Wefers_2017_Appl.Environ.Microbiol_83_

Reference

Title : Enzymatic Mechanism for Arabinan Degradation and Transport in the Thermophilic Bacterium Caldanaerobius polysaccharolyticus - Wefers_2017_Appl.Environ.Microbiol_83_
Author(s) : Wefers D , Dong J , Abdel-Hamid AM , Paul HM , Pereira GV , Han Y , Dodd D , Baskaran R , Mayer B , Mackie RI , Cann I
Ref : Applied Environmental Microbiology , 83 : , 2017
Abstract :

The plant cell wall polysaccharide arabinan provides an important supply of arabinose, and unraveling arabinan-degrading strategies by microbes is important for understanding its use as a source of energy. Here, we explored the arabinan-degrading enzymes in the thermophilic bacterium Caldanaerobius polysaccharolyticus and identified a gene cluster encoding two glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 51 alpha-l-arabinofuranosidases (CpAbf51A, CpAbf51B), a GH43 endoarabinanase (CpAbn43A), a GH27 beta-l-arabinopyranosidase (CpAbp27A), and two GH127 beta-l-arabinofuranosidases (CpAbf127A, CpAbf127B). The genes were expressed as recombinant proteins, and the functions of the purified proteins were determined with para-nitrophenyl (pNP)-linked sugars and naturally occurring pectin structural elements as the substrates. The results demonstrated that CpAbn43A is an endoarabinanase while CpAbf51A and CpAbf51B are alpha-l-arabinofuranosidases that exhibit diverse substrate specificities, cleaving alpha-1,2, alpha-1,3, and alpha-1,5 linkages of purified arabinan-oligosaccharides. Furthermore, both CpAbf127A and CpAbf127B cleaved beta-arabinofuranose residues in complex arabinan side chains, thus providing evidence of the function of this family of enzymes on such polysaccharides. The optimal temperatures of the enzymes ranged between 60 degrees C and 75 degrees C, and CpAbf43A and CpAbf51A worked synergistically to release arabinose from branched and debranched arabinan. Furthermore, the hydrolytic activity on branched arabinan oligosaccharides and degradation of pectic substrates by the endoarabinanase and l-arabinofuranosidases suggested a microbe equipped with diverse activities to degrade complex arabinan in the environment. Based on our functional analyses of the genes in the arabinan degradation cluster and the substrate-binding studies on a component of the cognate transporter system, we propose a model for arabinan degradation and transport by C. polysaccharolyticusIMPORTANCE Genomic DNA sequencing and bioinformatic analysis allowed the identification of a gene cluster encoding several proteins predicted to function in arabinan degradation and transport in C. polysaccharolyticus The analysis of the recombinant proteins yielded detailed insights into the putative arabinan metabolism of this thermophilic bacterium. The use of various branched arabinan oligosaccharides provided a detailed understanding of the substrate specificities of the enzymes and allowed assignment of two new GH127 polypeptides as beta-l-arabinofuranosidases able to degrade pectic substrates, thus expanding our knowledge of this rare group of glycoside hydrolases. In addition, the enzymes showed synergistic effects for the degradation of arabinans at elevated temperatures. The enzymes characterized from the gene cluster are, therefore, of utility for arabinose production in both the biofuel and food industries.

PubMedSearch : Wefers_2017_Appl.Environ.Microbiol_83_
PubMedID: 28710263

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Citations formats

Wefers D, Dong J, Abdel-Hamid AM, Paul HM, Pereira GV, Han Y, Dodd D, Baskaran R, Mayer B, Mackie RI, Cann I (2017)
Enzymatic Mechanism for Arabinan Degradation and Transport in the Thermophilic Bacterium Caldanaerobius polysaccharolyticus
Applied Environmental Microbiology 83 :

Wefers D, Dong J, Abdel-Hamid AM, Paul HM, Pereira GV, Han Y, Dodd D, Baskaran R, Mayer B, Mackie RI, Cann I (2017)
Applied Environmental Microbiology 83 :