IQUIBICEN   23947
INSTITUTO DE QUIMICA BIOLOGICA DE LA FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS EXACTAS Y NATURALES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
IMPROVING LIGNOCELLULOSE DEGRADATION THROUGH MULTIENZIMATIC COMPLEXES
Autor/es:
GOROJOVSKY, NATALIA; IGLESIAS RANDO MATÍAS R; GARRONE NICOLÁS; SANTOS JAVIER; DODES TRAIAN MARTIN; ZYLBERMAN VANESA; GOLDBAUM FERNANDO ALBERTO; CRAIG PATRICIO OLIVER; GOROJOVSKY, NATALIA; IGLESIAS RANDO MATÍAS R; GARRONE NICOLÁS; SANTOS JAVIER; DODES TRAIAN MARTIN; ZYLBERMAN VANESA; GOLDBAUM FERNANDO ALBERTO; CRAIG PATRICIO OLIVER
Lugar:
Buenos Aires
Reunión:
Congreso; Protein Biophysics at the end of the world; 2017
Resumen:
IMPROVING LIGNOCELLULOSE DEGRADATION THROUGH MULTIENZIMATIC COMPLEXESGorojovsky N1, Iglesias Rando MR1, Garrone N1, Santos J2, Dodes M1, Zylberman V3, Goldbaum FA4, Craig PO1.1 Departamento de Química Biológica e Instituto de Química Biológica de la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (IQUIBICEN, UBA/CONICET). 2Instituto de Química y Fisicoquímica Biológicas (IQUIFIB, UBA/CONICET). 3 Inmunova/CONICET. 4Fundacion Instituto Leloir (IIBBA/CONICET).Lignocellulose is the most abundant renewable resource on the planet and is an excellent substrate for the production of biofuels. Its enzymatic degradation generates sugars that upon fermentation produce bioethanol. The ligno-cellulolytic enzymes currently used in this process are expensive and have low efficiency. For an economically viable production of biofuels it is essential to develop new methods to increase the activity and stability of these enzymes.Cellulosomes are multienzymatic complexes that colocalize different cellulolytic enzymes and cellulose binding domains, increasing their degradation activity through enzymatic proximity and substrate targeting effects. However, the industrial production of natural cellulosomes has serious limitations because of the properties of their scaffolding protein. Our goal is to develop artificial cellulosomes using the structure of an oligomeric protein that is highly stable and highly expressed in bacteria, as a scaffold for the colocalization of cellulases, hemicellulases, beta-glucosidases and cellulose binding domains. For the assembly of these multienzymatic particles we use a non-covalent coupling strategy trough high affinity heterodimeric modules (coiled peptides or cohesin/dockerin modules) complementary fused to the structure of the protein targets and the oligomeric scaffold. It is expected that these complexes will help to increase the enzymatic lignocellulose degradation, reducing the cost of bioethanol production and favoring fossil fuels substitution.