Inhibition of lpmos by fermented persimmon juice
Journal article, 2021

Fermented persimmon juice, Kakishibu, has traditionally been used for wood and paper protection. This protective effect stems at least partially from inhibition of microbial cellulose degrading enzymes. The inhibitory effect of Kakishibu on lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) and on a cocktail of cellulose hydrolases was studied, using three different cellulosic substrates. Dose dependent inhibition of LPMO activity by a commercial Kakishibu product was assessed for the well-characterized LPMO from Thermoascus aurantiacus TaAA9A, and the inhibitory effect was confirmed on five additional microbial LPMOs. The model tannin compound, tannic acid exhibited a similar inhibitory effect on TaAA9A as Kakishibu. It was further shown that both polyethylene glycol and tannase can alleviate the inhibitory effect of Kakishibu and tannic acid, indicating a likely mechanism of inhibition caused by unspecific tannin–protein interactions.

Cellulase

Inhibition

Tannins

LPMO

PEG

Kakishibu

Author

Radina Tokin

University of Copenhagen

Johan Ipsen

University of Copenhagen

Mahesha M. Poojary

University of Copenhagen

P. E. Jensen

University of Copenhagen

Lisbeth Olsson

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Industrial Biotechnology

Katja Salomon Johansen

University of Copenhagen

Biomolecules

2218-273X (eISSN)

Vol. 11 12 1890

Subject Categories

Polymer Technologies

Other Basic Medicine

Biocatalysis and Enzyme Technology

DOI

10.3390/biom11121890

PubMed

34944533

More information

Latest update

12/29/2021