posted on 2024-02-06, 20:04authored byKrisztina Zajki-Zechmeister, Manuel Eibinger, Gaurav Singh Kaira, Bernd Nidetzky
The cellulosome is
a megadalton-size protein complex that functions
as a biological nanomachine of cellulosic fiber degradation. We show
that the cellulosome behaves as a Brownian ratchet that rectifies
protein motions on the cellulose surface into a propulsion mechanism
by coupling to the hydrolysis of cellulose chains. Movement on cellulose
fibrils is unidirectional and results from “macromolecular
crawl” composed of dynamic switches between elongated and compact
spatial arrangements of enzyme subunits. Deletion of the main exocellulase
Cel48S eliminates conformational bias for aligning the subunits to
the long fibril axis, which we reveal as crucial for optimum coupling
between directional movement and substrate degradation. Implications
of the cellulosome acting as a mechanochemical motor suggest a distinct
mechanism of enzymatic machinery in the deconstruction of cellulose
assemblies.