| Literature DB >> 31719844 |
Rahul Singh1,2, Joseph P Bennett3, Mayank Gupta1,2, Medha Sharma1,2, Danish Eqbal1, Anna M Alessi3, Adam A Dowle4, Simon J McQueen-Mason3, Neil C Bruce3, Syed Shams Yazdani1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Efficient deconstruction of lignocellulosic biomass into simple sugars in an economically viable manner is a prerequisite for its global acceptance as a feedstock in bioethanol production. This is achieved in nature by suites of enzymes with the capability of efficiently depolymerizing all the components of lignocellulose. Here, we provide detailed insight into the repertoire of enzymes produced by microorganisms enriched from the gut of the crop pathogen rice yellow stem borer (Scirpophaga incertulas).Entities:
Keywords: Carbohydrate-active enzymes; GH10 family; Gut consortium; Metaexoproteome; Microbial diversity; Rice yellow stem borer; Targeted enrichment; Xylanase
Year: 2019 PMID: 31719844 PMCID: PMC6839054 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-019-1603-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Bacterial diversity in rice YSB gut consortium
| S. No. | Name of phylum | Number of genera |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Proteobacteria | 101 |
| 2 | Bacteroidetes | 29 |
| 3 | Actinobacteria | 17 |
| 4 | Firmicutes | 14 |
| 5 | Verrucomicrobia | 6 |
| 6 | Planctomycetes | 3 |
| 7 | Euryarchaeota | 2 |
| 8 | Acetobacteria | 1 |
| 9 | Chloroflexi | 1 |
| 10 | Armatimonadetes | 1 |
| 11 | Woesearchaeota | 1 |
| 12 | Crenarchaeota | 1 |
| 13 | Aquificae | 1 |
| Total genera | 178 |
Fig. 1Rice yellow stem borer gut microbial community structure at the level of Phylum. Relative abundance of phylum in the a gut consortium and in the c enriched consortium. b Total number of Operational Taxonomy Unit (OTU) in the gut consortium and in the enriched consortium
Fig. 2Rice yellow stem borer gut microbial community structure at the level of genus. Relative abundance of genus in the a gut consortium and in the c enriched consortium. Top 20 genera in terms of their unique OTUs detected in the b gut consortium and in the d enriched consortium
Fig. 3Evaluation of different culture conditions for biomass degrading enzyme production. Cultures were grown under various conditions, and secretory proteins (a) and cell bound protein extract (b) were evaluated for release of glucose and xylose using CMC and xylan as substrates, respectively. Data in a and b represent mean ± SD. TSB Tryptic Soya Broth, YE yeast extract
Fig. 4Enrichment of rice straw deconstructing YSB gut microbial community and assessment of available enzymes and biomass degrading ability. a The microbial community was passaged for 1 year on the rice straw containing medium and analyzed for various features. b Reduction in rice straw weight after incubation with either enriched consortium or original symbionts; c CMCase activity shown by the supernatant and cell bound protein fraction of YSB gut consortium on plate containing CMC and trypan blue dye; d CMCase and xylanase assay of YSB gut consortium proteins on zymogram; e Morphologically different colonies grown as a result of plating on YEB agar plate
CAZy families detected in rice YSB metaexoproteome
| Nature of domains | Number of domains identified |
|---|---|
| Carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) | 95 |
| Glycoside hydrolases (GHs) | 55 |
| Carbohydrate esterases (CEs) | 21 |
| Glycosyl transferases (GTs) | 19 |
| Auxiliary activities (AAs) | 16 |
| Surface layer homology (SLH) | 3 |
| Polysaccharide lyases (PLs) | 2 |
| Dockerin | 1 |
| Total | 212 |
Fig. 5Venn diagram showing the proportion of CAZy assignments observed exclusively in the Bound Fraction, Supernatant or in both fractions
Relative abundance of top 20 GH family proteins observed in the rice YSB gut consortium
| Relative abundance rank | Total emPAI scorea | Family | Bound fraction | Supernatant | Substrate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 12.86 | GH10 | Yes | Yes | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 2 | 10.67 | GH9 | Yes | Yes | Cellulose deconstruction |
| 3 | 8.24 | GH48 | Yes | No | Cellulose deconstruction |
| 4 | 4.38 | GH109 | Yes | Yes | Glycoprotein deconstruction |
| 5 | 4.21 | GH5 | Yes | No | Cellulose and hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 6 | 3.58 | GH6 | Yes | No | Cellulose deconstruction |
| 7 | 1.28 | GH74 | Yes | No | Cellulose and hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 8 | 1.04 | GH94 | Yes | No | Starch deconstruction |
| 9 | 0.93 | GH3 | Yes | No | Cellulose and hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 10 | 0.65 | GH13 | Yes | No | Starch deconstruction |
| 11 | 0.64 | GH120 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 12 | 0.54 | GH11 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 13 | 0.37 | GH15 | Yes | No | Starch deconstruction |
| 14 | 0.26 | GH26 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 15 | 0.24 | GH39 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 16 | 0.23 | GH33 | No | Yes | Glycoprotein deconstruction |
| 17 | 0.12 | GH43 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 18 | 0.10 | GH20 | Yes | No | Peptidoglycan deconstruction |
| 19 | 0.06 | GH62 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
| 20 | 0.03 | GH2 | Yes | No | Hemicellulose deconstruction |
aTotal emPAI scores are based on the sum of emPAI scores all entries for a given family of glycoside hydrolases
Architecture of multi-domain CAZymes identified in the rice YSB gut consortium
| S. no. | YSB contig | ORF of the YSB contig | Domain architecture of translated proteins |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | c58099_g3_i2 | c58099_g3_i2_3 | CBM2/CBM3/GH9 |
| 2 | c65180_g3_i1 | c65180_g3_i1_1 | AA2/AA2/AA2 |
| 3 | c66145_g1_i1 | c66145_g1_i1_1 | CBM20/CBM20/CBM20 |
| 4 | c61378_g1_i1 | c61378_g1_i1_7 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 5 | c17840_g1_i1 | c17840_g1_i1_6 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 6 | c17840_g1_i1 | c17840_g1_i1_7 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 7 | c17840_g1_i1 | c17840_g1_i1_8 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 8 | c8173_g2_i1 | c8173_g2_i1_1 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 9 | c66028_g1_i1 | c66028_g1_i1_14 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 10 | c61637_g1_i1 | c61637_g1_i1_4 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
| 11 | c175818_g1_i1 | c175818_g1_i1_1 | CE1/CE1 |
| 12 | c58415_g1_i1 | c58415_g1_i1_1 | CE1/PL22 |
| 13 | c15588_g1_i1 | c15588_g1_i1_2 | AA2/AA2/AA2 |
| 14 | c61645_g1_i2 | c61645_g1_i2_15 | CBM13/CBM13 |
| 15 | c65434_g3_i1 | c65434_g3_i1_8 | CBM44/CBM44 |
| 16 | c234089_g1_i1 | c234089_g1_i1_4 | CBM44/CBM44/CBM44/CBM44 |
YSB_Contigs: gene sequence obtained as a result of de novo assembly
ORF of the contigs: translated protein from different open reading frame (ORF) of the respective YSB contig
Fig. 6Dynamics of changes in different classes of CAZy families upon cultivation on rice straw for 20 days. Hierarchical clustering of CAZy family proteins detected at 4th, 7th, 13th and 20th day of cultivation in the bound (a) and supernatant (b) fractions. c Comparison of the expression level of various CAZy classes in the 30 high expressed contigs at each timepoints
Fig. 7Annotation, expression and characterization of xylanase from the enriched consortium derived from rice stem borer gut. a Schematic representation of various modules present in the xylanase polypeptide; SP signal peptide, GH10 glycoside hydrolase of family 10, CBM2 carbohydrate-binding modules of family 2. b Cloning of xylanase ORF without the SP in the expression vector pET30a at the NdeI and HindIII restriction sites to derive the expression of xylanase with the help of T7 promoter. c Xylanase protein purification. Lane1, uninduced total cellular protein; lane 2, Induced total cellulase protein and Lane 3, Purified xylanase protein after metal affinity chromatography. d Optimal temperature and e optimal pH for activity of xylanase