Werner Besenmatter
Novozymes
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Publication
Featured researches published by Werner Besenmatter.
ChemBioChem | 2012
Per-Olof Syrén; Peter Hendil-Forssell; Lucie Aumailley; Werner Besenmatter; Farida Gounine; Allan Svendsen; Mats Martinelle; Karl Hult
Esterases with an Introduced Amidase-Like Hydrogen Bond in the Transition State Have Increased Amidase Specificity
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Antonio Ariza; Jens M. Eklöf; Oliver Spadiut; Wendy A. Offen; Shirley M. Roberts; Werner Besenmatter; Esben Peter Friis; Michael Skjøt; Keith S. Wilson; Harry Brumer; Gideon J. Davies
The enzymatic degradation of plant polysaccharides is emerging as one of the key environmental goals of the early 21st century, impacting on many processes in the textile and detergent industries as well as biomass conversion to biofuels. One of the well known problems with the use of nonstarch (nonfood)-based substrates such as the plant cell wall is that the cellulose fibers are embedded in a network of diverse polysaccharides, including xyloglucan, that renders access difficult. There is therefore increasing interest in the “accessory enzymes,” including xyloglucanases, that may aid biomass degradation through removal of “hemicellulose” polysaccharides. Here, we report the biochemical characterization of the endo-β-1,4-(xylo)glucan hydrolase from Paenibacillus polymyxa with polymeric, oligomeric, and defined chromogenic aryl-oligosaccharide substrates. The enzyme displays an unusual specificity on defined xyloglucan oligosaccharides, cleaving the XXXG-XXXG repeat into XXX and GXXXG. Kinetic analysis on defined oligosaccharides and on aryl-glycosides suggests that both the −4 and +1 subsites show discrimination against xylose-appended glucosides. The three-dimensional structures of PpXG44 have been solved both in apo-form and as a series of ligand complexes that map the −3 to −1 and +1 to +5 subsites of the extended ligand binding cleft. Complex structures are consistent with partial intolerance of xylosides in the −4′ subsites. The atypical specificity of PpXG44 may thus find use in industrial processes involving xyloglucan degradation, such as biomass conversion, or in the emerging exciting applications of defined xyloglucans in food, pharmaceuticals, and cellulose fiber modification.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Martin R. Hediger; Luca De Vico; Allan Svendsen; Werner Besenmatter; Jan H. Jensen
We present a fast computational method to efficiently screen enzyme activity. In the presented method, the effect of mutations on the barrier height of an enzyme-catalysed reaction can be computed within 24 hours on roughly 10 processors. The methodology is based on the PM6 and MOZYME methods as implemented in MOPAC2009, and is tested on the first step of the amide hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by the Candida Antarctica lipase B (CalB) enzyme. The barrier heights are estimated using adiabatic mapping and shown to give barrier heights to within 3 kcal/mol of B3LYP/6-31G(d)//RHF/3-21G results for a small model system. Relatively strict convergence criteria (0.5 kcal/(molÅ)), long NDDO cutoff distances within the MOZYME method (15 Å) and single point evaluations using conventional PM6 are needed for reliable results. The generation of mutant structures and subsequent setup of the semiempirical calculations are automated so that the effect on barrier heights can be estimated for hundreds of mutants in a matter of weeks using high performance computing.
PeerJ | 2013
Martin R. Hediger; Luca De Vico; Julie Bille Rannes; Christian Jäckel; Werner Besenmatter; Allan Svendsen; Jan H. Jensen
Our previously presented method for high throughput computational screening of mutant activity (Hediger et al., 2012) is benchmarked against experimentally measured amidase activity for 22 mutants of Candida antarctica lipase B (CalB). Using an appropriate cutoff criterion for the computed barriers, the qualitative activity of 15 out of 22 mutants is correctly predicted. The method identifies four of the six most active mutants with ≥3-fold wild type activity and seven out of the eight least active mutants with ≤0.5-fold wild type activity. The method is further used to screen all sterically possible (386) double-, triple- and quadruple-mutants constructed from the most active single mutants. Based on the benchmark test at least 20 new promising mutants are identified.
Archive | 2014
Werner Besenmatter; Astrid Benie; Esben Peter Friis; Pernille O. Micheelsen
Journal of Molecular Catalysis B-enzymatic | 2014
Valerio Ferrario; Cynthia Ebert; Allan Svendsen; Werner Besenmatter; Lucia Gardossi
Archive | 2013
Werner Besenmatter; Marco Malten; Astrid Benie
Archive | 2009
Werner Besenmatter; Esben Peter Friis; Keith Gibson; Frank Winther Rasmussen; Michael Skjoet
Archive | 2013
Werner Besenmatter; Marco Malten; Astrid Benie
Archive | 2012
Werner Besenmatter; Astrid Benie; Marco Malten