Suite of Activity-Based
Probes for Cellulose-Degrading
Enzymes
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Abstract
Microbial glycoside hydrolases play a dominant role in
the biochemical
conversion of cellulosic biomass to high-value biofuels. Anaerobic
cellulolytic bacteria are capable of producing multicomplex catalytic
subunits containing cell-adherent cellulases, hemicellulases, xylanases,
and other glycoside hydrolases to facilitate the degradation of highly
recalcitrant cellulose and other related plant cell wall polysaccharides. <i>Clostridium thermocellum</i> is a cellulosome-producing bacterium
that couples rapid reproduction rates to highly efficient degradation
of crystalline cellulose. Herein, we have developed and applied a
suite of difluoromethylphenyl aglycone, <i>N</i>-halogenated
glycosylamine, and 2-deoxy-2-fluoroglycoside activity-based protein
profiling (ABPP) probes to the direct labeling of the <i>C. thermocellum</i> cellulosomal secretome. These activity-based probes (ABPs) were
synthesized with alkynes to harness the utility and multimodal possibilities
of click chemistry and to increase enzyme active site inclusion for
liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) analysis.
We directly analyzed ABP-labeled and unlabeled global MS data, revealing
ABP selectivity for glycoside hydrolase (GH) enzymes, in addition
to a large collection of integral cellulosome-containing proteins.
By identifying reactivity and selectivity profiles for each ABP, we
demonstrate our ability to widely profile the functional cellulose-degrading
machinery of the bacterium. Derivatization of the ABPs, including
reactive groups, acetylation of the glycoside binding groups, and
mono- and disaccharide binding groups, resulted in considerable variability
in protein labeling. Our probe suite is applicable to aerobic and
anaerobic microbial cellulose-degrading systems and facilitates a
greater understanding of the organismal role associated with biofuel
development