Qualitative metabolomics-based characterization of a phenolic UDP-xylosyltransferase with a broad substrate spectrum from Lentinus brumalis

Wood-decaying fungi are the major decomposers of plant litter. Heavy sequencing efforts on genomes of wood-decaying fungi have recently been made due to the interest in their lignocellulolytic enzymes; however, most parts of their proteomes remain uncharted. We hypothesized that wood-decaying fungi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2023-07, Vol.120 (28), p.e2301007120-e2301007120
Hauptverfasser: Jeong, Eunah, Kim, Wonyong, Son, Seungju, Yang, Sungyeon, Gwon, Dasom, Hong, Jihee, Cho, Yoonhee, Jang, Chang-Young, Steinegger, Martin, Lim, Young Woon, Kang, Kyo Bin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Wood-decaying fungi are the major decomposers of plant litter. Heavy sequencing efforts on genomes of wood-decaying fungi have recently been made due to the interest in their lignocellulolytic enzymes; however, most parts of their proteomes remain uncharted. We hypothesized that wood-decaying fungi would possess promiscuous enzymes for detoxifying antifungal phytochemicals remaining in the dead plant bodies, which can be useful biocatalysts. We designed a computational mass spectrometry-based untargeted metabolomics pipeline for the phenotyping of biotransformation and applied it to 264 fungal cultures supplemented with antifungal plant phenolics. The analysis identified the occurrence of diverse reactivities by the tested fungal species. Among those, we focused on -xylosylation of multiple phenolics by one of the species tested, . By integrating the metabolic phenotyping results with publicly available genome sequences and transcriptome analysis, a UDP-glycosyltransferase designated UGT66A1 was identified and validated as an enzyme catalyzing -xylosylation with broad substrate specificity. We anticipate that our analytical workflow will accelerate the further characterization of fungal enzymes as promising biocatalysts.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2301007120