| Literature DB >> 21845199 |
Jeong Ho Jeon1, Jun Tae Kim, Hyun Sook Lee, Sang-Jin Kim, Sung Gyun Kang, Sang Ho Choi, Jung-Hyun Lee.
Abstract
Metagenomic library was constructed from a deep-sea sediment sample and screened for lipolytic activity. Open-reading frames of six positive clones showed only 33-58% amino acid identities to the known proteins. One of them was assigned to a new group while others were grouped into Families I and V or EstD Family. By employing a combination of approaches such as removing the signal sequence, coexpression of chaperone genes, and low temperature induction, we obtained five soluble recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli. The purified enzymes had optimum temperatures of 30-35°C and the cold-activity property. Among them, one enzyme showed lipase activity by preferentially hydrolyzing p-nitrophenyl palmitate and p-nitrophenyl stearate and high salt resistance with up to 4 M NaCl. Our research demonstrates the feasibility of developing novel lipolytic enzymes from marine environments by the combination of functional metagenomic approach and protein expression technology.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21845199 PMCID: PMC3154406 DOI: 10.1155/2011/271419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Primers used in the cloning of lipolytic enzyme-encoding genes.
| Gene | Primer* |
|---|---|
| EM3L1 | 5′-TTTGGAGG |
| 5′-CTGGTGTC | |
| EM3L2 | 5′-TGATAAAT |
| 5′-CCTTTTAG | |
| EM3L3 | 5′-TAGCTGCA |
| 5′-AAAGTTGG | |
| EM3L4 | 5′-GAGAAGTGAACCGGGGGA |
| 5′-CAAAAGCGCCC | |
| EM3L6 | 5′-AGGAGAAG |
| 5′-GTTGCAGA | |
| EM3L7 | 5′-CGGAGTGAAAG |
| 5′-GTATTACCT |
*Underlined bases in the primers indicate the restriction enzyme recognition site (NdeI/XhoI).
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree of the lipolytic enzymes. The tree was constructed using the MEGA 4.1 program with the neighbor-joining algorithm. Only bootstrap values greater than 50% are shown. Bar: 0.2 substitutions per amino acid site.
Figure 2Multiple alignments of the conserved motifs of the ORFs isolated from metagenomic library with the homologs of each family or group. (a) Family V including EM3L1 and EM3L6: YP_003395264, an α/β hydrolase fold protein from Conexibacter woesei DSM 14684; ZP_01697334, an α/β hydrolase fold from Bacillus coagulans 36D1; NP_767479, a hypothetical protein bll0839 from Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110; ZP_06812025, an α/β hydrolase fold protein from Geobacillus thermoglucosidasius C56-YS93. (b) Family V including EM3L3: AAK07450, a triacylglycerol acyl hydrolase from Moritella marina; YP_001530963, an α/β hydrolase fold from Desulfococcus oleovorans Hxd3; YP_001188192, an α/β hydrolase fold from Pseudomonas mendocina ymp (YP_001188192). (c) EstD2 family including EM3L2: ZP_01915829, a hypothetical protein from Limnobacter sp. MED105; ADN26553, an EstD2 from uncultured bacterium; ZP_00952831, a hypothetical protein from Oceanicaulis alexandrii HTCC2633; YP_003594738, a hypothetical protein from Caulobacter segnis ATCC 21756. (d) New group including EM3L4: ZP_01463024, an LpqC from Stigmatella aurantiaca DW4/3-1; YP_004018523, a lipoprotein from Frankia sp. EuI1c; ZP_06968499, a putative lipoprotein from Ktedonobacter racemifer DSM 44963; ZP_06502439, a conserved hypothetical protein from Micrococcus luteus SK58. (e) Family I including EM3L7: ACJ13070, a lipase from uncultured bacterium; (ACJ13070); XP_390196, a hypothetical protein from Gibberella zeae PH-1; XP_504639, a YALI0E31515p from Yarrowia lipolytica. Triangles and squares represent the residues involved in the formation of the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole, respectively, and the conserved pentapeptide motifs are boxed.
Figure 3Expression of esterase/lipase genes. (a) Expression analysis of EM3L1, EM3L2, and EM3L3; (b) expression analysis of EM3L4, EM3L6, and EM3L7 with co-expression of the GroEL-GroES chaperone genes at 16°C; (c) purified enzymes. The bands corresponding to the proteins are indicated by arrows. Lane M: molecular mass standards, lane T: total cell lysate, lane S: soluble fraction, lane P: insoluble fraction, lane 1: purified EM3L1, lane 2: purified EM3L2, lane3: purified EM3L3, lane 4: purified EM3L4, and lane 5: purified EM3L6.
Characteristics of the purified lipolytic enzymes.
| Enzyme | Temperaturea
| Activation energy | pHb
| Substratec
| Specific activity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EM3L1 | 15–50 (35) | 3.6 | 7.5–9.5 (8.5) | C2–C10 (C6) | 558.2 |
| EM3L2 | 15–40 (30) | 8.6 | 7.0–10.0 (8.5) | C6 (C6) | 1.7 |
| EM3L3 | 15–40 (35) | 3.5 | 7.0–10.0 (8.5) | C2–C10 (C6) | 29.7 |
| EM3L4 | 20–50 (35) | 10.6 | 7.0–10.0 (7.5) | C16–C18 (C16) | 5.3 |
| EM3L6 | 15–40 (35) | 4.1 | 7.5–9.0 (8.5) | C2–C10 (C6) | 23.3 |
aThe temperature range is the temperatures at which the activities are greater than 50% of the highest value (Figure S1). bpH range is the pHs at which the activities are greater than 50% of the highest value (Figure S2). cSubstrates are the p-nitrophenyl esters for which the enzyme shows an activity greater than 20% of the highest value (Figure S3).
Effect of metal ions and detergents on EM3L4.
| Metal ions (1 mM) | Relative activity (%) | Detergent (1%) | Relative activity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| None | 100 | None | 100 |
| MnCl2 | 147 | Tween 20 | 74 |
| MgCl2 | 175 | Tween 40 | 70 |
| CaCl2 | 175 | Tween 60 | 54 |
| CuCl2 | 165 | Tween 80 | 69 |
| ZnSO4 | 52 | Triton X-100 | 92 |
| FeSO4 | 0 | SDS | 0 |
| CoSO4 | 35 | ||
| NiSO4 | 112 | ||
| PMSF | 42 | ||
| EDTA | 107 |
Figure 4Effect of NaCl on p-nitrophenyl hexanoate hydrolysis activity of EM3L4. The activity of the enzyme preparation in the absence of NaCl before incubation was defined as the 100% level.