Published November 11, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article

Creating a large designer cellulosome in yeast to boost ethanol production

  • 1. Academia Sinica
  • 2. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • 3. China Medical University Hospital
  • 4. University of Chicago

Description

Cellulosic biomass represents a promising feedstock for biofuel and biochemical production. However, its recalcitrant structure strongly hinders enzymatic degradation. Cellulosomes are large multienzyme complexes, highly efficient at degrading cellulose. A cellulase in a cellulosome has a dockerin domain that binds to a cohesin module on the CipA (cellulosome integrating protein A). In a native cellulosome all cohesins are identical, so that the cellulase types and their positions in a CipA cannot be controlled. Here, we constructed the largest designer CipA known to date. Using innovative techniques, we synthesized a designer CipA gene that encodes nine distinct cohesins and two cellulose-binding modules, which we named DCipA2B9C. Then, we fused nine distinct fungal cellulases separately with nine distinct dockerins for their precise positioning on DCipA2B9C to achieve enzyme proximity-effect. We constructed three yeast hosts to compare their performances. First, an enzyme host (EH) secretes nine dockerin-fused cellulases, including endoglucanases (EgIII-a, EgIII-m, and EgIII-c), exoglucanases (CBHII-j and EXG2-r), β-glucosidases (BGS-f and BGS-l), and cellulase boosters, including a LPMO-t and CDH-b. Second, the scaffoldin host (SH) expresses DCipA2B9C. Third, the cellulosome-9 host expresses DCipA2B9C and nine dockerin-fused cellulases. Native-PAGE and ELISA confirmed specific interactions between dockerins and cohesins. Additionally, native-PAGE, SDS-PAGE, and LC-MS verified the successful assembly of the multienzyme complex. Our performance evaluation showed that coculturing of EH and SH outperformed the cellulosome-9 host. It degraded microcrystalline cellulose efficiently to produce 14.29 g/L bioethanol, which surpassed all previously constructed yeast cellulosomes by fourfold or more. In summary, our study provides an effective approach to biomass degradation.

Data availability

The amino acid sequences of the cellulosomal constructs are provided in SI Appendix, Table S7. All other data are included in the manuscript and/or SI Appendix.

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2517490122
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:16660

Funding

National Science and Technology Council
NSTC113-2321-B-005-011
National Science and Technology Council
MOST 110-2221-E-039-002-MY3

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution