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Dive into the research topics where Trine Holst Sørensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Trine Holst Sørensen.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2013

Product inhibition of five Hypocrea jecorina cellulases.

Leigh Murphy; Christina Bohlin; Martin J. Baumann; Søren N. Olsen; Trine Holst Sørensen; Lars Anderson; Kim Borch; Peter Westh

Product inhibition of cellulolytic enzymes has been deemed a critical factor in the industrial saccharification of cellulosic biomass. Several investigations have addressed this problem using crude enzyme preparations or commercial (mixed) cellulase products, but quantitative information on individual cellulases hydrolyzing insoluble cellulose remains insufficient. Such knowledge is necessary to pinpoint and quantify inhibitory weak-links in cellulose hydrolysis, but has proven challenging to come by. Here we show that product inhibition of mono-component cellulases hydrolyzing unmodified cellulose may be monitored by calorimetry. The key advantage of this approach is that it directly measures the rate of hydrolysis while being essentially blind to the background of added product. We investigated the five major cellulases from Hypocrea jecorina (anamorph: Tricoderma reesei), Cel7A (formerly CBH1), Cel6A (CBH2), Cel7B (EG1), Cel5A (EG2) and Cel12A (EG3), for their sensitivity to the products glucose and cellobiose. The strongest inhibition was found for Cel7A, which showed a 50% activity-loss in 19 mM cellobiose (IC(50)=19 mM). The other exoglucanase, Cel6A, was much less inhibited by cellobiose, but showed the highest sensitivity to glucose among all investigated enzymes. The endoglucanases Cel12A and Cel7B were moderately inhibited by cellobiose (IC(50)=60-80 mM), and weakly inhibited by glucose (IC(50)=350-380 mM). The highest resistance to both products was found for Cel5A, which retained about 75% of its activity at the highest investigated concentrations (respectively 65 mM cellobiose and 1000 mM glucose).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Probing substrate interactions in the active tunnel of a catalytically deficient cellobiohydrolase (Cel7)

Francieli Colussi; Trine Holst Sørensen; Kadri Alasepp; Jeppe Kari; Nicolaj Cruys-Bagger; Michael Skovbo Windahl; Johan Pelck Olsen; Kim Borch; Peter Westh

Background: Substrate interactions in the long tunnel of processive cellulases govern both their catalytic activity and stepwise movement along a cellulose strand. Results: The energetics of enzyme-substrate interactions at different depths of the tunnel are reported. Conclusion: The affinity for the substrate varies strongly through the tunnel. Significance: Quantitative information on interactions is required to understand the complex processive mechanism. Cellobiohydrolases break down cellulose sequentially by sliding along the crystal surface with a single cellulose strand threaded through the catalytic tunnel of the enzyme. This so-called processive mechanism relies on a complex pattern of enzyme-substrate interactions, which need to be addressed in molecular descriptions of processivity and its driving forces. Here, we have used titration calorimetry to study interactions of cellooligosaccharides (COS) and a catalytically deficient variant (E212Q) of the enzyme Cel7A from Trichoderma reesei. This enzyme has ∼10 glucopyranose subsites in the catalytic tunnel, and using COS ligands with a degree of polymerization (DP) from 2 to 8, different regions of the tunnel could be probed. For COS ligands with a DP of 2–3 the binding constants were around 105 m−1, and for longer ligands (DP 5–8) this value was ∼107 m−1. Within each of these groups we did not find increased affinity as the ligands got longer and potentially filled more subsites. On the contrary, we found a small but consistent affinity loss as DP rose from 6 to 8, particularly at the higher investigated temperatures. Other thermodynamic functions (ΔH, ΔS, and ΔCp) decreased monotonously with both temperature and DP. Combined interpretation of these thermodynamic results and previously published structural data allowed assessment of an affinity profile along the length axis of the active tunnel.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2014

A pyranose dehydrogenase-based biosensor for kinetic analysis of enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose by cellulases

Nicolaj Cruys-Bagger; Silke Flindt Badino; Radina Tokin; Mark Gontsarik; Samin Fathalinejad; Kenneth Jensen; Miguel D. Toscano; Trine Holst Sørensen; Kim Borch; Hirosuke Tatsumi; Priit Väljamäe; Peter Westh

A novel electrochemical enzyme biosensor was developed for real-time detection of cellulase activity when acting on their natural insoluble substrate, cellulose. The enzyme biosensor was constructed with pyranose dehydrongease (PDH) from Agaricus meleagris that was immobilized on the surface of a carbon paste electrode, which contained the mediator 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP). An oxidation current of the reduced form of DCIP, DCIPH2, produced by the PDH-catalyzed reaction with either glucose or cellobiose, was recorded under constant-potential amperometry at +0.25V (vs. Ag/AgCl). The PDH-biosensor was shown to be anomer unspecific and it can therefore be used in kinetic studies over broad time-scales of both retaining- and inverting cellulases (in addition to enzyme cocktails). The biosensor was used for real-time measurements of the activity of the inverting cellobiohydrolase Cel6A from Hypocrea jecorina (HjCel6A) on cellulosic substrates with different morphology (bacterial microcrystalline cellulose (BMCC) and Avicel). The steady-state rate of hydrolysis increased towards a saturation plateau with increasing loads of substrate. The experimental results were rationalized using a steady-state rate equation for processive cellulases, and it was found that the turnover for HjCel6A at saturating substrate concentration (i.e. maximal apparent specific activity) was similar (0.39-0.40s(-1)) for the two substrates. Conversely, the substrate load at half-saturation was much lower for BMCC compared to Avicel. Biosensors covered with a polycarbonate membrane showed high operational stability of several weeks with daily use.


Langmuir | 2014

In Situ Stability of Substrate-Associated Cellulases Studied by DSC

Kadri Alasepp; Kim Borch; Nicolaj Cruys-Bagger; Silke Flindt Badino; Kenneth Jensen; Trine Holst Sørensen; Michael Skovbo Windahl; Peter Westh

This work shows that differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) can be used to monitor the stability of substrate-adsorbed cellulases during long-term hydrolysis of insoluble cellulose. Thermal transitions of adsorbed enzyme were measured regularly in subsets of a progressing hydrolysis, and the size of the transition peak was used as a gauge of the population of native enzyme. Analogous measurements were made for enzymes in pure buffer. Investigations of two cellobiohydrolases, Cel6A and Cel7A, from Trichoderma reesei, which is an anamorph of the fungus Hypocrea jerorina, showed that these enzymes were essentially stable at 25 °C. Thus, over a 53 h experiment, Cel6A lost less than 15% of the native population and Cel7A showed no detectable loss for either the free or substrate-adsorbed state. At higher temperatures we found significant losses in the native populations, and at the highest tested temperature (49 °C) about 80% Cel6A and 35% of Cel7A was lost after 53 h of hydrolysis. The data consistently showed that Cel7A was more long-term stable than Cel6A and that substrate-associated enzyme was less long-term stable than enzyme in pure buffer stored under otherwise equal conditions. There was no correlation between the intrinsic stability, specified by the transition temperature in the DSC, and the long-term stability derived from the peak area. The results are discussed with respect to the role of enzyme denaturation for the ubiquitous slowdown observed in the enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2017

Loop variants of the thermophile Rasamsonia emersonii Cel7A with improved activity against cellulose.

Trine Holst Sørensen; Michael Skovbo Windahl; Brett Mcbrayer; Jeppe Kari; Johan Pelck Olsen; Kim Borch; Peter Westh

Cel7A cellobiohydrolases perform processive hydrolysis on one strand of cellulose, which is threaded through the enzymes substrate binding tunnel. The tunnel structure results from a groove in the catalytic domain, which is covered by a number of loops. These loops have been identified as potential targets for engineering of this industrially important enzyme family, but only few systematic studies on this have been made. Here we show that two asparagine residues (N194 and N197) positioned in the loop covering the glucopyranose subsite −4 (recently denoted B2 loop) of the thermostable Cel7A from Rasamsonia emersonii had profound effects on both substrate interactions and catalytic efficacy. At room temperature the double mutant N194A/N197A showed strongly reduced substrate affinity with a water‐cellulose partitioning coefficient threefold lower than the wild type. Yet, this variant was catalytically efficient with a maximal turnover about twice as high as the wild type. Analogous but smaller changes were found for the single mutants. Analysis of these changes in affinity and kinetics as a function of temperature, led to the conclusion that replacement of N194 and particularly N197 with alanine leads to faster enzyme‐substrate dissociation. Conversely, these residues appeared to have little or no effect on the rate of association. We suggest that the controlled adjustment of the enzyme‐substrate dissociation prompts faster cellulolytic enzymes. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 53–62.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2017

The influence of different linker modifications on the catalytic activity and cellulose affinity of cellobiohydrolase Cel7A from Hypocrea jecorina

Silke Flindt Badino; Jenny Kim Bathke; Trine Holst Sørensen; Michael Skovbo Windahl; Kenneth Jensen; Günther H. Peters; Kim Borch; Peter Westh

Various cellulases consist of a catalytic domain connected to a carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) by a flexible linker peptide. The linker if often strongly O-glycosylated and typically has a length of 20-50 amino acid residues. Functional roles, other than connecting the two folded domains, of the linker and its glycans, have been widely discussed, but experimental evidence remains sparse. One of the most studied cellulose degrading enzymes is the multi-domain cellobiohydrolase Cel7A from Hypocrea jecorina. Here, we designed variants of Cel7A with mutations in the linker region to elucidate the role of the linker. We found that moderate modification of the linker could result in significant changes in substrate affinity and catalytic efficacy. These changes were quite different for different linker variants. Thus, deletion of six residues near the catalytic domain had essentially no effects on enzyme function. Conversely, a substitution of four glycosylation sites near the middle of the linker reduced substrate affinity and increased maximal turnover. The observation of weaker binding provides some support of recent suggestions that linker glycans may be directly involved in substrate interactions. However, a variant with several inserted glycosylation sites near the CBM also showed lower affinity for the substrate compared to the wild-type, and we suggest that substrate interactions of the glycans depend on their exact location as well as other factors such as changes in structure and dynamics of the linker peptide.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2018

Thermoactivation of a cellobiohydrolase

Peter Westh; Kim Borch; Trine Holst Sørensen; Radina Tokin; Jeppe Kari; Silke Flindt Badino; Mafalda A. Cavaleiro; Nanna Sandager Røjel; Stefan Jarl Christensen; Cynthia S. Vesterager; Corinna Schiano di Cola

We have measured activity and substrate affinity of the thermostable cellobiohydrolase, Cel7A, from Rasamsonia emersonii over a broad range of temperatures. For the wild type enzyme, which does not have a Carbohydrate Binding Module (CBM), higher temperature only led to moderately increased activity against cellulose, and we ascribed this to a pronounced, temperature induced desorption of enzyme from the substrate surface. We also tested a “high affinity” variant of R. emersonii Cel7A with a linker and CBM from a related enzyme. At room temperature, the activity of the variant was similar to the wild type, but the variant was more accelerated by temperature and about two‐fold faster around 70 °C. This better thermoactivation of the high‐affinity variant could not be linked to differences in stability or the catalytic process, but coincided with less desorption as temperature increased. Based on these observations and earlier reports on moderate thermoactivation of cellulases, we suggest that better cellulolytic activity at industrially relevant temperatures may be attained by engineering improved substrate affinity into enzymes that already possess good thermostability.


Archive | 2016

Cellobiohydrolase variants and polynucleotides encoding same

Kim Borch; Kenneth Jensen; Kristian B. R. M. Krogh; Brett Mcbrayer; Peter Westh; Jeppe Kari; Johan Pelck Olsen; Trine Holst Sørensen; Michael Skovbo Windahl; Hui Xu


PhD Dissertations from Roskilde University | 2016

Temperature Effects on Kinetic Parameters and Substrate Affinity of Cel7A Cellobiohydrolases

Trine Holst Sørensen


PhD Dissertations from Roskilde University | 2016

Free Energy Diagram for the Heterogeneous Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Glycosidic Bonds in Cellulose

Trine Holst Sørensen

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