| Literature DB >> 16348990 |
H D Bae1, T A McAllister, J Yanke, K J Cheng, A D Muir.
Abstract
The effect of condensed tannins from birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus L.) on the cellulolytic rumen bacterium Fibrobacter succinogenes S85 was examined. Condensed tannins inhibited endoglucanase activity in the extracellular culture fluid, at concentrations as low as 25 mug ml. In contrast, cell-associated endoglucanase activity increased in concentrations of condensed tannins between 100 and 300 mug ml. Inhibition of endoglucanase activity in both the extracellular and the cell-associated fractions was virtually complete at 400 mug of condensed tannins ml. Despite the sharp decline in extracellular endoglucanase activity with increasing concentrations of condensed tannins, filter paper digestion declined only moderately between 0 and 200 mug of condensed tannins ml. However, at 300 mug ml, filter paper digestion was dramatically reduced and at 400 mug ml, almost no filter paper was digested. F. succinogenes S85 was seen to form digestive grooves on the surface of cellulose, and at 200 mug ml, digestive pits were formed which penetrated into the interior of cellulose fibers. Cells grown with condensed tannins (100 to 300 mug ml) possessed large amounts of surface material, and although this material may have been capsular carbohydrate, its osmiophilic nature suggested that it had arisen from the formation of tannin-protein complexes on the cell surface. The presence of electron-dense extracellular material suggested that similar complexes were formed with extracellular protein.Entities:
Year: 1993 PMID: 16348990 PMCID: PMC182247 DOI: 10.1128/aem.59.7.2132-2138.1993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Environ Microbiol ISSN: 0099-2240 Impact factor: 4.792