Kelly_2010_PLoS.One_5_e11942

Reference

Title : The glycobiome of the rumen bacterium Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus B316(T) highlights adaptation to a polysaccharide-rich environment - Kelly_2010_PLoS.One_5_e11942
Author(s) : Kelly WJ , Leahy SC , Altermann E , Yeoman CJ , Dunne JC , Kong Z , Pacheco DM , Li D , Noel SJ , Moon CD , Cookson AL , Attwood GT
Ref : PLoS ONE , 5 :e11942 , 2010
Abstract :

Determining the role of rumen microbes and their enzymes in plant polysaccharide breakdown is fundamental to understanding digestion and maximising productivity in ruminant animals. Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus B316(T) is a gram-positive, butyrate-forming rumen bacterium with a key role in plant polysaccharide degradation. The 4.4 Mb genome consists of 4 replicons; a chromosome, a chromid and two megaplasmids. The chromid is the smallest reported for all bacteria, and the first identified from the phylum Firmicutes. B316 devotes a large proportion of its genome to the breakdown and reassembly of complex polysaccharides and has a highly developed glycobiome when compared to other sequenced bacteria. The secretion of a range of polysaccharide-degrading enzymes which initiate the breakdown of pectin, starch and xylan, a subtilisin family protease active against plant proteins, and diverse intracellular enzymes to break down oligosaccharides constitute the degradative capability of this organism. A prominent feature of the genome is the presence of multiple gene clusters predicted to be involved in polysaccharide biosynthesis. Metabolic reconstruction reveals the absence of an identifiable gene for enolase, a conserved enzyme of the glycolytic pathway. To our knowledge this is the first report of an organism lacking an enolase. Our analysis of the B316 genome shows how one organism can contribute to the multi-organism complex that rapidly breaks down plant material in the rumen. It can be concluded that B316, and similar organisms with broad polysaccharide-degrading capability, are well suited to being early colonizers and degraders of plant polysaccharides in the rumen environment.

PubMedSearch : Kelly_2010_PLoS.One_5_e11942
PubMedID: 20689770
Gene_locus related to this paper: butpb-e0rxq6 , butpb-e0ryg8 , butpb-e0ryt2 , butpb-e0s1b3 , butpb-e0s2z7 , butpb-e0rxr0 , butpb-e0rxg9

Related information

Gene_locus butpb-e0rxq6    butpb-e0ryg8    butpb-e0ryt2    butpb-e0s1b3    butpb-e0s2z7    butpb-e0rxr0    butpb-e0rxg9

Citations formats

Kelly WJ, Leahy SC, Altermann E, Yeoman CJ, Dunne JC, Kong Z, Pacheco DM, Li D, Noel SJ, Moon CD, Cookson AL, Attwood GT (2010)
The glycobiome of the rumen bacterium Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus B316(T) highlights adaptation to a polysaccharide-rich environment
PLoS ONE 5 :e11942

Kelly WJ, Leahy SC, Altermann E, Yeoman CJ, Dunne JC, Kong Z, Pacheco DM, Li D, Noel SJ, Moon CD, Cookson AL, Attwood GT (2010)
PLoS ONE 5 :e11942