Filonova Lada, Gunnarsson Lavinia Cicortas, Daniel Geoffrey, Ohlin Mats
WURC, Department of Wood Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, PO Box 7008, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden.
BMC Plant Biol. 2007 Oct 12;7:54. doi: 10.1186/1471-2229-7-54.
The complex carbohydrate composition of natural and refined plant material is not known in detail but a matter that is of both basic and applied importance. Qualitative assessment of complex samples like plant and wood tissues requires the availability of a range of specific probes. Monoclonal antibodies and naturally existing carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs) have been used in the past to assess the presence of certain carbohydrates in plant tissues. However, the number of natural CBMs is limited and development of carbohydrate-specific antibodies is not always straightforward. We envisage the use of sets of very similar proteins specific for defined targets, like those developed by molecular evolution of a single CBM scaffold, as a suitable strategy to assess carbohydrate composition. An advantage of using synthetic CBMs lies in the possibility to study fine details of carbohydrate composition within non-uniform substrates like plant cell walls as made possible through minor differences in CBM specificity of the variety of binders that can be developed by genetic engineering.
A panel of synthetic xylan-binding CBMs, previously selected from a molecular library based on the scaffold of CBM4-2 from xylanase Xyn10A of Rhodothermus marinus, was used in this study. The wild type CBM4-2 and evolved modules both showed binding to wood sections. However, differences were observed in the staining patterns suggesting that these modules have different xylan-binding properties. Also the staining stability varied between the CBMs, the most stable staining being obtained with one (X-2) of the synthetic modules. Treatment of wood materials resulted in altered signal intensities, thereby also demonstrating the potential application of engineered CBMs as analytical tools for quality assessment of diverse plant material processes.
In this study we have demonstrated the usefulness of synthetic xylan-binding modules as specific probes in analysis of hemicelluloses (xylan) in wood and fibre materials.
天然和精制植物材料的复杂碳水化合物组成尚未得到详细了解,但这是一个具有基础和应用重要性的问题。对植物和木材组织等复杂样品进行定性评估需要一系列特定的探针。过去曾使用单克隆抗体和天然存在的碳水化合物结合模块(CBM)来评估植物组织中某些碳水化合物的存在。然而,天然CBM的数量有限,且碳水化合物特异性抗体的开发并非总是一帆风顺。我们设想使用针对特定目标的一组非常相似的蛋白质,就像通过单个CBM支架的分子进化所开发的那些蛋白质一样,作为评估碳水化合物组成的合适策略。使用合成CBM的一个优势在于,通过基因工程开发的各种结合剂的CBM特异性存在微小差异,从而有可能研究植物细胞壁等非均匀底物中碳水化合物组成的细节。
本研究使用了一组先前从基于海栖热袍菌木聚糖酶Xyn10A的CBM4-2支架构建的分子文库中筛选出的合成木聚糖结合CBM。野生型CBM4-2和进化模块均显示与木材切片结合。然而,观察到染色模式存在差异,这表明这些模块具有不同的木聚糖结合特性。此外,CBM之间的染色稳定性也有所不同,其中一种合成模块(X-2)获得的染色最稳定。对木材材料的处理导致信号强度发生变化,这也证明了工程化CBM作为分析工具在评估各种植物材料加工质量方面的潜在应用。
在本研究中,我们证明了合成木聚糖结合模块作为特异性探针在分析木材和纤维材料中的半纤维素(木聚糖)方面的实用性。