DIRECTED EVOLUTION OF A THERMOSTABLE PECTIN METHYLESTERASE FOR USE IN A SUGAR BEET BIOREFINARY
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Date
2013-09
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Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Worldwide demand for biofuel is increasing. Agricultural waste like sugar beet
pulp is a sustainable, abundant, inexpensive, and readily saccharificable biomass
feedstock. Pectin is a complex polymer abundant in plant cell walls. Pectin
methylesterase (PME) catalyzes the hydrolysis of pectin methylester groups into
methanol. Application of PME to sugar beet pectin yields biomethanol and enables
further enzymatic conversion into other biofuels. The optimal temperature of PME is
50°C, yet sugar beet pulp exits processing at 60°C. To utilize this latent heat PME must
be active at 60°C. This study uses directed evolution methods (site-directed mutagenesis
and error-prone PCR) to combine known thermostable mutations to create one multiplymutant
thermostable PME. The final clone, JL25, exhibited 100% activity at 65°C and
enhanced activity on sugar beet pulp. These results confirm past research suggesting the
additive effects of multiple mutations, and provide an example of an amino acid
substitution with background-dependent phenotypic effects.