Biochemical and molecular characterization of a laccase from Marasmius quercophilus

TitleBiochemical and molecular characterization of a laccase from Marasmius quercophilus
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2000
AuthorsDedeyan, B., Klonowska A., Tagger S., Tron T., Iacazio G., Gil G., & Le petit J.
JournalAPPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume66
Issue3
Pagination925 - 929
Date Published2000///
KeywordsBasidiomycete, litter, Marasmius quercophilus, mediterranean forest, Quercus ilex L., structural genes
Abstract

The basidiomycete Marasmius quercophilus is commonly found during autumn on the decaying litter of the evergreen oak (Quercus ilex L.), a plant characteristic of Mediterranean forest. This white-rot fungus colonizes the leaf surface with rhizomorphs, causing a total bleaching of the leaf. In synthetic liquid media, this white-rot fungus has strong laccase activity. From a three-step chromatographic procedure, we purified a major isoform to homogeneity, The gene encodes a monomeric glycoprotein of approximately 63 kDa, with a 3.6 isoelectric point, that contains 12% carbohydrate, Spectroscopic analysis of the purified enzyme (UV/visible and electron paramagnetic resonance, atomic absorption) confirmed that it belongs to the ``blue copper oxidase{''} family. With syringaldazine as the substrate, the enzyme's pH optimum was 4.5, the optimal temperature was 75 degrees C, and the K-m was 7.1 mu M. The structural gene, lac1, was cloned and sequenced. This gene encodes a 517-amino-acid protein 99% identical to a laccase produced by PM1, an unidentified basidiomycete previously isolated from wastewater from a paper factory in Spain. This similarity may be explained by the ecological distribution of the evergreen oak in Mediterranean forest.