Matt Sweeney
Novozymes
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Featured researches published by Matt Sweeney.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011
James Langston; Tarana Shaghasi; Eric Abbate; Feng Xu; Elena Vlasenko; Matt Sweeney
ABSTRACT Several members of the glycoside hydrolase 61 (GH61) family of proteins have recently been shown to dramatically increase the breakdown of lignocellulosic biomass by microbial hydrolytic cellulases. However, purified GH61 proteins have neither demonstrable direct hydrolase activity on various polysaccharide or lignacious components of biomass nor an apparent hydrolase active site. Cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) is a secreted flavocytochrome produced by many cellulose-degrading fungi with no well-understood biological function. Here we demonstrate that the binary combination of Thermoascus aurantiacus GH61A (TaGH61A) and Humicola insolens CDH (HiCDH) cleaves cellulose into soluble, oxidized oligosaccharides. TaGH61A-HiCDH activity on cellulose is shown to be nonredundant with the activities of canonical endocellulase and exocellulase enzymes in microcrystalline cellulose cleavage, and while the combination of TaGH61A and HiCDH cleaves highly crystalline bacterial cellulose, it does not cleave soluble cellodextrins. GH61 and CDH proteins are coexpressed and secreted by the thermophilic ascomycete Thielavia terrestris in response to environmental cellulose, and the combined activities of T. terrestris GH61 and T. terrestris CDH are shown to synergize with T. terrestris cellulose hydrolases in the breakdown of cellulose. The action of GH61 and CDH on cellulose may constitute an important, but overlooked, biological oxidoreductive system that functions in microbial lignocellulose degradation and has applications in industrial biomass utilization.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Leigh C. Murphy; Nicolaj Cruys-Bagger; Heidi Delcomyn Damgaard; Martin J. Baumann; Søren N. Olsen; Kim Borch; Søren Flensted Lassen; Matt Sweeney; Hirosuke Tatsumi; Peter Westh
The kinetics of cellulose hydrolysis have longbeen described by an initial fast hydrolysis rate, tapering rapidly off, leading to a process that takes days rather than hours to complete. This behavior has been mainly attributed to the action of cellobiohydrolases and often linked to the processive mechanism of this exo-acting group of enzymes. The initial kinetics of endo-glucanases (EGs) is far less investigated, partly due to a limited availability of quantitative assay technologies. We have used isothermal calorimetry to monitor the early time course of the hydrolysis of insoluble cellulose by the three main EGs from Trichoderma reesei (Tr): TrCel7B (formerly EG I), TrCel5A (EG II), and TrCel12A (EG III). These endo-glucanases show a distinctive initial burst with a maximal rate that is about 5-fold higher than the rate after 5 min of hydrolysis. The burst is particularly conspicuous for TrCel7B, which reaches a maximal turnover of about 20 s−1 at 30 °C and conducts about 1200 catalytic cycles per enzyme molecule in the initial fast phase. For TrCel5A and TrCel12A the extent of the burst is 2–300 cycles per enzyme molecule. The availability of continuous data on EG activity allows an analysis of the mechanisms underlying the initial kinetics, and it is suggested that the slowdown is linked to transient inactivation of enzyme on the cellulose surface. We propose, therefore, that the frequency of structures on the substrate surface that cause transient inactivation determine the extent of the burst phase.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2010
Leigh Murphy; Martin J. Baumann; Kim Borch; Matt Sweeney; Peter Westh
The study of cellulolytic enzymes has traditionally been carried out using endpoint measurements by quantitation of reaction products using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or overall determination of produced reducing ends. To measure catalytic activity, model substrates such as solubilized cellulose derivates, soluble chromogenic, and fluorogenic oligomeric substrates are often employed even though they do not reflect the natural insoluble substrate hydrolysis. Thermochemical methods using, for example, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) yield data where the primary observable is heat production. This can be converted to the rate of reaction and allows direct and continuous monitoring of the hydrolysis of complex substrates. To overcome the low molar enthalpy of the hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond, which is typically on the order of -2.5 kJ mol(-1), an enzymatic signal amplification method has been developed to measure even slow hydrolytically active enzymes such as cellobiohydrolases. This method is explained in detail for the amplification of the heat signal by more than 130 times by using glucose oxidase and catalase. The kinetics of this complex coupled reaction system is thoroughly investigated, and the potential use to generate kinetic models of enzymatic hydrolysis of unmodified cellulosic substrates is demonstrated.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
James Langston; Kimberly Brown; Feng Xu; Kim Borch; Ashley Garner; Matt Sweeney
The enzyme cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) is of considerable interest, not only for its biotechnological applications, but also its potential biological role in lignocellulosic biomass breakdown. The enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of cellobiose and other cellodextrins, utilizing a variety of one- and two-electron acceptors, although the electron acceptor employed in nature is still unknown. In this study we show that a CDH is present in the secretome of the thermophilic ascomycete Thielavia terrestris when grown with cellulose, along with a mixture of cellulases and hemicellulases capable of breaking down lignocellulosic biomass. We report the cloning of this T. terrestris CDH gene (cbdA), its recombinant expression in Aspergillus oryzae, and purification and characterization of the T. terrestris CDH protein (TtCDH). The TtCDH shows spectral properties and enzyme activity similar to other characterized CDH enzymes. Substrate specificity was determined for a number of carbohydrate electron donors in the presence of the two-electron acceptor 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol. The TtCDH also shows dramatic synergy with Thermoascus aurantiacus glycoside hydrolase family 61A protein in the presence of a β-glucosidase for the cleavage of cellulose.
Archive | 2012
Janine Lin; Doreen Bohan; Michelle Maranta; Leslie Beresford; Michael Lamsa; Matt Sweeney; Mark Wogulis; Elizabeth Znameroski; Frank Winther Rasmussen
Archive | 2017
Bjarne Gram Hansen; Doreen Bohan; Douglas J Boyle; Frank Winther Rasmussen; Janine Lin; Leslie Beresford; Matt Sweeney; Michael Lamsa; Michaelle Maranta
Archive | 2013
Kirk Schnorr; Tarana Shaghasi; Matt Sweeney
Archive | 2013
Kirk Schnorr; Tarana Shaghasi; Matt Sweeney
Archive | 2013
Kirk Schnorr; Tarana Shaghasi; Matt Sweeney
Archive | 2012
Janine Lin; Doreen Bohan; Michelle Maranta; Leslie Beresford; Michael Lamsa; Bjarne Gram Hansen; Frank Winther Rasmussen; Matt Sweeney; Iii Douglas J. Boyle