Penicillium chrysogenum as a fungal factory for feruloyl esterases

[EN] Abstract: Plant biomass is a promising substrate for biorefinery, as well as a source of bioactive compounds, platform chemicals, and precursors with multiple industrial applications. These applications depend on the hydrolysis of its recalcitrant structure. However, the effective biological de...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: García Calvo, Laura, Rodríguez Castro, Raquel, Ullán, Ricardo V., Albillos García, Silvia María, Fernández Aguado, Marta, Vicente, Claudia M., Degnes, Kristin F., Sletta, Håvard, Barreiro Méndez, Carlos
Formato: artículo
Estado:Versión aceptada para publicación
Fecha de publicación:2023
País:España
Recursos:Universidad de León
Repositorio:BULERIA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de León
OAI Identifier:oai:buleria.unileon.es:10612/27114
Acesso em linha:https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00253-022-12335-w
https://hdl.handle.net/10612/27114
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Biología
Bioquímica
Biotecnología
Fungi
Penicillium rubens
Penicillium chrysogenum
Lignocellulose
Feruloyl esterase
Extracellular proteome
2403 Bioquímica
Descrição
Resumo:[EN] Abstract: Plant biomass is a promising substrate for biorefinery, as well as a source of bioactive compounds, platform chemicals, and precursors with multiple industrial applications. These applications depend on the hydrolysis of its recalcitrant structure. However, the effective biological degradation of plant cell walls requires several enzymatic groups acting synergistically, and novel enzymes are needed in order to achieve profitable industrial hydrolysis processes. In the present work, a feruloyl esterase (FAE) activity screening of Penicillium spp. strains revealed a promising candidate (Penicillium rubens Wisconsin 54–1255; previously Penicillium chrysogenum), where two FAE-ORFs were identified and subsequently overexpressed. Enzyme extracts were analyzed, confirming the presence of FAE activity in the respective gene products (PrFaeA and PrFaeB). PrFaeB-enriched enzyme extracts were used to determine the FAE activity optima (pH 5.0 and 50–55 °C) and perform proteome analysis by means of MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry. The studies were completed with the determination of other lignocellulolytic activities, an untargeted metabolite analysis, and upscaled FAE production in stirred tank reactors. The findings described in this work present P. rubens as a promising lignocellulolytic enzyme producer. Key points: • Two Penicillium rubens ORFs were first confirmed to have feruloyl esterase activity. • Overexpression of the ORFs produced a novel P. rubens strain with improved activity. • The first in-depth proteomic study of a P. rubens lignocellulolytic extract is shown