High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits

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High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits. / Schückel, Julia; Kracun, Stjepan Kresimir; Willats, William George Tycho.

I: Journal of Visualized Experiments, Bind 115, e54286, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schückel, J, Kracun, SK & Willats, WGT 2016, 'High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits', Journal of Visualized Experiments, bind 115, e54286. https://doi.org/10.3791/54286

APA

Schückel, J., Kracun, S. K., & Willats, W. G. T. (2016). High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits. Journal of Visualized Experiments, 115, [e54286]. https://doi.org/10.3791/54286

Vancouver

Schückel J, Kracun SK, Willats WGT. High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits. Journal of Visualized Experiments. 2016;115. e54286. https://doi.org/10.3791/54286

Author

Schückel, Julia ; Kracun, Stjepan Kresimir ; Willats, William George Tycho. / High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits. I: Journal of Visualized Experiments. 2016 ; Bind 115.

Bibtex

@article{9b691909929142dfa8761eeadb3627e6,
title = "High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits",
abstract = "Carbohydrates active enzymes (CAZymes) have multiple roles in vivo and are widely used for industrial processing in the biofuel, textile, detergent, paper and food industries. A deeper understanding of CAZymes is important from both fundamental biology and industrial standpoints. Vast numbers of CAZymes exist in nature (especially in microorganisms) and hundreds of thousands have been cataloged and described in the carbohydrate active enzyme database (CAZy). However, the rate of discovery of putative enzymes has outstripped our ability to biochemically characterize their activities. One reason for this is that advances in genome and transcriptome sequencing, together with associated bioinformatics tools allow for rapid identification of candidate CAZymes, but technology for determining an enzyme's biochemical characteristics has advanced more slowly. To address this technology gap, a novel high-throughput assay kit based on insoluble chromogenic substrates is described here. Two distinct substrate types were produced: Chromogenic Polymer Hydrogel (CPH) substrates (made from purified polysaccharides and proteins) and Insoluble Chromogenic Biomass (ICB) substrates (made from complex biomass materials). Both CPH and ICB substrates are provided in a 96-well high-throughput assay system. The CPH substrates can be made in four different colors, enabling them to be mixed together and thus increasing assay throughput. The protocol describes a 96-well plate assay and illustrates how this assay can be used for screening the activities of enzymes, enzyme cocktails, and broths.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Julia Sch{\"u}ckel and Kracun, {Stjepan Kresimir} and Willats, {William George Tycho}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.3791/54286",
language = "English",
volume = "115",
journal = "Journal of Visualized Experiments",
issn = "1940-087X",
publisher = "Journal of Visualized Experiments",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High-throughput screening of carbohydrate-degrading enzymes using novel insoluble chromogenic substrate assay kits

AU - Schückel, Julia

AU - Kracun, Stjepan Kresimir

AU - Willats, William George Tycho

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Carbohydrates active enzymes (CAZymes) have multiple roles in vivo and are widely used for industrial processing in the biofuel, textile, detergent, paper and food industries. A deeper understanding of CAZymes is important from both fundamental biology and industrial standpoints. Vast numbers of CAZymes exist in nature (especially in microorganisms) and hundreds of thousands have been cataloged and described in the carbohydrate active enzyme database (CAZy). However, the rate of discovery of putative enzymes has outstripped our ability to biochemically characterize their activities. One reason for this is that advances in genome and transcriptome sequencing, together with associated bioinformatics tools allow for rapid identification of candidate CAZymes, but technology for determining an enzyme's biochemical characteristics has advanced more slowly. To address this technology gap, a novel high-throughput assay kit based on insoluble chromogenic substrates is described here. Two distinct substrate types were produced: Chromogenic Polymer Hydrogel (CPH) substrates (made from purified polysaccharides and proteins) and Insoluble Chromogenic Biomass (ICB) substrates (made from complex biomass materials). Both CPH and ICB substrates are provided in a 96-well high-throughput assay system. The CPH substrates can be made in four different colors, enabling them to be mixed together and thus increasing assay throughput. The protocol describes a 96-well plate assay and illustrates how this assay can be used for screening the activities of enzymes, enzyme cocktails, and broths.

AB - Carbohydrates active enzymes (CAZymes) have multiple roles in vivo and are widely used for industrial processing in the biofuel, textile, detergent, paper and food industries. A deeper understanding of CAZymes is important from both fundamental biology and industrial standpoints. Vast numbers of CAZymes exist in nature (especially in microorganisms) and hundreds of thousands have been cataloged and described in the carbohydrate active enzyme database (CAZy). However, the rate of discovery of putative enzymes has outstripped our ability to biochemically characterize their activities. One reason for this is that advances in genome and transcriptome sequencing, together with associated bioinformatics tools allow for rapid identification of candidate CAZymes, but technology for determining an enzyme's biochemical characteristics has advanced more slowly. To address this technology gap, a novel high-throughput assay kit based on insoluble chromogenic substrates is described here. Two distinct substrate types were produced: Chromogenic Polymer Hydrogel (CPH) substrates (made from purified polysaccharides and proteins) and Insoluble Chromogenic Biomass (ICB) substrates (made from complex biomass materials). Both CPH and ICB substrates are provided in a 96-well high-throughput assay system. The CPH substrates can be made in four different colors, enabling them to be mixed together and thus increasing assay throughput. The protocol describes a 96-well plate assay and illustrates how this assay can be used for screening the activities of enzymes, enzyme cocktails, and broths.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.3791/54286

DO - 10.3791/54286

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27684747

VL - 115

JO - Journal of Visualized Experiments

JF - Journal of Visualized Experiments

SN - 1940-087X

M1 - e54286

ER -

ID: 167812892