Utilization of starch and synthesis of a combined amylase/αα-glucosidase by the human colonic anaerobe Bacteroides ovatus |
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Authors: | B.A. Degnan,S. Macfarlane,& G.T. Macfarlane |
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Affiliation: | Medical Research Council, Dunn Clinical Nutrition Centre, Cambridge, UK |
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Abstract: | Bacteroides ovatus preferentially utilized starch and pectin when grown on a mixture of polysaccharides in batch culture, indicating that these carbohydrates are important substrates for the bacterium in the human large intestine. Further studies on starch breakdown showed that continuous cultures grew on the polysaccharide when it provided the sole carbohydrate source, to yield a single hydrolytic product at low dilution rates ( D = 0·04 h−1), with an estimated molecular mass of 13 kDa. In contrast, two major types of oligomeric products were formed at higher dilution rates ( D = 0·44 h−1), with approximate molecular weights of 11 and 140 kDa. Analysis of cell-associated starch-degrading enzymes produced by Bact. ovatus using ion exchange chromatography and HPLC gel-filtration showed that amylase and α-glucosidase activities eluted in the same fractions. The single peak containing amylase and α-glucosidase activities obtained by HPLC gel-filtration chromatography corresponded to a molecular mass of approximately 140 kDa, and activity staining of gels for α-glucosidase activity after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate, gave an estimated molecular mass of 70 kDa, indicating this enzyme to be a dimer. After renaturation, the 70 kDa band was cut from the gels and solubilized. The extract hydrolysed gelatinized starch and p -nitrophenyl-α- D -glucopyranoside. |
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