Douglas B. Jordan
National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research
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Featured researches published by Douglas B. Jordan.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2010
Douglas B. Jordan; Kurt Wagschal
Xylan 1,4-β-D-xylosidase catalyzes hydrolysis of non-reducing end xylose residues from xylooligosaccharides. The enzyme is currently used in combination with β-xylanases in several large-scale processes for improving baking properties of bread dough, improving digestibility of animal feed, production of d-xylose for xylitol manufacture, and deinking of recycled paper. On a grander scale, the enzyme could find employment alongside cellulases and other hemicellulases in hydrolyzing lignocellulosic biomass so that reaction product monosaccharides can be fermented to biofuels such as ethanol and butanol. Catalytically efficient enzyme, performing under saccharification reactor conditions, is critical to the feasibility of enzymatic saccharification processes. This is particularly important for β-xylosidase which would catalyze breakage of more glycosidic bonds of hemicellulose than any other hemicellulase. In this paper, we review applications and properties of the enzyme with emphasis on the catalytically efficient β-d-xylosidase from Selenomonas ruminantium and its potential use in saccharification of lignocellulosic biomass for producing biofuels.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008
Joseph S. Brunzelle; Douglas B. Jordan; Darrell R. McCaslin; Andrzej Olczak; Zdzislaw Wawrzak
The three-dimensional structure of the catalytically efficient beta-xylosidase from Selenomonas ruminantium in complex with competitive inhibitor 1,3-bis[tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]propane (BTP) was determined by using X-ray crystallography (1.3A resolution). Most H bonds between inhibitor and protein occur within subsite -1, including one between the carboxyl group of E186 and an N group of BTP. The other N of BTP occupies subsite +1 near K99. E186 (pK(a) 7.2) serves as catalytic acid. The pH (6-10) profile for 1/K(i)((BTP)) is bell-shaped with pK(a)s 6.8 and 7.8 on the acidic limb assigned to E186 and inhibitor groups and 9.9 on the basic limb assigned to inhibitor. Mutation K99A eliminates pK(a) 7.8, strongly suggesting that the BTP monocation binds to the dianionic enzyme D14(-)E186(-). A sedimentation equilibrium experiment estimates a K(d) ([dimer](2)/[tetramer]) of 7 x 10(-9)M. Similar k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) values were determined when the tetramer/dimer ratio changes from 0.0028 to 26 suggesting that dimers and tetramers are equally active forms.
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2008
Douglas B. Jordan
Catalytically efficient β-d-xylosidase from Selenomonas ruminantium (SXA) exhibits pKas 5 and 7 (assigned to catalytic base, D14, and catalytic acid, E186) for kcat/Km with substrates 1,4-β-d-xylobiose (X2) and 1,4-β-d-xylotriose (X3). Catalytically inactive, dianionic SXA (D14−E186−) has threefold lower affinity than catalytically active, monoanionic SXA (D14−E186H) for X2 and X3, whereas D14−E186− has twofold higher affinity than D14−E186H for 4-nitrophenyl-β-d-xylopyranoside (4NPX), and D14−E186− has no affinity for 4-nitrophenyl-α-l-arabinofuranoside. Anomeric isomers, α-d-xylose and β-d-xylose, have similar affinity for SXA. 4-Nitrophenol competitively inhibits SXA-catalyzed hydrolysis of 4NPX. SXA steady-state kinetic parameters account for complete progress curves of SXA-catalyzed hydrolysis reactions.
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2007
Douglas B. Jordan; Xin-Liang Li; Christopher A. Dunlap; Terence R. Whitehead; Michael A. Cotta
Abstractβ-d-Xylosidase from the ruminal anaerobic bacterium, Selenomonas ruminantium (SXA), catalyzes hydrolysis of β-1,4-xylooligosacharides and has potential utility in saccharification processes. The enzyme, heterologously produced in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, has an isoelectric point of approx 4.4, an intact N terminus, and a Stokes radius that defines a homotetramer. SXA denatures between pH 4.0 and 4.3 at 25°C and between 50 and 60°C at pH 5.3. Following heat or acid treatment, partially inactivated SXA exhibits lower kcat values, but similar Km values as untreated SXA. d-Glucose and d-xylose protect SXA from inactivation at high temperature and low pH.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010
Michael J. Bowman; Douglas B. Jordan; Karl E. Vermillion; Jay D. Braker; Jaewoong Moon; Z. Lewis Liu
ABSTRACT Ari1p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, recently identified as an intermediate-subclass short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase, contributes in situ to the detoxification of furfural. Furfural inhibits efficient ethanol production by yeast, particularly when the carbon source is acid-treated lignocellulose, which contains furfural at a relatively high concentration. NADPH is Ari1ps best known hydride donor. Here we report the stereochemistry of the hydride transfer step, determined by using (4R)-[4-2H]NADPD and (4S)-[4-2H]NADPD and unlabeled furfural in Ari1p-catalyzed reactions and following the deuterium atom into products 2-furanmethanol or NADP+. Analysis of the products demonstrates unambiguously that Ari1p directs hydride transfer from the si face of NADPH to the re face of furfural. The singular orientation of substrates enables construction of a model of the Michaelis complex in the Ari1p active site. The model reveals hydrophobic residues near the furfural binding site that, upon mutation, may increase specificity for furfural and enhance enzyme performance. Using (4S)-[4-2H]NADPD and NADPH as substrates, primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects of 2.2 and 2.5 were determined for the steady-state parameters kcatNADPH and kcat/KmNADPH, respectively, indicating that hydride transfer is partially rate limiting to catalysis.
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2013
Charles C. Lee; Jay D. Braker; Arabela A. Grigorescu; Kurt Wagschal; Douglas B. Jordan
Depolymerization of xylan, a major fraction of lignocellulosic biomass, releases xylose which can be converted into transportation fuels and chemical feedstocks. A requisite enzyme for the breakdown of xylan is β-xylosidase. A gene encoding the 324-amino acid β-xylosidase, RS223-BX, was cloned from an anaerobic mixed microbial culture. This glycoside hydrolase belongs to family 43. Unlike other GH43 enzymes, RS223-BX can be strongly activated by exogenously supplied Ca(2+), Co(2+), Fe(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+) and Ni(2+) (e.g., 28-fold by Mg(2+)) and it is inhibited by Cu(2+) or Zn(2+). Sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation experiments indicated that the divalent metal cations mediate multimerization of the enzyme from a dimeric to a tetrameric state, which have equal catalytic activity on an active-site basis. Compared to the determined active sites of other GH43 β-xylosidases, the predicted active site of RS223-BX contains two additional amino acids with carboxylated side chains that provide potential sites for divalent metal cations to reside. Thus, the divalent metal cations likely occupy the active site and participate in the catalytic mechanism. RS223-BX accepts as substrate xylobiose, arabinobiose, 4-nitrophenyl-β-D-xylopyranoside, and 4-nitrophenyl-α-L-arabinofuranoside. Additionally, the enzyme has good pH and temperature stabilities and a large K(i) for D-glucose (1.3 M), favorable properties for performance in saccharification reactors.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011
Douglas B. Jordan; Jay D. Braker; Michael J. Bowman; Karl E. Vermillion; Jaewoong Moon; Z. Lewis Liu
An effective means of relieving the toxicity of furan aldehydes, furfural (FFA) and 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), on fermenting organisms is essential for achieving efficient fermentation of lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol and other products. Ari1p, an aldehyde reductase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, has been shown to mitigate the toxicity of FFA and HMF by catalyzing the NADPH-dependent conversion to corresponding alcohols, furfuryl alcohol (FFOH) and 5-hydroxymethylfurfuryl alcohol (HMFOH). At pH 7.0 and 25°C, purified Ari1p catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of substrates with the following values (k(cat) (s(-1)), k(cat)/K(m) (s(-1)mM(-1)), K(m) (mM)): FFA (23.3, 1.82, 12.8), HMF (4.08, 0.173, 23.6), and dl-glyceraldehyde (2.40, 0.0650, 37.0). When acting on HMF and dl-glyceraldehyde, the enzyme operates through an equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism. In the physiological direction of the reaction, NADPH binds first and NADP(+) dissociates from the enzyme last, demonstrated by k(cat) of HMF and dl-glyceraldehyde that are independent of [NADPH] and (K(ia)(NADPH)/k(cat)) that extrapolate to zero at saturating HMF or dl-glyceraldehyde concentration. Microscopic kinetic parameters were determined for the HMF reaction (HMF+NADPH↔HMFOH+NADP(+)), by applying steady-state, presteady-state, kinetic isotope effects, and dynamic modeling methods. Release of products, HMFOH and NADP(+), is 84% rate limiting to k(cat) in the forward direction. Equilibrium constants, [NADP(+)][FFOH]/[NADPH][FFA][H(+)]=5600×10(7)M(-1) and [NADP(+)][HMFOH]/[NADPH][HMF][H(+)]=4200×10(7)M(-1), favor the physiological direction mirrored by the slowness of hydride transfer in the non-physiological direction, NADP(+)-dependent oxidation of alcohols (k(cat) (s(-1)), k(cat)/K(m) (s(-1)mM(-1)), K(m) (mM)): FFOH (0.221, 0.00158, 140) and HMFOH (0.0105, 0.000104, 101).
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2015
Kurt Wagschal; Douglas B. Jordan; Charles C. Lee; Aunna Younger; Jay D. Braker; Victor J. Chan
Enzyme catalysts will be vital in the development of synthetic biology approaches for converting pectinic monosaccharides from citrus and beet processing waste streams to value-added materials. We describe here the biophysical and mechanistic characterization of uronate dehydrogenases from a wide variety of bacterial sources that convert galacturonic acid, the predominate building block of pectin from these plant sources, and glucuronic acid to their corresponding dicarboxylic acids galactarate and glucarate, the latter being a DOE top value biochemical from biomass. The enzymes from Pseudomonas syringae and Polaromonas naphthalenivorans were found to have the highest reported kcat(glucuronic acid) values, on the order of 220-270 s(-1). The thermal stability of this enzyme type is described for the first time here, where it was found that the Kt((0.5)) value range was >20 °C, and the enzyme from Chromohalobacter was moderately thermostable with Kt((0.5))=62.2 °C. The binding mechanism for these bi-substrate enzymes was also investigated in initial rate experiments, where a predominately steady-state ordered binding pattern was indicated.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2013
Douglas B. Jordan; Charles C. Lee; Kurt Wagschal; Jay D. Braker
RS223-BX of glycoside hydrolase family 43 is a β-d-xylosidase that is strongly activated (k(cat)/K(m) as much as 116-fold) by the addition of divalent metal cations, Ca(2+), Co(2+), Fe(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+) and Ni(2+). Slow activation by Mg(2+) was demonstrated (k(on) 0.013 s(-1) mM(-1), k(off) 0.008 s(-1)) at pH 7.0 and 25 °C. k(off) and k(on) values are independent of Mg(2+) concentration, but k(off) and k(on) are slower in the presence of increasing levels of substrate 4-nitrophenyl-β-D-xylopyranoside. The kinetics strongly suggest that M(2+) binds to the enzyme rapidly, forming E M(2+), followed by slow isomerization to the activated enzyme, E* M(2+). Moderately high values of kcat (7-30 s(-1)) were found for M(2+)-activated RS223-BX acting on xylobiose (natural substrate) at pH 7.0 and 25 °C. Certain M(2+)-activated RS223-BX exhibit the highest reported values of k(cat)/K(m) of any β-xylosidase acting on natural substrates: for example, at pH 7.0 and 25°C, xylobiose (Mn(2+), 190 s(-1) mM(-1)), xylotriose (Ca(2+), 150 s(-1) mM(-1)) and xylotetraose (Ca(2+), 260 s(-1) mM(-1)). There is potential for the enzyme to add value to industrial saccharification operations at low substrate and high d-glucose and high d-xylose concentrations.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009
Douglas B. Jordan; Jeffrey A. Mertens; Jay D. Braker
Catalysis and inhibitor binding by the GH43 beta-xylosidase are governed by the protonation states of catalytic base (D14, pK(a) 5.0) and catalytic acid (E186, pK(a) 7.2) which reside in subsite -1 of the two-subsite active site. Cationic aminoalcohols are shown to bind exclusively to subsite -1 of the catalytically-inactive, dianionic enzyme (D14(-)E186(-)). Enzyme (E) and aminoalcohols (A) form E-A with the affinity progression: triethanolamine>diethanolamine>ethanolamine. E186A mutation raises the K(i)(triethanolamine) 1000-fold. By occupying subsite -1 with aminoalcohols, affinity of monosaccharide inhibitors (I) for subsite +1 is demonstrated. The single access route for ligands into the active site dictates ordered formation of E-A followed by E-A-I. E-A-I forms with the affinity progression: ethanolamine>diethanolamine>triethanolamine. The latter affinity progression is seen in formation of E-A-substrate complexes with substrate 4-nitrophenyl-beta-d-xylopyranoside (4NPX). Inhibition patterns of aminoalcohols versus 4NPX appear competitive, noncompetitive, and uncompetitive depending on the strength of E-A-4NPX. E-A-substrate complexes form weakly with substrate 4-nitrophenyl-alpha-l-arabinofuranoside (4NPA), and inhibition patterns appear competitive. Biphasic inhibition by triethanolamine reveals minor (<0.03%) contamination of E186A preparations (including a His-Tagged form) by wild-type-like enzyme, likely originating from translational misreading. Aminoalcohols are useful in probing glycoside hydrolases; they cause artifacts when used unwarily as buffer components.