| Literature DB >> 26387816 |
Bo Xu1,2,3, Liming Dai1, Junjun Li1,2,3, Meng Deng1, Huabiao Miao1, Junpei Zhou1,2,3, Yuelin Mu1,2,3, Qian Wu1,2,3, Xianghua Tang1,2,3, Yunjuan Yang1,2,3, Junmei Ding1,2,3, Nanyu Han1,2,3, Zunxi Huang1,2,3.
Abstract
Xylanases sourced from different bacteria have significantly different enzymatic properties. Therefore, studying xylanases from different bacteria is important to their applications in different fields. A potential xylanase degradation gene in Massilia was recently discovered through genomic sequencing. However, its xylanase activity remains unexplored. This paper is the first to report a xylanase (XynRBM26) belonging to the glycosyl hydrolase family (GH10) from the genus Massilia. The gene encodes a 383-residue polypeptide (XynRBM26) with the highest identity of 62% with the endoxylanase from uncultured bacterium BLR13. The XynRBM26 expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 is a monomer with a molecular mass of 45.0 kDa. According to enzymatic characteristic analysis, pH 5.5 is the most appropriate for XynRBM26, which could maintain more than 90% activity between pH 5.0 and 8.0. Moreover, XynRBM26 is stable at 37°C and could maintain at least 96% activity after being placed at 37°C for 1 h. This paper is the first to report that GH10 xylanase in an animal gastrointestinal tract (GIT) has salt tolerance, which could maintain 86% activity in 5 M NaCl. Under the optimum conditions, Km, Vmax, and kcat of XynRBM26 to beechwood xylan are 9.49 mg/ml, 65.79 μmol/min/mg, and 47.34 /sec, respectively. Considering that XynRBM26 comes from an animal GIT, this xylanase has potential application in feedstuff. Moreover, XynRBM26 is applicable to high-salt food and seafood processing, as well as other high-salt environmental biotechnological fields, because of its high catalytic activity in high-concentration NaCl.Entities:
Keywords: Gastrointestinal tract; Massilia; Rhinopithecus bieti; Xylanase; salt tolerant
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26387816 DOI: 10.4014/jmb.1504.04021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 1017-7825 Impact factor: 2.351