Enzymically attaching oligosaccharide-linked ‘cargoes’ to cellulose and other commercial polysaccharides via stable covalent bonds
The Equisetum enzyme hetero-trans-β-glucanase (HTG) covalently grafts native plant cellulose (donor-substrate) to xyloglucan (acceptor-substrate), potentially offering a novel ‘green’ method of cellulose functionalisation. However, the range of cellulosic and non-cellulosic donor substrates that can...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of biological macromolecules 2020-12, Vol.164, p.4359-4369 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Equisetum enzyme hetero-trans-β-glucanase (HTG) covalently grafts native plant cellulose (donor-substrate) to xyloglucan (acceptor-substrate), potentially offering a novel ‘green’ method of cellulose functionalisation. However, the range of cellulosic and non-cellulosic donor substrates that can be utilised by HTG is unknown, limiting our insight into its biotechnological potential. Here we show that HTG binds all celluloses tested (papers, tissues, hydrogels, bacterial cellulose) to radioactively- or fluorescently-labelled xyloglucan-heptasaccharide (XXXGol; acceptor-substrate). Glycol-chitin, glycol-chitosan and chitosan also acted as donor substrates but less effectively than cellulose. Cellulose-XXXGol conjugates were formed throughout the volume of a block of hydrogel, demonstrating penetration. Plant-derived celluloses (cellulose Iβ) became more effective donor-substrates after ‘mercerisation’ in ≥3 M NaOH; the opposite was true for bacterial cellulose Iα. Cellulose-XXXGol bonds resisted boiling 6 M NaOH, demonstrating strong glycosidic bonding. In conclusion, HTG stably grafts native and processed celluloses to xyloglucan-oligosaccharides, which may carry valuable ‘cargoes’, exemplified by sulphorhodamine. We thus demonstrate HTG's biotechnological potential to modify various cellulose-based substrates such as textiles, pulps, papers, packaging, sanitary products and hydrogels.
•Transglucanase covalently bonds cellulose to xyloglucan-linked cargoes (e.g. dyes).•This plant enzyme can modify various natural and commercial cellulosic materials.•Cellulose–xyloglucan bonds are highly stable, resisting hot concentrated alkali.•The enzyme can be produced heterologously in yeast or extracted from plants.•The approach offers a novel ‘green’ technology for cellulose functionalisation. |
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ISSN: | 0141-8130 1879-0003 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2020.09.039 |