High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays

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Standard

High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays. / Øbro, Jens; Sørensen, Iben; Derkx, Patrick; Madsen, Christian Toft; Drews, Martin; Willer, Martin; Mikkelsen, Jørn D.; Willats, William George Tycho.

I: Proteomics - Practical Proteomics, Bind 9, Nr. 7, 2009, s. 1861-1868.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Øbro, J, Sørensen, I, Derkx, P, Madsen, CT, Drews, M, Willer, M, Mikkelsen, JD & Willats, WGT 2009, 'High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays', Proteomics - Practical Proteomics, bind 9, nr. 7, s. 1861-1868. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200800349

APA

Øbro, J., Sørensen, I., Derkx, P., Madsen, C. T., Drews, M., Willer, M., Mikkelsen, J. D., & Willats, W. G. T. (2009). High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays. Proteomics - Practical Proteomics, 9(7), 1861-1868. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200800349

Vancouver

Øbro J, Sørensen I, Derkx P, Madsen CT, Drews M, Willer M o.a. High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays. Proteomics - Practical Proteomics. 2009;9(7):1861-1868. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200800349

Author

Øbro, Jens ; Sørensen, Iben ; Derkx, Patrick ; Madsen, Christian Toft ; Drews, Martin ; Willer, Martin ; Mikkelsen, Jørn D. ; Willats, William George Tycho. / High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays. I: Proteomics - Practical Proteomics. 2009 ; Bind 9, Nr. 7. s. 1861-1868.

Bibtex

@article{d3bc42d01dff11deb43e000ea68e967b,
title = "High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays",
abstract = "Pectin methylesterases (PMEs) catalyse the removal of methyl esters from the homogalacturonan (HG) backbone domain of pectin, a ubiquitous polysaccharide in plant cell walls. The degree of methyl esterification (DE) impacts upon the functional properties of HG within cell walls and plants produce numerous PMEs that act upon HG in muro. Many microbial plant pathogens also produce PMEs, the activity of which renders HG more susceptible to cleavage by pectin lyase and polygalacturonase enzymes and hence aids cell wall degradation. We have developed a novel microarray-based approach to investigate the activity of a series of variant enzymes based on the PME from the important pathogen Erwinia chrysanthemi. A library of 99 E. chrysanthemi PME mutants was created in which seven amino acids were altered by various different substitutions. Each mutant PME was incubated with a highly methyl esterified lime pectin substrate and, after digestion the enzyme/substrate mixtures were printed as microarrays. The loss of activity that resulted from certain mutations was detected by probing arrays with a mAb (JIM7) that preferentially binds to HG with a relatively high DE. Active PMEs therefore resulted in diminished JIM7 binding to the lime pectin substrate, whereas inactive PMEs did not. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of our approach for rapidly testing the effects on PME activity of substituting a wide variety of amino acids at different positions.",
author = "Jens {\O}bro and Iben S{\o}rensen and Patrick Derkx and Madsen, {Christian Toft} and Martin Drews and Martin Willer and Mikkelsen, {J{\o}rn D.} and Willats, {William George Tycho}",
note = "Keywords Carbohydrate microarray • Erwinia chrysanthemi • Pectin methylesterase",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1002/pmic.200800349",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "1861--1868",
journal = "Proteomics - Practical Proteomics",
issn = "1862-7595",
publisher = "Wiley - V C H Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High-throughput screening of Erwinia chrysanthemi pectin methylesterase variants using carbohydrate microarrays

AU - Øbro, Jens

AU - Sørensen, Iben

AU - Derkx, Patrick

AU - Madsen, Christian Toft

AU - Drews, Martin

AU - Willer, Martin

AU - Mikkelsen, Jørn D.

AU - Willats, William George Tycho

N1 - Keywords Carbohydrate microarray • Erwinia chrysanthemi • Pectin methylesterase

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Pectin methylesterases (PMEs) catalyse the removal of methyl esters from the homogalacturonan (HG) backbone domain of pectin, a ubiquitous polysaccharide in plant cell walls. The degree of methyl esterification (DE) impacts upon the functional properties of HG within cell walls and plants produce numerous PMEs that act upon HG in muro. Many microbial plant pathogens also produce PMEs, the activity of which renders HG more susceptible to cleavage by pectin lyase and polygalacturonase enzymes and hence aids cell wall degradation. We have developed a novel microarray-based approach to investigate the activity of a series of variant enzymes based on the PME from the important pathogen Erwinia chrysanthemi. A library of 99 E. chrysanthemi PME mutants was created in which seven amino acids were altered by various different substitutions. Each mutant PME was incubated with a highly methyl esterified lime pectin substrate and, after digestion the enzyme/substrate mixtures were printed as microarrays. The loss of activity that resulted from certain mutations was detected by probing arrays with a mAb (JIM7) that preferentially binds to HG with a relatively high DE. Active PMEs therefore resulted in diminished JIM7 binding to the lime pectin substrate, whereas inactive PMEs did not. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of our approach for rapidly testing the effects on PME activity of substituting a wide variety of amino acids at different positions.

AB - Pectin methylesterases (PMEs) catalyse the removal of methyl esters from the homogalacturonan (HG) backbone domain of pectin, a ubiquitous polysaccharide in plant cell walls. The degree of methyl esterification (DE) impacts upon the functional properties of HG within cell walls and plants produce numerous PMEs that act upon HG in muro. Many microbial plant pathogens also produce PMEs, the activity of which renders HG more susceptible to cleavage by pectin lyase and polygalacturonase enzymes and hence aids cell wall degradation. We have developed a novel microarray-based approach to investigate the activity of a series of variant enzymes based on the PME from the important pathogen Erwinia chrysanthemi. A library of 99 E. chrysanthemi PME mutants was created in which seven amino acids were altered by various different substitutions. Each mutant PME was incubated with a highly methyl esterified lime pectin substrate and, after digestion the enzyme/substrate mixtures were printed as microarrays. The loss of activity that resulted from certain mutations was detected by probing arrays with a mAb (JIM7) that preferentially binds to HG with a relatively high DE. Active PMEs therefore resulted in diminished JIM7 binding to the lime pectin substrate, whereas inactive PMEs did not. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of our approach for rapidly testing the effects on PME activity of substituting a wide variety of amino acids at different positions.

U2 - 10.1002/pmic.200800349

DO - 10.1002/pmic.200800349

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19333997

VL - 9

SP - 1861

EP - 1868

JO - Proteomics - Practical Proteomics

JF - Proteomics - Practical Proteomics

SN - 1862-7595

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 11664017