Gilvan Pessoa Furtado
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Gilvan Pessoa Furtado.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Lucas Ferreira Ribeiro; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Marcos Roberto Lourenzoni; Antonio J. Costa-Filho; Camila R. Santos; Simone de Carvalho Peixoto Nogueira; Jorge Betini; Maria de Lourdes Teixeira de Moraes Polizeli; Mario Tyago Murakami; Richard J. Ward
Background: Rational design methods can be used to create chimeric enzymes with novel catalytic combinations. Results: Bifunctional enzymes combining xylanase and laccase activities showed enhanced catalytic activity and stability. Conclusion: Formation of an inter-domain interface alters enzyme conformation that enhances catalytic performance of the chimera. Significance: Deeper understanding of structural principles of protein fusion can improve the design of novel catalysts. Two bifunctional enzymes exhibiting combined xylanase and laccase activities were designed, constructed, and characterized by biochemical and biophysical methods. The Bacillus subtilis cotA and xynA genes were used as templates for gene fusion, and the xynA coding sequence was inserted into a surface loop of the cotA. A second chimera was built replacing the wild-type xynA gene by a thermostable variant (xynAG3) previously obtained by in vitro molecular evolution. Kinetic measurements demonstrated that the pH and temperature optima of the catalytic domains in the chimeras were altered by less than 0.5 pH units and 5 °C, respectively, when compared with the parental enzymes. In contrast, the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of the laccase activity in both chimeras was 2-fold higher than for the parental laccase. Molecular dynamics simulations of the CotA-XynA chimera indicated that the two domains are in close contact, which was confirmed by the low resolution structure obtained by small angle x-ray scattering. The simulation also indicates that the formation of the inter-domain interface causes the dislocation of the loop comprising residues Leu-558 to Lys-573 in the laccase domain, resulting in a more accessible active site and exposing the type I Cu2+ ion to the solvent. These structural changes are consistent with the results from UV-visible electronic and EPR spectroscopy experiments of the type I copper between the native and chimeric enzymes and are likely to contribute to the observed increase in catalytic turnover number.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
André R.L. Damásio; Liliane Fraga Costa Ribeiro; Lucas F. Ribeiro; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Fernando Segato; Fausto Almeida; Augusto C. Crivellari; Marcos S. Buckeridge; Tatiana de Arruda Campos Brasil de Souza; Mario Tyago Murakami; Richard John Ward; Rolf A. Prade; Maria de Lourdes Teixeira de Moraes Polizeli
Xyloglucan is a major structural polysaccharide of the primary (growing) cell wall of higher plants. It consists of a cellulosic backbone (beta-1,4-linked glucosyl residues) that is frequently substituted with side chains. This report describes Aspergillus nidulans strain A773 recombinant secretion of a dimeric xyloglucan-specific endo-β-1,4-glucanohydrolase (XegA) cloned from Aspergillus niveus. The ORF of the A. niveus xegA gene is comprised of 714 nucleotides, and encodes a 238 amino acid protein with a calculated molecular weight of 23.5kDa and isoelectric point of 4.38. The optimal pH and temperature were 6.0 and 60°C, respectively. XegA generated a xyloglucan-oligosaccharides (XGOs) pattern similar to that observed for cellulases from family GH12, i.e., demonstrating that its mode of action includes hydrolysis of the glycosidic linkages between glucosyl residues that are not branched with xylose. In contrast to commercial lichenase, mixed linkage beta-glucan (lichenan) was not digested by XegA, indicating that the enzyme did not cleave glucan β-1,3 or β-1,6 bonds. The far-UV CD spectrum of the purified enzyme indicated a protein rich in β-sheet structures as expected for GH12 xyloglucanases. Thermal unfolding studies displayed two transitions with mid-point temperatures of 51.3°C and 81.3°C respectively, and dynamic light scattering studies indicated that the first transition involves a change in oligomeric state from a dimeric to a monomeric form. Since the enzyme is a predominantly a monomer at 60°C, the enzymatic assays demonstrated that XegA is more active in its monomeric state.
Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2013
Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Lucas F. Ribeiro; M.R. Lourenzoni; Richard John Ward
A bifunctional enzyme has been created by fusing two Bacillus subtilis enzymes: the β-1,3-1,4-glucanase (BglS, EC 3.2.1.73) that hydrolyzes plant cell wall β-glucans and the copper-dependent oxidase laccase (CotA, EC 1.10.3.2) that catalyzes the oxidation of aromatic compounds with simultaneous reduction of oxygen to water. The chimeric laccase/β-1,3-1,4-glucanase was created by insertion fusion of the bglS and cotA genes, and expressed in Escherichia coli. The affinity-purified recombinant chimeric enzyme showed both laccase and glucanase activities, with a maximum laccase activity at pH 4.5 and 75°C that showed a V(max) 30% higher than observed for the parental laccase. The maximum glucanase activity in the chimeric enzyme was at pH 6.0 and 50°C, with a slight reduction in V(max) by ∼10% compared with the parental glucanase. A decreased K(M) resulted in an overall increase in the K(cat)/K(M) value for the glucanase activity of the chimeric enzyme. The hydrolytic activity of the chimera was 20% higher against natural milled sugarcane bagasse as compared with equimolar mixtures of the separate parental enzymes. Molecular dynamics simulations indicated the approximation of the two catalytic domains in the chimeric enzyme, and the formation of an inter-domain interface may underlie the improved catalytic function.
Toxicon | 2015
Eduardo Crosara Roncolato; Lucas Benício Campos; Gabriela Pessenda; Luciano C. Silva; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; José Elpidio Barbosa
In this work, we present recent advances in the use of phage display technology for the preparation of antivenoms for animal toxin neutralization. Even though classical antivenoms have been used since the early 20th century, envenomation remains a global public health problem. Recently, the phage display technique has been used in an attempt to circumvent some of the difficulties associated with traditional preparations of antivenom. Here, we review studies that developed antibody fragments with potential inhibitory effects against animal toxins and discuss the most current technical issues and perspectives regarding phage display technology in this field.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2013
Lucas F. Ribeiro; Fabiana Bressan; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Flavio Meireles; Richard John Ward
A gene circuit for the controlled expression of a marker gene and for the assay of xylose concentration in Escherichia coli has been designed and tested. The xylF coding sequence for the xylose binding protein (XBP) was cloned in pT7T318U downstream from the promoter for xylanase A from B. subtilis (Pbsu), together with the GFP coding sequence (gfp) under the control of the xylF promoter, forming the pT7T3-GFP-XBP construct. GFP fluorescence in Escherichia coli JW3538-1 xylF-transformed with pT7T3-GFP-XBP was approximately 1.4 × higher after 520 min growth in the presence of 5mM xylose than in cells transformed with pT7T3-GFP. Under saturating xylose concentration, flow cytometry analysis showed that all cells resulted in homogeneous populations, and the population with XBP showed a fluorescence greater than that without XBP. Activity of the xylF promoter in cells transformed with pT7T3-GFP-XBP was ≈ 40% higher than with the pT7T3-GFP. No response was observed with arabinose and ribose, showing that the expression effects were specific for xylose, demonstrating the potential use of the gene circuit as a biosensor.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Rafael Silva-Rocha; Marjorie Cornejo Pontelli; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Livia Soares Zaramela; Tie Koide
Our ability to genetically manipulate living organisms is usually constrained by the efficiency of the genetic tools available for the system of interest. In this report, we present the design, construction and characterization of a set of four new modular vectors, the pHsal series, for engineering Halobacterium salinarum, a model halophilic archaeon widely used in systems biology studies. The pHsal shuttle vectors are organized in four modules: (i) the E. coli’s specific part, containing a ColE1 origin of replication and an ampicillin resistance marker, (ii) the resistance marker and (iii) the replication origin, which are specific to H. salinarum and (iv) the cargo, which will carry a sequence of interest cloned in a multiple cloning site, flanked by universal M13 primers. Each module was constructed using only minimal functional elements that were sequence edited to eliminate redundant restriction sites useful for cloning. This optimization process allowed the construction of vectors with reduced sizes compared to currently available platforms and expanded multiple cloning sites. Additionally, the strong constitutive promoter of the fer2 gene was sequence optimized and incorporated into the platform to allow high-level expression of heterologous genes in H. salinarum. The system also includes a new minimal suicide vector for the generation of knockouts and/or the incorporation of chromosomal tags, as well as a vector for promoter probing using a GFP gene as reporter. This new set of optimized vectors should strongly facilitate the engineering of H. salinarum and similar strategies could be implemented for other archaea.
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2018
Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Marcos Roberto Lourenzoni; Carlos Alessandro Fuzo; Raquel Fonseca-Maldonado; María-Eugenia Guazzaroni; Lucas Ferreira Ribeiro; Richard J. Ward
Carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs) are non-catalytic domains within larger multidomain polypeptides. The CelH from Ruminoclostridium (Clostridium) thermocellum contains a family 11 CBM (RtCBM11) with high binding affinity for the linear polysaccharide β-glucan, and low affinity for the branched xyloglucan. Screening a random RtCBM11 mutant phage library created by error prone PCR for xyloglucan binding identified RtCBM11 mutants with enhanced xyloglucan affinity. Subsequent recombination of the selected variants by site-directed mutagenesis generated the H102L/Y152F and Y46N/G52D/H102L/Y152F mutants. Fusion of the quadruple RtCBM11 mutant with the xyloglucanase from Aspergillus niveus increased the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme by 38%. Isothermal titration calorimetry demonstrated increased xyloglucan affinity for both mutants and reduced affinity for β-glucan in the H102L/Y152F mutant. Molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the increased xyloglucan specificity results both from formation of a xylosyl binding pocket in the carbohydrate binding cleft, and via modulation of a hydrogen bond network between the oligosaccharide ligand and the protein. These results explain the improved xyloglucan binding in the RtCBM11 H102L/Y152F mutant and advance the understanding of the structural determinants of CBMs binding that discriminate between branched and unbranched polysaccharides.
Process Biochemistry | 2011
Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Lucas F. Ribeiro; Camila R. Santos; Celisa C. C. Tonoli; Angelica Rodrigues de Souza; Renata Rocha de Oliveira; Mario Tyago Murakami; Richard John Ward
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015
Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Camila R. Santos; Rosa Lorizolla Cordeiro; Lucas F. Ribeiro; Luiz A. B. de Moraes; André R.L. Damásio; Maria de Lourdes Teixeira de Moraes Polizeli; Marcos Roberto Lourenzoni; Mario Tyago Murakami; Richard John Ward
Process Biochemistry | 2014
Raquel Fonseca-Maldonado; Lucas F. Ribeiro; Gilvan Pessoa Furtado; Letícia Magalhães Arruda; Luana Parras Meleiro; Juliana S. Alponti; Carla Botelho-Machado; Davi Serradella Vieira; Eric Bonneil; Rosa Prazeres Melo Furriel; Pierre Thibault; Richard John Ward