Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.105, No.20, 7769-7783, 2021
Recombinant production and characterisation of two chitinases from Rasamsonia emersonii, and assessment of their potential industrial applicability
Rasamsonia emersonii (previously Talaromyces emersonii) is a thermophilic filamentous fungus displaying optimum growth at 45 degrees C. It has a history of use in commercial food enzyme production. Its unfractionated chitinolytic secretome was partially characterised in the early 1990s; however, no individual chitinase from this source has been described in literature previously. This study describes two GH18 chitinases originating from the R. emersonii genome, expressed in the methylotrophic yeast P. pastoris. Chit1 comprises of a GH18 catalytic domain and Chit2 comprises of a GH18 catalytic domain and a chitin-binding motif at the C-terminal. The chitinases were expressed as glycoproteins. The apparent molecular weight of Chit1 was 35.8-42.1 kDa with a smearing tail associated with glyco-sidechains visible up to 72.2 kDa. This became two bands of 30.8 and 29.0 kDa upon de-glycosylation. The apparent molecular weight of Chit2 was 50.4 kDa, reducing to 48.2 kDa upon de-glycosylation. Both chitinases displayed endo-chitinase and chitobiosidase activity, temperature optima of 50-55 degrees C and low pH optima (pH 4.5 or lower); Chit1 displayed a pH optimum of 3.5, retaining > 60% maximum activity at pH 2.2, a pH range lower than most enzymes of fungal origin. Chit2 displayed the highest chitin-degrading ability at 3456 mu mol/mg on 4-NP-triacetylchitotriose, but lost activity faster than Chit1, which displayed 403 mu mol/mg on the same substrate. The predicted D values (time required to reduce the enzyme activity to 10% of its original value at 50 degrees C) were 19.2 and 2.3 days for Chit1 and Chit2, respectively. Thus, Chit1 can be considered one of few hyperthermostable chitinase enzymes described in literature to date. Their physicochemical properties render these chitinases likely suitable for shrimp chitin processing including one-step chitin hydrolysis and alternative sustainable protein processing and the attractive emerging application of mushroom food waste valorisation.
Keywords:Thermostable chitinase;Rasamsonia emersonii;Fungal chitinase;GH18;Glucosamine;Chitooligosaccharides;Sustainable protein processing;Chitin waste valorisation