PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Discovery and Characterization of a Thermostable and Highly Halotolerant GH5 Cellulase from an Icelandic Hot Spring Isolate.

  • Dimitra Zarafeta,
  • Dimitrios Kissas,
  • Christopher Sayer,
  • Sóley R Gudbergsdottir,
  • Efthymios Ladoukakis,
  • Michail N Isupov,
  • Aristotelis Chatziioannou,
  • Xu Peng,
  • Jennifer A Littlechild,
  • Georgios Skretas,
  • Fragiskos N Kolisis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146454
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. e0146454

Abstract

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With the ultimate goal of identifying robust cellulases for industrial biocatalytic conversions, we have isolated and characterized a new thermostable and very halotolerant GH5 cellulase. This new enzyme, termed CelDZ1, was identified by bioinformatic analysis from the genome of a polysaccharide-enrichment culture isolate, initiated from material collected from an Icelandic hot spring. Biochemical characterization of CelDZ1 revealed that it is a glycoside hydrolase with optimal activity at 70°C and pH 5.0 that exhibits good thermostability, high halotolerance at near-saturating salt concentrations, and resistance towards metal ions and other denaturing agents. X-ray crystallography of the new enzyme showed that CelDZ1 is the first reported cellulase structure that lacks the defined sugar-binding 2 subsite and revealed structural features which provide potential explanations of its biochemical characteristics.