Tuesday, May 16, 2023 - 4:00pm

Abstract:

Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are relatively recently discovered enzymes that catalyse the oxidation of polysaccharides, leading to chain cleavage.  LPMOs has transformed our understanding of biomass degradation, and—moreover—are now critical components in the enzymatic breakdown of biomass in the second generation bioethanol industry.1  We and others have also recently shown that LPMOs are key virulence factors in major plant diseases.2

Our recent work has concentrated on the discovery of new LPMO active sites, some of which will be described in the seminar.  We have also examined the action of oxidizing agents on the enzyme which has been shown to enhance the activity of the enzymes on saccharidic substrates, but also lead to rapid inactivation of the enzyme, presumably through protein oxidation.3 

In this talk, in addition to a description of the structure and reactivity of LPMOs, I will show that the use of UV/vis, CD, XAS, EPR, MCD, MS and resonance Raman spectroscopies augmented with DFT calculations, reveals that one of the products of protein oxidation in an AA9 LPMO is a long-lived ground-state singlet Cu(II)-tyrosyl species, which is inactive for the oxidation of saccharidic substrates.  I will also show that this state evolves from an intermediate Cu(II)…tyrosyl triplet species via a open-shell singlet Cu(II)…histidyl radical.

  1. K. E. H. Frandsen, P. H. Walton et al, Nature Chem. Biol. 298—303 (2016).
  2. F. Sabbadin, P. H. Walton et al, Science, 373, 774-779 (2021).
  3. A. Paradisi, P. H. Walton et al, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 18585—18599 (2019).

Speaker: 

Paul Walton

Institution: 

University of York

Location: 

ISEB 1010