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Dive into the research topics where Miguel Alcalde is active.

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Featured researches published by Miguel Alcalde.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2008

Engineering and Applications of fungal laccases for organic synthesis

Adinarayana Kunamneni; Susana Camarero; Carlos García-Burgos; Francisco J. Plou; Antonio Ballesteros; Miguel Alcalde

Laccases are multi-copper containing oxidases (EC 1.10.3.2), widely distributed in fungi, higher plants and bacteria. Laccase catalyses the oxidation of phenols, polyphenols and anilines by one-electron abstraction, with the concomitant reduction of oxygen to water in a four-electron transfer process. In the presence of small redox mediators, laccase offers a broader repertory of oxidations including non-phenolic substrates. Hence, fungal laccases are considered as ideal green catalysts of great biotechnological impact due to their few requirements (they only require air, and they produce water as the only by-product) and their broad substrate specificity, including direct bioelectrocatalysis.Thus, laccases and/or laccase-mediator systems find potential applications in bioremediation, paper pulp bleaching, finishing of textiles, bio-fuel cells and more. Significantly, laccases can be used in organic synthesis, as they can perform exquisite transformations ranging from the oxidation of functional groups to the heteromolecular coupling for production of new antibiotics derivatives, or the catalysis of key steps in the synthesis of complex natural products. In this review, the application of fungal laccases and their engineering by rational design and directed evolution for organic synthesis purposes are discussed.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Functional Expression of a Fungal Laccase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by Directed Evolution

Thomas Bulter; Miguel Alcalde; Volker Sieber; Peter Meinhold; Christian Schlachtbauer; Frances H. Arnold

ABSTRACT Laccase from Myceliophthora thermophila (MtL) was expressed in functional form in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Directed evolution improved expression eightfold to the highest yet reported for a laccase in yeast (18 mg/liter). Together with a 22-fold increase in kcat, the total activity was enhanced 170-fold. Specific activities of MtL mutants toward 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) and syringaldazine indicate that substrate specificity was not changed by the introduced mutations. The most effective mutation (10-fold increase in total activity) introduced a Kex2 protease recognition site at the C-terminal processing site of the protein, adjusting the protein sequence to the different protease specificities of the heterologous host. The C terminus is shown to be important for laccase activity, since removing it by a truncation of the gene reduces activity sixfold. Mutations accumulated during nine generations of evolution for higher activity decreased enzyme stability. Screening for improved stability in one generation produced a mutant more stable than the heterologous wild type and retaining the improved activity. The molecular mass of MtL expressed in S. cerevisiae is 30% higher than that of the same enzyme expressed in M. thermophila (110 kDa versus 85 kDa). Hyperglycosylation, corresponding to a 120-monomer glycan on one N-glycosylation site, is responsible for this increase. This S. cerevisiae expression system makes MtL available for functional tailoring by directed evolution.


Recent Patents on Biotechnology | 2008

Laccases and their applications: a patent review

Adinarayana Kunamneni; Francisco J. Plou; Antonio Ballesteros; Miguel Alcalde

Laccases are an interesting group of multi copper enzymes, which have received much attention of researchers in last decades due to their ability to oxidize both phenolic and non-phenolic lignin related compounds as well as highly recalcitrant environmental pollutants. This makes these biocatalysts very useful for their application in several biotechnological processes. Such applications include the detoxification of industrial effluents, mostly from the paper and pulp, textile and petrochemical industries, polymer synthesis, bioremediation of contaminated soils, wine and beverage stabilization. Laccases are also used as catalysts for the manufacture of anti-cancer drugs and even as ingredients in cosmetics. Recently, the utility of laccases has also been applied to nanobiotechnology. This paper reviews recent and important patents related to the properties, heterologous production, molecular cloning, and applications of laccases within different industrial fields as well as their potential extension to the nanobiotechnology area.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Novel Polyphenol Oxidase Mined from a Metagenome Expression Library of Bovine Rumen BIOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES, STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS, AND PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS

Ana Beloqui; Marcos Pita; Julio Polaina; A. Martínez-Arias; Olga V. Golyshina; Miren Zumárraga; Michail M. Yakimov; Humberto García-Arellano; Miguel Alcalde; Victor M. Fernandez; Kieran Elborough; Antonio Ballesteros; Francisco J. Plou; Kenneth N. Timmis; Manuel Ferrer; Peter N. Golyshin

RL5, a gene coding for a novel polyphenol oxidase, was identified through activity screening of a metagenome expression library from bovine rumen microflora. Characterization of the recombinant protein produced in Escherichia coli revealed a multipotent capacity to oxidize a wide range of substrates (syringaldazine > 2,6-dimethoxyphenol > veratryl alcohol > guaiacol > tetramethylbenzidine > 4-methoxybenzyl alcohol > 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) >> phenol red) over an unusually broad range of pH from 3.5 to 9.0. Apparent Km and kcat values for ABTS, syringaldazine, and 2,6-dimetoxyphenol obtained from steady-state kinetic measurements performed at 40 °C, pH 4.5, yielded values of 26, 0.43, and 0.45 μm and 18, 660, and 1175 s-1, respectively. The Km values for syringaldazine and 2,6-dimetoxyphenol are up to 5 times lower, and the kcat values up to 40 times higher, than values previously reported for this class of enzyme. RL5 is a 4-copper oxidase with oxidation potential values of 745, 400, and 500 mV versus normal hydrogen electrode for the T1, T2, and T3 copper sites. A three-dimensional model of RL5 and site-directed mutants were generated to identify the copper ligands. Bioinformatic analysis of the gene sequence and the sequences and contexts of neighboring genes suggested a tentative phylogenetic assignment to the genus Bacteroides. Kinetic, electrochemical, and EPR analyses provide unequivocal evidence that the hypothetical proteins from Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and from E. coli, which are closely related to the deduced protein encoded by the RL5 gene, are also multicopper proteins with polyphenol oxidase activity. The present study shows that these three newly characterized enzymes form a new family of functional multicopper oxidases with laccase activity related to conserved hypothetical proteins harboring the domain of unknown function DUF152 and suggests that some other of these proteins may also be laccases.


Chemistry & Biology | 2010

Laboratory Evolution of High-Redox Potential Laccases

Diana M. Mate; Carlos García-Burgos; Eva Garcia-Ruiz; Antonio Ballesteros; Susana Camarero; Miguel Alcalde

Thermostable laccases with a high-redox potential have been engineered through a strategy that combines directed evolution with rational approaches. The original laccase signal sequence was replaced by the α-factor prepro-leader, and the corresponding fusion gene was targeted for joint laboratory evolution with the aim of improving kinetics and secretion by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, while retaining high thermostability. After eight rounds of molecular evolution, the total laccase activity was enhanced 34,000-fold culminating in the OB-1 mutant as the last variant of the evolution process, a highly active and stable enzyme in terms of temperature, pH range, and organic cosolvents. Mutations in the hydrophobic core of the evolved α-factor prepro-leader enhanced functional expression, whereas some mutations in the mature protein improved its catalytic capacities by altering the interactions with the surrounding residues.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Self-powered wireless carbohydrate/oxygen sensitive biodevice based on radio signal transmission

Magnus Falk; Miguel Alcalde; Philip N. Bartlett; Antonio L. De Lacey; Lo Gorton; Cristina Gutierrez-Sanchez; Raoudha Haddad; Jeremy D. Kilburn; Dónal Leech; Roland Ludwig; Edmond Magner; Diana M. Mate; Peter Ó Conghaile; Roberto Ortiz; Marcos Pita; Sascha Pöller; Tautgirdas Ruzgas; Urszula Salaj-Kosla; Wolfgang Schuhmann; Fredrik Sebelius; Minling Shao; Leonard Stoica; Cristoph Sygmund; Jonas Tilly; Miguel D. Toscano; Jeevanthi Vivekananthan; Emma Wright; Sergey Shleev

Here for the first time, we detail self-contained (wireless and self-powered) biodevices with wireless signal transmission. Specifically, we demonstrate the operation of self-sustained carbohydrate and oxygen sensitive biodevices, consisting of a wireless electronic unit, radio transmitter and separate sensing bioelectrodes, supplied with electrical energy from a combined multi-enzyme fuel cell generating sufficient current at required voltage to power the electronics. A carbohydrate/oxygen enzymatic fuel cell was assembled by comparing the performance of a range of different bioelectrodes followed by selection of the most suitable, stable combination. Carbohydrates (viz. lactose for the demonstration) and oxygen were also chosen as bioanalytes, being important biomarkers, to demonstrate the operation of the self-contained biosensing device, employing enzyme-modified bioelectrodes to enable the actual sensing. A wireless electronic unit, consisting of a micropotentiostat, an energy harvesting module (voltage amplifier together with a capacitor), and a radio microchip, were designed to enable the biofuel cell to be used as a power supply for managing the sensing devices and for wireless data transmission. The electronic system used required current and voltages greater than 44 µA and 0.57 V, respectively to operate; which the biofuel cell was capable of providing, when placed in a carbohydrate and oxygen containing buffer. In addition, a USB based receiver and computer software were employed for proof-of concept tests of the developed biodevices. Operation of bench-top prototypes was demonstrated in buffers containing different concentrations of the analytes, showcasing that the variation in response of both carbohydrate and oxygen biosensors could be monitored wirelessly in real-time as analyte concentrations in buffers were changed, using only an enzymatic fuel cell as a power supply.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Engineering Platforms for Directed Evolution of Laccase from Pycnoporus cinnabarinus

Susana Camarero; Isabel Pardo; Ana Isabel Cañas; P. Molina; Eric Record; Ángel T. Martínez; M. J. Martínez; Miguel Alcalde

ABSTRACT While the Pycnoporus cinnabarinus laccase (PcL) is one of the most promising high-redox-potential enzymes for environmental biocatalysis, its practical use has to date remained limited due to the lack of directed evolution platforms with which to improve its features. Here, we describe the construction of a PcL fusion gene and the optimization of conditions to induce its functional expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, facilitating its directed evolution and semirational engineering. The native PcL signal peptide was replaced by the α-factor preproleader, and this construct was subjected to six rounds of evolution coupled to a multiscreening assay based on the oxidation of natural and synthetic redox mediators at more neutral pHs. The laccase total activity was enhanced 8,000-fold: the evolved α-factor preproleader improved secretion levels 40-fold, and several mutations in mature laccase provided a 13.7-fold increase in k cat. While the pH activity profile was shifted to more neutral values, the thermostability and the broad substrate specificity of PcL were retained. Evolved variants were highly secreted by Aspergillus niger (∼23 mg/liter), which addresses the potential use of this combined-expression system for protein engineering. The mapping of mutations onto the PcL crystal structure shed new light on the oxidation of phenolic and nonphenolic substrates. Furthermore, some mutations arising in the evolved preproleader highlighted its potential for heterologous expression of fungal laccases in yeast (S. cerevisiae).


ChemBioChem | 2002

Modification of galactose oxidase to introduce glucose 6-oxidase activity

Lianhong Sun; Thomas Bulter; Miguel Alcalde; Ioanna P. Petrounia; Frances H. Arnold

The selective oxidation of the 6-hydroxy group of D-glucose to introduce an aldehyde functionality is not catalyzed by known oxidase enzymes. Selective functionalization at the glucose C-6 position in oligoand polysaccharides is a synthetically useful reaction that would greatly facilitate further chemical modifications for food, pharmaceutical, and materials applications. We chose the fungal enzyme galactose oxidase (D-galactose: oxygen 6-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.3.9) as a starting point to try to generate a glucose 6-oxidase. A well-characterized copper-containing radical enzyme, galactose oxidase (GOase) oxidizes various primary alcohols to their corresponding aldehydes, with the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. Native GOase is highly active towards the 6-OH group of D-galactose but essentially inactive towards D-glucose. Glucose apparently cannot bind at the active site since concentrations as high as 1M have no effect on the activity of the enzyme towards Dgalactose. We first attempted to generate activity towards D-glucose by random point mutagenesis. After screening more than 30000 clones, however, we observed no improvement in D-glucose activity, although both the expression level and thermostability were enhanced. Careful examination of GOase activity shows that it is at least one million times less active towards D-glucose than towards D-galactose. We therefore concluded that the desired novel activity would require significant remodeling of the active site and is not accessible by point mutagenesis. The crystal structure of GOase has been solved and a substrate binding model has been proposed based on a molecular docking experiment. 5] According to the model, Arg330 forms hydrogen bonds with the hydroxy groups of substrate C-4 and C-3 atoms, while Gln406 forms an additional hydrogen bond with the C-2 hydroxy group of the substrate. In addition, a hydrophobic wall in the pocket that contains Phe194 and Phe464 interacts with the D-galactose backbone atoms C-6, C-5, and C-4. Trp290, which has been proposed to stabilize the radical form of GOase, is believed to play a key role in restricting entry to the active center (Figure 1).


Proteins | 2008

Altering the laccase functionality by in vivo assembly of mutant libraries with different mutational spectra

Miren Zumárraga; Susana Camarero; Sergey Shleev; A. Martínez-Arias; Antonio Ballesteros; Francisco J. Plou; Miguel Alcalde

The generation of diversity for directed protein evolution experiments shows an important bottleneck in the in vitro random mutagenesis protocols. Most of them are biased towards specific changes that eventually confer a predicted and conservative mutational spectrum, limiting the exploration of the vast protein space. The current work describes a simple methodology to in vivo recombine mutant libraries with different nucleotide bias created by in vitro methods. This in vivo assembly was based on the accurate physiology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which as host, provided its high homologous recombination frequency to shuffle the libraries in a nonmutagenic way. The fungal thermophilic laccase from Myceliophthora thermophila expressed in S. cerevisiae was submitted to this protocol under the selective pressure of high concentrations of organic solvents. Mutant 2E9 with ∼3‐fold better kinetics than parent type showed two consecutive amino acid changes (G614D ‐GGC/GAC‐ and E615K ‐GAG/AAG‐) because of the in vivo shuffling of the mutant libraries. Both mutations are located in the C‐terminal tail that is specifically processed at the Golgi during the maturation of the protein by the Kex2 protease. Notoriously, the oxygen consumption at the T2/T3 trinuclear copper cluster was altered and the catalytic copper at the T1 site was perturbed showing differences in its redox potential and geometry. The change in the isoelectric point of C‐terminal extension upon mutations seems to affect the folding of the protein at the posttranslational processing steps providing new insights in the significance of the C‐terminal tail for the functionality of the ascomycete laccases. Proteins 2008.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2002

Colorimetric Assays for Biodegradation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by Fungal Laccases

Miguel Alcalde; Thomas Bulter; Frances H. Arnold

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are highly toxic organic pollutants widely distributed in terrestrial and aquatic environments. In the present work, 2 colorimetric assays for laccase-catalyzed degradation of PAHs were developed based on studies of the oxidation of 12 aromatic hydrocarbons by fungal laccases from Trametes versicolor and Myceliophthora thermophila . Using a sodium borohydride water-soluble solution, the authors could reduce the single product of laccase-catalyzed anthracene biooxidation into the orange-colored 9,10-anthrahydroquinone, which is quantifiable spectrophotometrically. An assay using polymeric dye (Poly R-478) as a surrogate substrate for lignin degradation by laccase in the presence of mediator is also presented. The decolorization of Poly R-478 was correlated to the oxidation of PAHs mediated by laccases. This demonstrates that a ligninolytic indicator such as Poly R-478 can be used to screen for PAH-degrading laccases; it will also be useful in screening mutant libraries in directed evolution experiments. Poly R-478 is stable and readily soluble. It has a high extinction coefficient and low toxicity toward white rot fungi, yeast, and bacteria, which allow its application in a solid-phase assay format.

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Antonio Ballesteros

Spanish National Research Council

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Francisco J. Plou

Spanish National Research Council

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Diana M. Mate

Spanish National Research Council

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David Gonzalez-Perez

Spanish National Research Council

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Susana Camarero

Spanish National Research Council

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Patricia Molina-Espeja

Spanish National Research Council

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Ángel T. Martínez

Spanish National Research Council

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Manuel Ferrer

Spanish National Research Council

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Iraj Ghazi

Spanish National Research Council

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Miren Zumárraga

Spanish National Research Council

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