Laccases that oxidize low-density polyethylene (LDPE) represent a promising strategy for bioremediation purposes. To rationalize or optimize their PE-oxidative activity, two fundamental factors must be considered: the enzyme‘s redox potential and its binding affinity/mode towards LDPE. Indeed, a stable laccase-PE complex may facilitate a thermodynamically unfavorable electron transfer, even without redox mediators. In this study, we compared the redox potential and the LDPE-binding properties of three different PE-oxidizing laccases: a fungal high-redox potential laccase from Trametes versicolor, a bacterial low-redox potential laccase from Bacillus subtilis, and the recently characterized LMCO2 from Rhodococcus opacus R7. First we found that LMCO2 is a low-potential laccase (E°=413 mV), as reported in other bacterial variants. Using computational tools, we simulated the interactions of these laccases with a large LDPE model and highlighted the key role of hydrophobic residues surrounding the T1 site. Notably, a methionine-rich loop in LMCO2 appears to enhance the formation of a stable complex with LDPE, potentially facilitating electron transfer. This study underscores the necessity for comprehensive computational strategies to analyze enzyme-polymer interactions beyond simplistic models, uncovering critical binding determinants and informing future mutagenesis experiments, in order to enhance laccase performance and rationalize variations in enzymatic activity.

Orlando, C., Bellei, M., Zampolli, J., Mangiagalli, M., Di Gennaro, P., Lotti, M., et al. (2025). Comparative analysis of Polyethylene-Degrading Laccases: Redox Properties and Enzyme-Polyethylene Interaction Mechanism. CHEMSUSCHEM [10.1002/cssc.202402253].

Comparative analysis of Polyethylene-Degrading Laccases: Redox Properties and Enzyme-Polyethylene Interaction Mechanism

Orlando C.
Primo
;
Zampolli J.;Mangiagalli M.;Di Gennaro P.;Lotti M.;De Gioia L.;Greco C.;Arrigoni F.
;
Bertini L.
2025

Abstract

Laccases that oxidize low-density polyethylene (LDPE) represent a promising strategy for bioremediation purposes. To rationalize or optimize their PE-oxidative activity, two fundamental factors must be considered: the enzyme‘s redox potential and its binding affinity/mode towards LDPE. Indeed, a stable laccase-PE complex may facilitate a thermodynamically unfavorable electron transfer, even without redox mediators. In this study, we compared the redox potential and the LDPE-binding properties of three different PE-oxidizing laccases: a fungal high-redox potential laccase from Trametes versicolor, a bacterial low-redox potential laccase from Bacillus subtilis, and the recently characterized LMCO2 from Rhodococcus opacus R7. First we found that LMCO2 is a low-potential laccase (E°=413 mV), as reported in other bacterial variants. Using computational tools, we simulated the interactions of these laccases with a large LDPE model and highlighted the key role of hydrophobic residues surrounding the T1 site. Notably, a methionine-rich loop in LMCO2 appears to enhance the formation of a stable complex with LDPE, potentially facilitating electron transfer. This study underscores the necessity for comprehensive computational strategies to analyze enzyme-polymer interactions beyond simplistic models, uncovering critical binding determinants and informing future mutagenesis experiments, in order to enhance laccase performance and rationalize variations in enzymatic activity.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Binding mechanism; Bioremediation; Computational modeling; Enzyme-polymer interaction; Laccases; Polyethylene; Redox potential;
English
10-gen-2025
2025
e202402253
none
Orlando, C., Bellei, M., Zampolli, J., Mangiagalli, M., Di Gennaro, P., Lotti, M., et al. (2025). Comparative analysis of Polyethylene-Degrading Laccases: Redox Properties and Enzyme-Polyethylene Interaction Mechanism. CHEMSUSCHEM [10.1002/cssc.202402253].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/539422
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