International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

Biochemical Characterization of Pyranose Oxidase from <i>Streptomyces canus</i>—Towards a Better Understanding of Pyranose Oxidase Homologues in Bacteria

  • Anja Kostelac,
  • Leander Sützl,
  • Jolanta Puc,
  • Valentina Furlanetto,
  • Christina Divne,
  • Dietmar Haltrich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 21
p. 13595

Abstract

Read online

Pyranose oxidase (POx, glucose 2-oxidase; EC 1.1.3.10, pyranose:oxygen 2-oxidoreductase) is an FAD-dependent oxidoreductase and a member of the auxiliary activity (AA) enzymes (subfamily AA3_4) in the CAZy database. Despite the general interest in fungal POxs, only a few bacterial POxs have been studied so far. Here, we report the biochemical characterization of a POx from Streptomyces canus (ScPOx), the sequence of which is positioned in a separate, hitherto unexplored clade of the POx phylogenetic tree. Kinetic analyses revealed that ScPOx uses monosaccharide sugars (such as d-glucose, d-xylose, d-galactose) as its electron-donor substrates, albeit with low catalytic efficiencies. Interestingly, various C- and O-glycosides (such as puerarin) were oxidized by ScPOx as well. Some of these glycosides are characteristic substrates for the recently described FAD-dependent C-glycoside 3-oxidase from Microbacterium trichothecenolyticum. Here, we show that FAD-dependent C-glycoside 3-oxidases and pyranose oxidases are enzymes belonging to the same sequence space.

Keywords