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1.
Bacteria and fungi are thought to degrade cellulose through the activity of either a complexed or a noncomplexed cellulolytic system composed of endoglucanases and cellobiohydrolases. The marine bacterium Saccharophagus degradans 2-40 produces a multicomponent cellulolytic system that is unusual in its abundance of GH5-containing endoglucanases. Secreted enzymes of this bacterium release high levels of cellobiose from cellulosic materials. Through cloning and purification, the predicted biochemical activities of the one annotated cellobiohydrolase Cel6A and the GH5-containing endoglucanases were evaluated. Cel6A was shown to be a classic endoglucanase, but Cel5H showed significantly higher activity on several types of cellulose, was the highest expressed, and processively released cellobiose from cellulosic substrates. Cel5G, Cel5H, and Cel5J were found to be members of a separate phylogenetic clade and were all shown to be processive. The processive endoglucanases are functionally equivalent to the endoglucanases and cellobiohydrolases required for other cellulolytic systems, thus providing a cellobiohydrolase-independent mechanism for this bacterium to convert cellulose to glucose.The microbial degradation of cellulose is of interest due to applications in the sugar-dependent production of alternative biofuels (25). There are well-characterized cellulolytic systems of bacteria and fungi that employ multiple endo-acting glucanases and exo-acting cellobiohydrolases in the degradation of cellulose (12). For example, the noncomplexed cellulase system of the wood soft rot fungus Hypocrea jecorina (anamorph Trichoderma reesei), the source for most commercially available cellulase preparations, produces up to eight secreted β-1,4-endoglucanases (Cel5A, Cel5B, Cel7B, Cel12A, Cel45A, Cel61A, Cel61B, and Cel61C), two cellobiohydrolases (Cel6A and Cel7A), and several β-glucosidases (e.g., Bgl3A) (21). Cellobiohydrolases are critical to the function of these systems, as, for example, Cel7A comprises in excess of 50% of the cellulases secreted by this organism (11). Another well-characterized noncomplexed cellulase system is found in Thermobifida fusca, a filamentous soil bacterium that is a major degrader of organic material found in compost piles (32). This bacterium also secretes several endoglucanases and end-specific cellobiohydrolases to degrade cellulose (32). An alternative mechanism for degradation of cellulose is found in microorganisms producing complexed cellulolytic systems, such as those found in cellulolytic clostridia. In these microorganisms, several β-1,4-endoglucanases and cellobiohydrolases assemble on surface-associated scaffoldin polypeptides to form cellulose-degrading multiprotein complexes known as cellulosomes (2, 6). The unifying theme in both complexed and noncomplexed systems is the importance of cellobiohydrolases in converting cellulose and cellodextrins to soluble cellobiose.Recently, a complete cellulolytic system was reported to occur in the marine bacterium Saccharophagus degradans 2-40 (28, 31). This bacterium is capable of growth on both crystalline and noncrystalline celluloses as sole carbon sources and produces multiple glucanases that can be detected in zymograms of cell lysates (28). The genome sequence of this bacterium predicts that the cellulolytic system of this bacterium consists of 10 GH5-containing β-1,4-endoglucanases (Cel5A, Cel5B, Cel5C, Cel5D, Cel5E, Cel5F, Cel5G, Cel5H, Cel5I, and Cel5J), two GH9 β-1,4-endoglucanases (Cel9A and Cel9B), one cellobiohydrolase (Cel6A), five β-glucosidases (Bgl1A, Bgl1B, Bgl3C, Ced3A, and Ced3B), and a cellobiose phosphorylase (Cep94A) (28, 31). The apparent absence of a homolog to a scaffoldin in the genome sequence and to dockerin-like domains in the proposed glucanases suggests that this bacterium produces a noncomplexed cellulolytic system. Two unusual features of this cellulolytic system are the large number of GH5 endoglucanases and the presence of only one annotated cellobiohydrolase, Cel6A (28, 31). The apparent deficiency of cellobiohydrolases in this system raised the question as to the mechanism by which this bacterium degrades cellulose.To understand the mechanism for degradation of cellulose, the biochemical activities for the predicted cellobiohydrolase Cel6A and each of the GH5 glucanases predicted for the S. degradans cellulolytic system were evaluated. Cel6A exhibited properties of a classic endoglucanase, but three of the originally annotated endoglucanases, Cel5G, Cel5H, and Cel5J, were shown to be processive, forming cellobiose as the end product. Processive endoglucanases substitute for cellobiohydrolases in this system to play a major role in the degradation of cellulose.  相似文献   

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3.
Neurospora crassa colonizes burnt grasslands and metabolizes both cellulose and hemicellulose from plant cell walls. When switched from a favored carbon source to cellulose, N. crassa dramatically up-regulates expression and secretion of genes encoding lignocellulolytic enzymes. However, the means by which N. crassa and other filamentous fungi sense the presence of cellulose in the environment remains unclear. Previously, we have shown that a N. crassa mutant carrying deletions of three β-glucosidase enzymes (Δ3βG) lacks β-glucosidase activity, but efficiently induces cellulase gene expression and cellulolytic activity in the presence of cellobiose as the sole carbon source. These observations indicate that cellobiose, or a modified version of cellobiose, functions as an inducer of lignocellulolytic gene expression and activity in N. crassa. Here, we show that in N. crassa, two cellodextrin transporters, CDT-1 and CDT-2, contribute to cellulose sensing. A N. crassa mutant carrying deletions for both transporters is unable to induce cellulase gene expression in response to crystalline cellulose. Furthermore, a mutant lacking genes encoding both the β-glucosidase enzymes and cellodextrin transporters (Δ3βGΔ2T) does not induce cellulase gene expression in response to cellobiose. Point mutations that severely reduce cellobiose transport by either CDT-1 or CDT-2 when expressed individually do not greatly impact cellobiose induction of cellulase gene expression. These data suggest that the N. crassa cellodextrin transporters act as “transceptors” with dual functions - cellodextrin transport and receptor signaling that results in downstream activation of cellulolytic gene expression. Similar mechanisms of transceptor activity likely occur in related ascomycetes used for industrial cellulase production.  相似文献   

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A novel phosphorylase was characterized as new member of glycoside hydrolase family 94 from the cellulolytic bacterium Xanthomonas campestris and the fungus Neurospora crassa. The enzyme catalyzed reversible phosphorolysis of cellobionic acid. We propose 4-O-β-d-glucopyranosyl-d-gluconic acid: phosphate α-d-glucosyltransferase as the systematic name and cellobionic acid phosphorylase as the short names for the novel enzyme. Several cellulolytic fungi of the phylum Ascomycota also possess homologous proteins. We, therefore, suggest that the enzyme plays a crucial role in cellulose degradation where cellobionic acid as oxidized cellulolytic product is converted into α-d-glucose 1-phosphate and d-gluconic acid to enter glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway, respectively.  相似文献   

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Total cDNA isolated from cellulolytic fungi cultured in cellulose was examined for the presence of sequences encoding for endoglucanases. Novel sequences encoding for glycoside hydrolases (GHs) were identified in Fusarium oxysporum, Ganoderma applanatum and Trametes versicolor. The cDNA encoding for partial sequences of GH family 61 cellulases from F. oxysporum and G. applanatum shares 58 and 68% identity with endoglucanases from Glomerella graminicola and Laccaria bicolor, respectively. A new GH family 5 endoglucanase from T. versicolor was also identified. The cDNA encoding for the mature protein was completely sequenced. This enzyme shares 96% identity with Trametes hirsuta endoglucanase and 22% with Trichoderma reesei endoglucanase II (EGII). The enzyme, named TvEG, has N-terminal family 1 carbohydrate binding module (CBM1). The full length cDNA was cloned into the pPICZαB vector and expressed as an active, extracellular enzyme in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. Preliminary studies suggest that T. versicolor could be useful for lignocellulose degradation.  相似文献   

9.
Four β-1,4-glucanases (cellulases) of the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi were purified from Escherichia coli cells transformed with recombinant plasmids. Previous analyses using soluble substrates had suggested that CenA and CenC were endoglucanases while CbhA and CbhB resembled the exo-acting cellobiohydrolases produced by cellulolytic fungi. Analysis of molecular size distributions during cellulose hydrolysis by the individual enzymes confirmed these preliminary findings and provided further evidence that endoglucanase CenC has a more processive hydrolytic activity than CenA. The significant differences between the size distributions obtained during hydrolysis of bacterial microcrystalline cellulose and acid-swollen cellulose can be explained in terms of the accessibility of β-1,4-glucan chains to enzyme attack. Endoglucanases and cellobiohydrolases were much more easily distinguished when the acid-swollen substrate was used.  相似文献   

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Conversion of plant biomass to soluble sugars is the primary bottleneck associated with production of economically viable cellulosic fuels and chemicals. To better understand the biochemical route that filamentous fungi use to degrade plant biomass, we have taken a quantitative proteomics approach to characterizing the secretome of Neurospora crassa during growth on microcrystalline cellulose. Thirteen proteins were quantified in the N. crassa secretome using a combination of Absolute Quantification (AQUA) and Absolute SILAC to verify protein concentrations. Four of these enzymes including 2 cellobiohydrolases (CBH-1 and GH6-2), an endoglucanase (GH5-1), and a β-glucosidase (GH3-4) were then chosen to reconstitute a defined cellulase mixture in vitro. These enzymes were assayed alone and in mixtures and the activity of the reconstituted set was then compared to the crude mixture of N. crassa secretome proteins. Results show that while these 4 proteins represent 63-65% of the total secretome by weight, they account for just 43% of the total activity on microcrystalline cellulose after 24 h of hydrolysis. This result and quantitative proteomic data on other less abundant proteins secreted by Neurospora suggest that proteins other than canonical fungal cellulases may play an important role in cellulose degradation by fungi.  相似文献   

12.
We report a novel production process for cellobionic acid from cellulose using an engineered fungal strain with the exogenous addition of laccase and a redox mediator. A previously engineered strain of Neurospora crassa (F5∆ace-1cre-1ndvB) was shown to produce cellobionate directly from cellulose without the addition of exogenous cellulases. Specifically, N. crassa produces cellulases, which hydrolyze cellulose to cellobiose, and cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH), which oxidizes cellobiose to cellobionate. However, the conversion of cellobiose to cellobionate is limited by the slow re-oxidation of CDH by molecular oxygen. By adding low concentrations of laccase and a redox mediator to the fermentation, CDH can be efficiently oxidized by the redox mediator, with in-situ re-oxidation of the redox mediator by laccase. The conversion of cellulose to cellobionate was optimized by evaluating pH, buffer, and laccase and redox mediator addition time on the yield of cellobionate. Mass and material balances were performed, and the use of the native N. crassa laccase in such a conversion system was evaluated against the exogenous Pleurotus ostreatus laccase. This paper describes a working concept of cellobionate production from cellulose using the CDH-ATBS-laccase system in a fermentation system.  相似文献   

13.
Yang W  Liu J  Wang W  Zhang Y  Gao P 《Biotechnology letters》2004,26(23):1799-1802
Peptides (MW < 5 kDa) produced by 57 cellulolytic fungi can form free radicals. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and IR spectroscopy showed that the peptide produced by Trichoderma pseudokoningii can break the hydrogen bond network of cellulose. The synergic action of these peptides and cellulases increased production of reducing sugars during degradation of native cellulose.  相似文献   

14.
Autohydrolysed beech sawdust has been treated with aqueous NaOH solution in a three-stage process to increase the susceptibility of cellulose to cellulolytic enzymes. This process consisted of neutralization of autohydrolysed wood, extraction of lignin and alkali treatment of residual solids with 1.5% aqueous NaOH solution at 135°C for 1 h. The cellulose in the residues was then hydrolysed with Novo (SP 122) and Fusarium sp. 27 cellulases [see 1,4-(1,3;1,4)-β-d-glucan 4-glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.4]. The susceptibility of cellulose to cellulases was increased 2.3 to 2.7-fold.  相似文献   

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Plant feedstocks are at the leading front of the biofuel industry based on the potential to promote economical, social and environmental development worldwide through sustainable scenarios related to energy production. Penicillium echinulatum is a promising strain for the bioethanol industry based on its capacity to produce large amounts of cellulases at low cost. The secretome profile of P. echinulatum after grown on integral sugarcane bagasse, microcrystalline cellulose and three types of pretreated sugarcane bagasse was evaluated using shotgun proteomics. The comprehensive chemical characterization of the biomass used as the source of fungal nutrition, as well as biochemical activity assays using a collection of natural polysaccharides, were also performed. Our study revealed that the enzymatic repertoire of P. echinulatum is geared mainly toward producing enzymes from the cellulose complex (endogluganases, cellobiohydrolases and β-glucosidases). Glycoside hydrolase (GH) family members, important to biomass-to-biofuels conversion strategies, were identified, including endoglucanases GH5, 7, 6, 12, 17 and 61, β-glycosidase GH3, xylanases GH10 and GH11, as well as debranching hemicellulases from GH43, GH62 and CE2 and pectinanes from GH28. Collectively, the approach conducted in this study gave new insights on the better comprehension of the composition and degradation capability of an industrial cellulolytic strain, from which a number of applied technologies, such as biofuel production, can be generated.  相似文献   

17.
Two general strategies have been proposed for microbial cellulose degradation: filamentous fungi and aerobic bacteria secrete uncomplexed cellulases, while some anaerobic bacteria produce a cell-associated and large extracellular multienzymatic complex called cellulosomes. By using a combination of 1D-blue native (BN)-PAGE, 2D-BN/SDS-PAGE, zymography, and LC-MS/MS methods, we demonstrate here that Streptomyces sp. I1.2, an aerobic bacterium associated with the land snail Achatina fulica, is able to degrade both crystalline cellulose and sugarcane bagasse through the production of cellulolytic multienzymatic complexes containing different combinations of cellobiohydrolases, endo-glucanases, xylanases, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs), and peptidases. The assembly and subunit composition of these complexes is specifically affected by the carbon source, while the multienzymatic complexes produced after growth in crystalline cellulose are composed mainly by one cellobiohydrolase and chitinase, in which the complexes produced in response to sugarcane bagasse are more heterogeneous and contain cellobiohydrolases, endo-glucanases, pectate lyases, one LPMO, β-1,3-glucanases, and one xylanase. Our results suggest that Streptomyces sp. I1.2 displays an alternative mechanism for deconstruction of cellulose that depends upon a noncellulosomic association of catalytic subunits into high molecular weight complexes in order to achieve higher catalytic efficiencies.  相似文献   

18.
Currently, the cost of cellulase enzymes remains a key economic impediment to commercialization of biofuels (1). Enzymes from glycoside hydrolase family 48 (GH48) are a critical component of numerous natural lignocellulose-degrading systems. Although computational mining of large genomic data sets is a promising new approach for identifying novel cellulolytic activities, current computational methods are unable to distinguish between cellulases and enzymes with different substrate specificities that belong to the same protein family. We show that by using a robust computational approach supported by experimental studies, cellulases and non-cellulases can be effectively identified within a given protein family. Phylogenetic analysis of GH48 showed non-monophyletic distribution, an indication of horizontal gene transfer. Enzymatic function of GH48 proteins coded by horizontally transferred genes was verified experimentally, which confirmed that these proteins are cellulases. Computational and structural studies of GH48 enzymes identified structural elements that define cellulases and can be used to computationally distinguish them from non-cellulases. We propose that the structural element that can be used for in silico discrimination between cellulases and non-cellulases belonging to GH48 is an ω-loop located on the surface of the molecule and characterized by highly conserved rare amino acids. These markers were used to screen metagenomics data for “true” cellulases.  相似文献   

19.
《Insect Biochemistry》1989,19(3):269-276
The presence of cellulases in a phytophagous insect hitherto considered as devoid of any cellulolytic enzymes, has been reported for the first time in the phytophagous lepidopteran, the eri silkworm Philosamia ricini. Cellulose digestion in Philosamia ricini appears to occur independently of its gut flora and via enzymes synthesized by the insect itself. The failure of three wide spectrum antibiotics to induce any change in the cellulolytic activity in this insect at any stage of its development evinces the non-participation of its gut flora in cellulose digestion. Culturing the antibiotic-fed larval gut fluids in appropriate media revealed the ability of tetracycline to effect complete inactivation of all bacteria and fungi by day 4 whereas penicillin and streptomycin could achieve it only partially. The cellulolytic activity, however, in all insect groups remained unaffected. The suggests that it is the endogenous enzymes of P. ricini that catalyze cellulose hydrolysis. This has been further confirmed by long term feeding of antibiotics to the insects.  相似文献   

20.
Filamentous fungi are native secretors of lignocellulolytic enzymes and are used as protein‐producing factories in the industrial biotechnology sector. Despite the importance of these organisms in industry, relatively little is known about the filamentous fungal secretory pathway or how it might be manipulated for improved protein production. Here, we use Neurospora crassa as a model filamentous fungus to interrogate the requirements for trafficking of cellulase enzymes from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi. We characterized the localization and interaction properties of the p24 and ERV‐29 cargo adaptors, as well as their role in cellulase enzyme trafficking. We find that the two most abundantly secreted cellulases, CBH‐1 and CBH‐2, depend on distinct ER cargo adaptors for efficient exit from the ER. CBH‐1 depends on the p24 proteins, whereas CBH‐2 depends on the N. crassa homolog of yeast Erv29p. This study provides a first step in characterizing distinct trafficking pathways of lignocellulolytic enzymes in filamentous fungi.  相似文献   

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