Microplate based procedures are described for the colorimetric or fluorometric analysis of extracellular enzyme activity. These procedures allow for the rapid assay of such activity in large numbers of environmental samples within a manageable time frame.
Much of the nutrient cycling and carbon processing in natural environments occurs through the activity of extracellular enzymes released by microorganisms. Thus, measurement of the activity of these extracellular enzymes can give insights into the rates of ecosystem level processes, such as organic matter decomposition or nitrogen and phosphorus mineralization. Assays of extracellular enzyme activity in environmental samples typically involve exposing the samples to artificial colorimetric or fluorometric substrates and tracking the rate of substrate hydrolysis. Here we describe microplate based methods for these procedures that allow the analysis of large numbers of samples within a short time frame. Samples are allowed to react with artificial substrates within 96-well microplates or deep well microplate blocks, and enzyme activity is subsequently determined by absorption or fluorescence of the resulting end product using a typical microplate reader or fluorometer. Such high throughput procedures not only facilitate comparisons between spatially separate sites or ecosystems, but also substantially reduce the cost of such assays by reducing overall reagent volumes needed per sample.
Microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi obtain nutrients and carbon from complex organic compounds through the production of extracellular enzymes. These enzymes typically hydrolyze polymers into smaller subunits that can be taken into the cell. Therefore, at an ecological level, these microbial extracellular enzymes are responsible for much of the nutrient mineralization and organic matter decomposition that occurs in natural environments. Enzymes such as cellobiohydrolase (CBH) and β-glucosidase are important for cellulose degradation and work in unison to catalyze the hydrolysis of cellulose to glucose1,2, which provides a utilizable carbon substrate for microbial uptake and assimilation. The enzyme phosphatase releases soluble inorganic phosphate groups from organophosphates, essentially mineralizing phosphate and making it available for use by most organisms3. Other enzymes, such as N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAGase), are important in chitin degradation and can make both carbon and nitrogen available for microbial acquisition4.
One of the procedures for the assay of microbial extracellular enzyme activity in natural environments is the use of artificial p-nitrophenyl (pNP) linked substrates, an approach that was originally developed to detect soil phosphatase activity5. This approach relies on the detection of a colored end product, p-nitrophenol, which is released when the artificial substrate is hydrolyzed by the appropriate enzyme. The p-nitrophenol can be subsequently quantified colorimetrically by measuring its absorbance at around 400-410 nm. This method has since been applied to detect other enzymes such as NAGase6, and has been used in various studies looking at microbial extracellular enzyme activity in soils and sediments7-9.
An alternative approach that was originally developed to assess extracellular glucosidase activity in aquatic environments10,11 makes use of 4-methylumbelliferone (MUB) linked substrates. The end product released (4-methylumbelliferone) is highly fluorescent and can be detected using a fluorometer with an excitation/emission setting around 360/460 nm. A variety of MUB-linked artificial substrates are available, permitting the fluorometric measurement of the activity of at least as many enzymes (e.g. β-glucosidase, cellobiohydrolase, NAGase, phosphatase) as can be assayed using the pNP-substrate colorimetric procedure. Other microbial extracellular enzymes, such as the protein-degrading leucine aminopeptidase, can be assayed fluorometrically using 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (COU) linked substrates. Both MUB- and COU-linked substrates have been used to determine enzyme activity in various terrestrial and aquatic samples12,13.
While previous studies have described fluorometric or colorimetric microplate approaches to determine extracellular enzyme activity14; there is a need for a clear presentation of how to conduct such assays. Here we demonstrate procedures for conducting high throughput microplate techniques for the analysis of extracellular enzyme activity in soils and sediments using the colorimetric pNP-linked substrates approach and in natural waters using the fluorescent MUB-linked substrates technique. We focus on the measurement of the activities of β-glucosidase, NAGase, and phosphatase as these enzymes can be tied to carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling, respectively. However, the procedures described here can be applied to the measurement of other extracellular enzymes using different artificial substrates.
Colorimetric Analysis of Extracellular Enzyme Activity in Soils and Sediments
1. Preparation of Substrate and Buffer Solutions for Colorimetric Analyses of Enzyme Activity
2. Determination of a Standard to Convert Absorbance to pNP Concentration
3. Conducting the Enzyme Assay
4. Determination of Dry Mass of Samples
5. Calculation of Enzyme Activity per Dry Mass of Soil or Sediment
Enzyme activity = Final absorbance / (C x incubation time x sample dry mass)
Fluorescent Analysis of Extracellular Enzyme Activity in Natural Waters
1. Preparation of Substrate, Standard, and Buffer Solutions for Fluorometric Analyses of Enzyme Activity
2. Organizing Water Samples on a 96-Well Black Microplate
3. Setting up Sample, Standard, Quench, and Substrate Controls
4. Recording Fluorescence
5. Calculation of Enzyme Activity per Volume of Water
Enzyme activity = (mean sample fluorescence – mean initial sample fluorescence) / ((mean standard fluorescence / 0.5 mol) x (mean quench control fluorescence / mean standard fluorescence) x (0.2 ml) x (time in hr))
Soils and aquatic sediments typically have appreciable levels of extracellular enzyme activity as a result of attached microbial communities (biofilms) growing on the surface of particles. Figure 3 shows how this activity changes depending on the size of particles obtained from the surface sediment of a third order stream in northern Mississippi, USA. A previous study has shown that the bacterial communities on sediment particles from this stream can be separated into three distinct groups based on molecular analysis of their community structure: those on 0.063 mm particles, those on 0.125, 0.25, and 0.5 mm particles, and those on 1 mm particles15. Analysis of patterns in extracellular enzyme activity supports this conclusion; with phosphatase (Figure 3A) being similar on 0.125, 0.25, and 0.5 mm particles but much higher on the 1 and 0.063 mm fractions when measured using the pNP-linked substrate technique. Other enzymes such as β-glucosidase (Figure 3B), and NAGase (Figure 3C) show similar peaks on the finest particles, but are not elevated on 1 mm particles, highlighting the fact that different enzymes may show different environmental distributions and these can be elucidated using this assay. The relatively low error bars show that colorimetric assays of enzyme activity on sediments are reproducible and thus amenable to statistical analysis when comparing different environmental samples.
Natural waters tend to have lower extracellular enzyme activity per ml than soils or sediments do per g. As such, they should be assayed fluorometrically using MUB-linked substrates. Figure 4 shows how the activity of the enzymes phosphatase (Figure 4A), β-glucosidase (Figure 4B), and NAGase (Figure 4C) varies with depth in a shallow lake in northern Mississippi, USA. The lake (Boondoggle Lake) is known to be nutrient poor16, which is also suggested by the relatively high activity of phosphatase (Figure 4A), an enzyme that microorganisms produce in order to acquire phosphate from organic compounds. For all three of the enzymes assayed, samples collected at the water surface (0 cm) and 50 cm depth showed similar activity, whereas activity was elevated in the 100 cm sample. This sample was essentially taken from the water-sediment interface, and the presence of sediment particles in the sample likely accounts for the higher activity seen in this sample, especially for β-glucosidase and NAGase. As with the pNP substrates, the low error bars show that even with just three replicate readings, the reproducibility of the fluorometric assays using MUB substrates is high.
Note that units for Figure 4 are in nmoles of substrate consumed whereas those for Figure 3 are in μmoles of substrate consumed, even though the per unit size is comparable (either per ml or per g). This highlights the fact that soils and sediments tend to have much higher extracellular activity than natural waters (the activities of each specific enzyme in Figure 3 are approximately 10-100x higher than the activities of the equivalent enzyme in Figure 4). It also demonstrates the increased sensitivity of the MUB-linked substrate technique, and the necessity of using this technique for assaying extracellular enzyme activity in water samples.
Figure 1. Suggested layout of 96-well deep well blocks for the assay of extracellular enzyme activity in soils or sediments using the colorimetric pNP-linked substrate technique. Each well should receive a total of 300 μl, made up of sample slurry, substrate solution, or acetate buffer depending upon whether it is a sample run, sample control, or substrate control.
Figure 2. Suggested layout of 96-well black microplates for the assay of extracellular enzyme activity in water samples using the fluorometric MUB-linked substrate technique. Nine samples can be arranged vertically on the plate (A) each occupying eight wells. These eight wells are used for sample runs, sample controls, and quench controls while remaining wells are used for substrate controls and MUB standards (B).
Figure 3. Extracellular enzyme activity on different sizes of surface sediment particles collected from a small stream in north Mississippi, USA. Each particle size fraction was assayed for the activity of phosphatase (A), β-glucosidase (B), and NAGase (C) following the pNP-substrate colorimetric procedure. Activity is reported in μmoles substrate consumed hr-1 g dry mass of sediment-1 and is the mean (+ S.E.) of three replicate readings per particle size fraction.
Figure 4. Extracellular enzyme activity in water taken at three different depths (0, 50, and 100 cm) from a shallow lake in north Mississippi, USA. Water was assayed for the activity of phosphatase (A), β-glucosidase (B), and NAGase (C) following the MUB-substrate fluorometric procedure. Activity is reported in nmoles substrate consumed h-1 ml of water-1 and is the mean (+ S.E.) of three replicate readings per sample.
Determining the activity of a variety of microbial extracellular enzymes in soils and sediments can provide useful insights into rates of nutrient mineralization and organic matter processing17. However, soils can vary in their moisture levels, so it is important to standardize activity to soil dry weight. This requires an additional drying step (typically of two days) beyond simply measuring enzyme activity. Thus, in contrast to assays of enzyme activity in water samples that provide near instantaneous results, reliable assays of enzyme activity in soil and sediments take a few days. For some soils, it may even be more appropriate to express activity per gram of organic matter or ash free dry mass, requiring an additional ashing step (typically 2 hr at 500 °C) beyond the drying procedure. Regardless, the most critical step in the colorimetric assay of soil or sediment enzyme activity is the withdrawal of the supernatant from the deep-well block following centrifugation at the end of the incubation period. Because this procedure relies on measuring absorbance, even the presence of a few stray soil particles in the final microplate can lead to spurious results. Higher centrifugation speeds (>5,000 x g) might help mitigate this problem, but in our experience centrifuge rotors that accept microplates usually have rotational limits below this threshold, and the blocks themselves may not tolerate much higher speeds. Essentially, this particular pipetting step requires a combination of care and speed to use a multi-channel pipettor to quickly transfer the required amount of supernatant from the deep-well block to the microplate.
Assays of extracellular enzyme activity in water samples have neither the need for a drying period nor the centrifugation step, the latter because both the enzyme-substrate reaction and measurement of fluorescence of the end product occur in the same microplate. As such, these assays are typically faster and may initially appear easier to run. However, they have their own limitations in that, whenever possible, the MUB standard and MUB-linked substrates should not be exposed to light. In our experience, dimming the lights as much a possible during pipetting and incubating the microplates in the dark (or covered with an opaque lid) is a necessity. Because these assays also require the plates to be read at multiple time points, this often results in the need for very rapid switching between plates when assaying multiple enzymes at the same time. For example, in order to assay nine water samples for the activity of six enzymes simultaneously (i.e. using six different microplates), it becomes necessary to read a plate every 2 min for 1 hr in order to ensure that each individual plate is read every 10-15 min (in this case, every 12 min). Care must be taken to keep track of the particular plate being read, as well as to ensure that no liquid is spilled from the plate as it is transferred into and out of the microplate fluorometer. When assaying multiple enzymes at once, it is also important to keep in mind the time that it takes for the microplate reader to actually read the plate and to stagger reading intervals accordingly. A final concern with the fluorescent assay of extracellular enzyme activity in water samples is when working with samples that are turbid. Water samples that contain suspended particles should be shaken before initially pouring into the pipette reservoir and mixed again by withdrawing and ejecting with the pipettor prior to being loaded onto the microplate. Higher numbers of particles in a sample also typically results in greater quenching of the fluorescent signal, and the importance of quench controls for each sample cannot be stressed enough.
While MUB- and pNP-linked substrates typically show similar Vmax values for environmental enzymes, the Km values can differ, and enzymes such as β-glucosidases and phosphatases may have higher affinity for MUB-linked substrates than their pNP-linked analogs14. Therefore, MUB-linked substrates are likely to be more sensitive than those linked to pNP, which suggests that they would be a better choice to use when measuring enzyme activity in soils and sediments. However the fluorogenic end product that is measured during MUB assays is subject to potential quenching in some soil extracts, and fluorescence readings can be unstable over time12. Soils and sediments also tend to have higher extracellular enzyme activity than natural waters, so the increased sensitivity of the fluorometric MUB-linked assays may offer little advantage over the colorimetric pNP methods given the potential problems with quenching when analyzing certain soils. As a side note, the pNP-linked substrates and the pNP standard itself are generally more affordable than their MUB counterparts; an additional reason for their use if budgetary restraints apply.
Perhaps the most important aspect of being able to assay microbial extracellular enzyme activity in aquatic and terrestrial environments is that while these techniques measure microbial physiological processes, these processes have a direct influence on ecosystem level transformations of carbon and nutrients. Rates of organic matter decomposition have been directly linked to the activity of extracellular cellulases in sediments18,19, so that rapid measurements of enzyme activity potentially facilitate the determination of instantaneous in situ decomposition rates in environmental samples. Using high throughput microplate approaches allows for the simultaneous measurement of enzyme activity in larger numbers of samples than more typical single tube approaches, so that variation in enzyme activity (and by extension in ecosystem level processes) in response to factors such as depth20 or environmental perturbations9,21 can be examined. Similarly, assays of enzymes involved in nutrient cycling, such as phosphatase and NAGase, can provide insights into nutrient limitation in specific environments, for instance, the relative importance of organic phosphorus to organic nitrogen during soil development8.
Because enzyme activities have been measured in environmental samples for over thirty years, comparisons between studies using advanced meta-analyses are now becoming possible. Such studies suggest that, at the global scale, enzyme activity, and therefore rates of organic matter decomposition and nutrient mineralization, are tied to pH, substrate availability, and nutrient stoichiometry17. At the same time, the use of a microplate-based protocol has begun to permit the analysis of fine scale patterns in enzyme activity using geostatistical mapping techniques22. Such techniques can examine patterns in spatial variability, and future developments could include the use of 384-well based microplates to permit the instantaneous analysis of even more samples and the finer resolution of spatial patterns.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Funding for aspects of this work was provided by various sources including the United States Department of Agriculture Specific Cooperative Agreement 58-6408-1-595 and the National Science Foundation (award 1049911).
REAGENTS AND MATERIALS | |||
Glacial acetic acid | Various suppliers | ||
Sodium acetate | Various suppliers | ||
Sodium hydroxide | Various suppliers | ||
p-Nitrophenol | Fisher | BP612-1 | Alternates available |
p-Nitrophenyl (pNP)-phosphate | Sigma | N3234 | pNP-substrate |
pNP-β-glucopyranoside | Sigma | N7006 | pNP-substrate |
pNP-β-N-acetylglucosaminide | Sigma | N9376 | pNP-substrate |
Clear 96-well microplates | Fisher | 12-563-301 | Alternates available |
96-well deep well blocks | Costar | 3958 | Alternates available |
Aluminum weigh pans | Various suppliers | ||
Sterile 15 ml centrifuge tubes | Various suppliers | ||
Sterile 50 ml centrifuge tubes | Various suppliers | ||
4-Methylumbelliferone | Sigma | M1381 | |
4-Methylumbelliferyl (MUB)-phosphate | Sigma | M8883 | MUB-substrate |
4-MUB-glucopyranoside | Sigma | M3633 | MUB-substrate |
4-MUB-N-acetylglucosaminide | Sigma | M2133 | MUB-substrate |
Sodium bicarbonate | Various suppliers | ||
Black 96-well microplate | Costar | 3792 | |
Pipette reservoir | Various suppliers | ||
EQUIPMENT | |||
Centrifuge | Eppendorf | 5810R | |
Centrifuge rotor | Eppendorf | A-4-81 | For microplates/deep-well blocks |
Microplate reader | BioTek | Synergy HT | Alternates available |
Microplate fluorometer | BioTek | FLx 800 | Alternates available |
8-channel pipettor | Various suppliers |