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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Apr 1996, 1151-1158, Vol 62, No. 4
C Eggert, U Temp and KE Eriksson
The white rot fungus Pycnoporus cinnabarinus was characterized with respect
to its set of extracellular phenoloxidases. Laccase was produced as the
predominant extracellular phenoloxidase in conjunction with low amounts of
an unusual peroxidase. Neither lignin peroxidase nor manganese peroxidase
was detected. Laccase was produced constitutively during primary
metabolism. Addition of the most effective inducer, 2,5-xylidine, enhanced
laccase production ninefold without altering the isoenzyme pattern of the
enzyme. Laccase purified to apparent homogeneity was a single polypeptide
having a molecular mass of approximately 81,000 Da, as determined by
calibrated gel filtration chromatography, and a carbohydrate content of 9%.
The enzyme displayed an unusual behavior on isoelectric focusing gels; the
activity was split into one major band (pI, 3.7) and several minor bands of
decreasing intensity which appeared at regular, closely spaced intervals
toward the alkaline end of the gel. Repeated electrophoresis of the major
band under identical conditions produced the same pattern, suggesting that
the laccase was secreted as a single acidic isoform with a pI of about 3.7
and that the multiband pattern was an artifact produced by electrophoresis.
This appeared to be confirmed by N- terminal amino acid sequencing of the
purified enzyme, which yielded a single sequence for the first 21 residues.
Spectroscopic analysis indicated a typical laccase active site in the P.
cinnabarinus enzyme since all three typical Cu(II)-type centers were
identified. Substrate specificity and inhibitor studies also indicated the
enzyme to be a typical fungal laccase. The N-terminal amino acid sequence
of the P. cinnabarinus laccase showed close homology to the N-terminal
sequences determined for laccases from Trametes versicolor, Coriolus
hirsutus, and an unidentified basidiomycete, PM1. The principal features of
the P. cinnabarinus enzyme system, a single predominant laccase and a lack
of lignin- or manganese-type peroxidase, make this organism an interesting
model for further studies of possible alternative pathways of lignin
degradation by white rot fungi.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
The ligninolytic system of the white rot fungus Pycnoporus cinnabarinus: purification and characterization of the laccase
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens 30602-7229, USA.
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