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Efficient enzymatic conversion of crystalline polysaccharides is crucial for an economically and environmentally sustainable bioeconomy but remains unfavorably inefficient. We describe an enzyme that acts on the surface of crystalline chitin, where it introduces chain breaks and generates oxidized chain ends, thus promoting further degradation by chitinases. This enzymatic activity was discovered and further characterized by using mass spectrometry and chromatographic separation methods to detect oxidized products generated in the absence or presence of H(2)(18)O or (18)O(2). There are strong indications that similar enzymes exist that work on cellulose. Our findings not only demonstrate the existence of a hitherto unknown enzyme activity but also provide new avenues toward more efficient enzymatic conversion of biomass.
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Gustav Vaaje‐Kolstad
All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Food Biotechnology
Bjørge Westereng
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
Svein Jarle Horn
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
Science
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
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Vaaje‐Kolstad et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d72a9066e6af6209f507ca — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1192231