the corresponding protein in the culture medium was achieved. The secreted FAEA was purified 3.5-fold to homogeneity in a two-step purification procedure with a recovery of 69%. The overproduced protein was characterised and presented properties in good agreement with those of native FAEA. The recombinant FAEA was tested for wheat straw pulp bleaching, with or without a laccase mediator system and xylanase. Best results were obtained using a bi-sequential process with a sequence including xylanase, FAEA and laccase, and yielded very efficient delignification--close to 75%--and a kappa number of 3.9. This is the first report on the potential application of recombinant FAEA in the pulp and paper sector.
Journal Article
Production of a chimeric enzyme tool associating the Trichoderma reesei swollenin with the Aspergillus niger feruloyl esterase A for release of ferulic acid
2006
The main goals of this work were to produce the fusion protein of the Trichoderma reesei swollenin I (SWOI) and Aspergillus niger feruloyl esterase A (FAEA) and to study the effect of the physical association of the fusion partners on the efficiency of the enzyme. The fusion protein was produced up to 25 mg l^sup -1^ in the T. reesei strains Rut-C30 and CL847. In parallel, FAEA alone was produced for use as a control protein in application tests. Recombinant FAEA and SWOI-FAEA were purified to homogeneity and characterized. The biochemical and kinetic characteristics of the two recombinant proteins were found to be similar to those of native FAEA, except for the temperature stability and specific activity of the SWOI-FAEA. Finally, the SWOI-FAEA protein was tested for release of ferulic acid from wheat bran. A period of 24 h of enzymatic hydrolysis with the SWOI-FAEA improved the efficiency of ferulic acid release by 50% compared with the results obtained using the free FAEA and SWOI. Ferulic acid is used as an antioxidant and flavor precursor in the food and pharmaceutical industries. This is the first report of a potential application of the SWOI protein fused with an enzyme of industrial interest.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Journal Article
Heterologous production of a laccase from the basidiomycete Pycnoporus cinnabarinus in the dimorphic yeast Yarrowia lipolytica
by
Asther, Marcel
,
Chamkha, Mohamed
,
Beckerich, Jean-Marie
in
Aspergillus
,
Basidiomycetes
,
Basidiomycota - enzymology
2005
Pycnoporus cinnabarinus lac1 gene was expressed in
Yarrowia lipolytica. Different secretion signals and culture media were tested. Production was correlated to both culture growth rate and cell morphology (highest at low growth rate, without mycelium). Recombinant laccase was characterized (immunodetection, N-terminal sequencing) and purified. Production was estimated to 20 mg
l
−1 in a bioreactor. Thus, complex metalloenzymes can be produced in
Yarrowia, assuming some control of host physiology. Lac1p production was compared in
Yarrowia,
Pichia and
Aspergillus: recombinant proteins were active, but host systems differed in transformation efficiency, production, and glycosylation. If not the best producer,
Yarrowia offers very high transformation efficiencies, allowing the genetic engineering of laccases for industrial applications.
Journal Article
Transgenic rice as a novel production system for Melanocarpus and Pycnoporus laccases
by
Asther, Marcel
,
Andberg, Martina
,
Lomascolo, Anne
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Ascomycota - enzymology
,
Biological and medical sciences
2008
Laccases have numerous biotechnological applications, among them food processing. The widespread use of laccases has increased the demand for an inexpensive and safe source of recombinant enzyme. We explored the use of a rice-based system for the production of two fungal laccases derived from the ascomycete
Melanocarpus albomyces
and the basidiomycete
Pycnoporus cinnabarinus
. High-expression levels of active recombinant laccases were achieved by targeting expression to the endosperm of rice seeds. The laccase cDNAs were fused to a plant-derived signal sequence for targeting to the secretory pathway, and placed under the control of a constitutive seed-specific promoter fused to an intron for enhanced expression. This construct enabled the recovery of on average 0.1–1% of soluble laccase in total soluble proteins (TSP). The highest yields of recombinant laccases obtained in rice seeds were 13 and 39 ppm for riceMaL and ricePycL, respectively. The rice-produced laccases were purified and characterized. The wild-type and the recombinant proteins showed similar biochemical features in terms of molecular mass, pI, temperature and optimal pH and the N-terminus was correctly processed. Although presenting lower kinetic parameters, the rice-produced laccases were also suitable for the oxidative cross-linking of a food model substrate [maize-bran feruloylated arabinoxylans (AX)].
Journal Article
Exploration of members of Aspergillus sections Nigri, Flavi, and Terrei for feruloyl esterase production
by
Navarro, D
,
Record, E
,
Asther, M
in
Aspergillus
,
Aspergillus - classification
,
Aspergillus - enzymology
2006
The ability of members of Aspergillus sections Nigri, Flavi, and Terrei to produce feruloyl esterases was studied according to their substrate specificity against synthetic methyl esters of hydroxycinnamic acids. Type A feruloyl esterases (FAEA), induced during growth on cereal-derived products, show a preference for the phenolic moiety of substrates that contain methoxy substitutions, as found in methyl sinapinate, whereas type B feruloyl esterases (FAEB) show a preference for the phenolic moiety of substrates that contain hydroxyl substitutions, as occurs in methyl caffeate. All the strains of Aspergillus section Nigri (e.g., A. niger and A. foetidus) were able to produce feruloyl esterases with activity profiles similar to those reported for FAEA and FAEB of A. niger when grown on oat-spelt xylan and sugar beet pulp, respectively. The two genes encoding these proteins, faeA and faeB, were identified by Southern blot analysis. The strains of Aspergillus sections Flavi (e.g., A. flavus, A. flavo-furcatus, and A. tamarii) and Terrei (e.g., A. terreus) were able to produce type A and type B enzymes. faeA was revealed in genomic DNA of these strains, and FAEA was determined by immunodetection in cultures grown in oat-spelt xylan. In addition, type B enzymes, not related to faeB, were efficiently induced by oat-spelt xylan and exhibited very original activity profiles on sugar beet pulp. This work confirms that the members of the genus Aspergillus are good feruloyl esterase producers.Key words: Aspergillus, Nigri, Flavi, Terrei, feruloyl esterase.
Journal Article
Isolation from a Shea Cake Digester of a Tannin-Tolerant Escherichia coli Strain Decarboxylating p -Hydroxybenzoic and Vanillic Acids
2002
A facultatively anaerobic, mesophilic, Gram-negative, non-motile, non-sporulated bacterium, designated strain C2, was isolated from an anaerobic digester fed with shea cake rich in tannins and aromatic compounds and previously inoculated with anaerobic sludge from the pit of a slaughterhouse, after enrichment on tannic acid. The straight rods occurred singly or in pairs. Strain C2 fermented numerous carbohydrates (fructose, galactose, glucose, lactose, mannose, maltose, melibiose, raffinose, rhamnose, ribose, saccharose, sorbitol, trehalose, and xylose) and peptides (Biotrypcase, Casamino acids, and yeast extract), producing acid and gas, and had a G + C content of 51.6 +/- 0.1 mol %. Strain C2 was very closely related to Escherichia coli (= DSM 30083(T)) phylogenetically (similarity of 99%), genotypically (DNA homology of 79%), and phenotypically. The isolate tolerated tannic acid (hydrolyzable tannin) and decarboxylated by non-oxidative decarboxylation only p-hydroxybenzoic and vanillic acids to their corresponding phenol and guaicol, under anaerobic and aerobic conditions without further degradation. Adding glucose increased growth and the rate of conversion. High concentrations of p-hydroxybenzoic acid or vanillic acid inhibited growth, and decarboxylation could not occur completely, suggesting phenol toxicity. In contrast, the type strain of E. coli cannot metabolize p-hydroxybenzoic and vanillic acids, anaerobically or aerobically, with or without glucose added.
Journal Article