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Oxidative cleavage of polysaccharides by a termite-derived superoxide dismutase boosts the degradation of biomass by glycoside hydrolases

Authors :
Mandelli, Fernanda
Tramontina, Robson
Cannella, David
Paradisi, Alessandro
Ciano, Luisa
Ferreira, Marcel
Rodrigues, Gisele Nunes
Alvarez, Thabata Maria
Mofatto, Luciana Souto
Carazzolle, Marcelo Falsarella
Leme, Adriana Paes
Costa-Leonardo, Ana Maria
Oliveira Neto, Mario
Davies, Gideon
Felby, Claus
Walton, Paul Howard
Squina, Fabio
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry, 2022.

Abstract

Wood-feeding termites effectively degrade plant biomass through enzymatic degradation. Despite their high efficiencies, however, individual glycoside hydrolases isolated from termites and their symbionts exhibit anomalously low effectiveness in lignocellulose degradation, suggesting hereto unknown enzymatic activities in their digestome. Herein, we demonstrate that an ancient redox-active enzyme encoded by the lower termite Coptotermes gestroi, a Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (CgSOD-1), plays a previously unknown role in plant biomass degradation. We show that CgSOD-1 transcripts and peptides are up-regulated in response to an increased level of lignocellulose recalcitrance and that CgSOD-1 localizes in the lumen of the fore- and midguts of C. gestroi together with termite main cellulase, CgEG-1-GH9. CgSOD-1 boosts the saccharification of polysaccharides by CgEG-1-GH9. We show that the boosting effect of CgSOD-1 involves an oxidative mechanism of action in which CgSOD-1 generates reactive oxygen species that subsequently cleave the polysaccharide. SOD-type enzymes constitute a new addition to the growing family of oxidases, ones which are up-regulated when exposed to recalcitrant polysaccharides, and that are used by Nature for biomass degradation.

Subjects

Subjects :
Environmental Chemistry
Pollution

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14639262 and 14639270
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....d8024dd077fae9e290d1cf11832c64ad