Colorimetric LPMO assay with direct implication for cellulolytic activity.
Søren BranderStine LaustenJohan Ø IpsenKristoffer B FalkenbergAndreas B BertelsenMorten H H NørholmLars H ØstergaardKatja Salomon JohansenPublished in: Biotechnology for biofuels (2021)
This novel and specific LPMO assay can be carried out in a convenient microtiter plate format ready for high-throughput screening and enzyme characterization. DHA was the best co-substrate tested for oxidation of rPHP and this preference appears to be LPMO-specific. The identified co-substrates DHA and fructose are not normally considered as LPMO co-substrates but here they are shown to facilitate both oxidation of rPHP and degradation of cellulose. This is a rare example of a finding from a high-throughput assay that directly translate into enzyme activity on an insoluble substrate. The rPHP-based assay thus expands our understanding of LPMO catalysed reactions and has the potential to characterize LPMO activity in industrial settings, where usual co-substrates such as ascorbate and oxygen are depleted.