| Literature DB >> 27915375 |
Hidetaka Doi1,2, Yuriko Tokura3, Yukiko Mori3, Kenichi Mori3, Yoko Asakura3, Yoshihiro Usuda3,4, Hiroo Fukuda5, Akito Chinen3.
Abstract
Alginate is a marine non-food-competing polysaccharide that has potential applications in biorefinery. Owing to its large size (molecular weight >300,000 Da), alginate cannot pass through the bacterial cell membrane. Therefore, bacteria that utilize alginate are presumed to have an enzyme that degrades extracellular alginate. Recently, Vibrio algivorus sp. SA2T was identified as a novel alginate-decomposing and alginate-utilizing species. However, little is known about the mechanism of alginate degradation and metabolism in this species. To address this issue, we screened the V. algivorus genomic DNA library for genes encoding polysaccharide-decomposing enzymes using a novel double-layer plate screening method and identified alyB as a candidate. Most identified alginate-decomposing enzymes (i.e., alginate lyases) must be concentrated and purified before extracellular alginate depolymerization. AlyB of V. algivorus heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli depolymerized extracellular alginate without requiring concentration or purification. We found seven homologues in the V. algivorus genome (alyB, alyD, oalA, oalB, oalC, dehR, and toaA) that are thought to encode enzymes responsible for alginate transport and metabolism. Introducing these genes into E. coli enabled the cells to assimilate soluble alginate depolymerized by V. algivorus AlyB as the sole carbon source. The alginate was bioconverted into L-lysine (43.3 mg/l) in E. coli strain AJIK01. These findings demonstrate a simple and novel screening method for identifying polysaccharide-degrading enzymes in bacteria and provide a simple alginate biocatalyst and fermentation system with potential applications in industrial biorefinery.Entities:
Keywords: Alginate; Alginate lyase; Alginate metabolism; Biorefinery; Polysaccharide-degrading enzyme; Vibrio algivorus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27915375 PMCID: PMC5266763 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-016-8021-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Strains and plasmids
| Strain | Description or genotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| MG1655 |
| CGSC (no. 6300) |
|
| Alginate-utilizing strain | DSM 29824T; Doi et al. |
|
| Alginate-utilizing strain | Le Roux et al. |
| JM109 |
| Takara Bio, Kyoto, Japan |
| EPI300 |
| Epicentre Biotechnologies, Madison, WI, USA |
| D2964 | MG1655 | This study |
| D2978 | MG1655 | This study |
| AJIK01 |
| Doi et al. |
| D3000 | AJIK01 | This study |
| pCC1FOS | Fosmid vector for preparing the | Epicentre Biotechnologies |
| pM01 | Plasmid for cloning and serving as a vector control, pMW119-attR- | Doi et al. |
| pM02 | Plasmid expressing | This study |
| pM03 | Plasmid expressing | This study |
| pM04 | Plasmid expressing SP-deficient | This study |
| pM05 | Plasmid expressing CBM32-deficient | This study |
| pM06 | Plasmid expressing PL7-deficient | This study |
| pM07 | Plasmid expressing SP- and CBM32-deficient | This study |
| pM08 | Plasmid expressing | This study |
| pM09 | Plasmid expressing | This study |
| pM10 | Plasmid expressing | This study |
| pM11 |
| This study |
| pM12 |
| This study |
| pKD46 | λ-Red system helper plasmid | Datsenko and Wanner |
| pMW-intxis-ts | λ-Red system marker excision plasmid, temperature sensitive | Katashkina et al. |
| pMW118-attR-cat-attL-P tac6 | Template plasmid for cloning of attR-cat-attL-P tac6- | Katashkina et al. |
CGSC Coli Genetic Stock Center
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the alginate viscosity test for detecting the in vivo extracellular alginate-decomposing activity. Schematic representation of negative (a) and positive (b) results
Fig. 3Extracellular alginate depolymerization by AlyB of V. algivorus. a Liquefaction of alginate-containing medium. 1, LB medium with 50 g/l sodium alginate; 2, JM109/pM01 broth with 50 g/l sodium alginate (vector control); 3, JM109/pM02 broth with 50 g/l sodium alginate (whole broth of cells expressing alyB of V. splendidus); 4, JM109/pM03 broth with 50 g/l sodium alginate (whole broth of cells expressing alyB of V. algivorus). b Results of GPC analysis. Black, 2 g/l sodium alginate standard; pink, LB medium; blue, 2 g/l sodium alginate after processing with the supernatant of JM109/pM01; brown, 2 g/l sodium alginate after processing with the supernatant of JM109/pM03
Results of the alginate viscosity test for detecting in vivo extracellular alginate-decomposing activity
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole broth | − | − | + | − | − | + | − |
| Supernatant | − | − | + | − | − | + | − |
| Washed cells | − | − | + | − | − | + | − |
| Cell lysate | − | + | + | + | − | + | + |
1, JM109/pM01 (vector control); 2, JM109/pM02 (expressing wild-type AlyB of V. splendidus); 3, JM109/pM03 (expressing wild-type AlyB of V. algivorus); 4, JM109/pM04 (SP deletion mutant); 5, JM109/pM06 (PL7 deletion mutant); 6, JM109/pM05 (CBM32 deletion mutant); 7, JM109/pM07 (SP and CBM32 deletion mutant)
Fig. 1Results of alginate lyase enzyme activity assay. 1, crude lysate of V. splendidus ATCC33125T; 2, crude lysate of V. algivorus SA2T; 3, crude lysate of E. coli JM109/pM01 (vector control); 4, crude lysate of E. coli JM109/pM03 (harbouring alyB of V. algivorus). Blue, red, green, and purple bars represent activity at 34, 37, 40, and 44 °C, respectively
Fig. 4Predicted domain structure of V. algivorus AlyB. a The model was established using SignalP 4.0 (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP/) (Petersen et al. 2011) and Pfam 25.0 (http://pfam.xfam.org) (Finn et al. 2014) software. b Amino acid sequence of V. algivorus AlyB. Purple, red, and blue letters denote the SP, CBM32, and PL7 domains, respectively. c Model of AlyB domain deletion mutants. 1, SP deletion; 2, PL7 deletion; 3, CBM32 deletion; 4, SP and CBM32 deletion
Fig. 5SP-dependent extracellular alginate decomposition. a Quantification of decomposed alginate in concentrated supernatant samples (with 100 mg sodium alginate added to 5-ml concentrated supernatant protein samples; protein concentration: 0.24 g/l). GPC analysis was carried out after shaking at 120 rpm and 37 °C for 20 h. 1, JM109/pM01 (vector control); 2, JM109/pM03 (expressing wild-type AlyB of V. algivorus); 3, JM109/pM04 (SP deletion mutant); 4, JM109/pM06 (PL7 deletion mutant); 5, JM109/pM05 (CBM32 deletion mutant); 6, JM109/pM07 (SP and CBM32 deletion mutant); 7, JM109/pM02 (expressing wild-type AlyB of V. splendidus). b Average molecular weights after processing concentrated supernatant samples. Samples 1–7 are as described for panel a. c Western blot analysis of alginate in concentrated supernatants. 1, XL-Western Marker SP-2170 (Aproscience, Tokushima, Japan); 2, JM109/pM01 (vector control); 3, JM109/pM03; 4, JM109/pM04 (SP deletion mutant). d Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis alginate in concentrated supernatants. Lane 1, Novex Sharp Unstained Protein Standard (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA); lanes 2–4 are as described for panel c
Candidate genes of V. algivorus encoding enzymes related to alginate degradation and metabolism
| Assigned gene name | Annotated function of homologous genes of | DNA similarity to homologous genes of | GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession no. |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Alginate lyase | 69 | LC175806 |
|
| Alginate lyase | 65 | LC175802 |
|
| Porin | 53 | LC175810 |
|
| Symporter | 75 | LC175801 |
|
| Oligoalginate lyase | 81 | LC175805 |
|
| Oligoalginate lyase | 69 | LC175803 |
|
| Oligoalginate lyase | 74 | LC175804 |
|
| DEHU reductase | 81 | LC175807 |
DEHU 4-deoxy-l-erythro-5-hexoseulose urinate
Fig. 6Results of test-tube cultivation on minimal medium. a Cell growth on minimal medium using alginate depolymerized with commercial alginate lyase as the sole carbon source. 1, MG1655; 2, D2964; 3, D2978. b Cell growth on minimal medium using alginate depolymerized with AlyB (JM109/pM03) as the sole carbon source. 1, MG1655; 2, D2964; 3, D2978. c MG1655 accumulation on M9 medium, presented as dry cell weight (DCW). 1, M9 medium only (no carbon added); 2, supernatant of JM109/pM03 cells (without alginate added); 3, sodium alginate (without pre-processing); 4, depolymerized alginate with AlyB-expressing cells (JM109/pM03); 5, depolymerized alginate with commercial alginate lyase. d Accumulation of D2978 on M9 medium, presented as DCW. Samples 1–5 are as described for panel c
Fig. 7Results of test-tube cultivation for l-lysine bioconversion. a Dry cell weight (DCW) accumulation. b l-lysine accumulation. 1, AJIK01 strain without depolymerized soluble alginate; 2, D3000 strain without depolymerized soluble alginate; 3, AJIK01 strain with alginate depolymerized by AlyB of V. algivorus expressed in E. coli; 4, D3000 strain with alginate depolymerized by AlyB of V. algivorus expressed in E. coli
Fig. 8Model of alginate degradation and metabolism in V. algivorus. Proteins denoted in red letter are heterologously expressed in E. coli MG1655 and fulfilled their functions for alginate utilization in this study