Modulation of cellulosome composition inClostridium cellulolyticum: Adaptation to the polysaccharide environment revealed by proteomic and carbohydrate-active enzyme analyses

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Modulation of cellulosome composition inClostridium cellulolyticum: Adaptation to the polysaccharide environment revealed by proteomic and carbohydrate-active enzyme analyses
المؤلفون: Pascale de Philip, Sandrine Pagès, Bernard Henrissat, Sabrina Lignon, Chantal Tardif, Jean-Charles Blouzard, Henri-Pierre Fierobe, Pedro M. Coutinho
المصدر: PROTEOMICS. 10:541-554
بيانات النشر: Wiley, 2009.
سنة النشر: 2009
مصطلحات موضوعية: Proteomics, Hydrolysis, food and beverages, Cellulosomes, Biology, Clostridium cellulolyticum, biology.organism_classification, Biochemistry, Xylan, Substrate Specificity, Cell wall, Cellulosome, chemistry.chemical_compound, Bacterial Proteins, chemistry, Polysaccharides, Gene cluster, Carbohydrate Metabolism, Hemicellulose, Cellulose, Molecular Biology
الوصف: Clostridium cellulolyticum is a model mesophilic anaerobic bacterium that efficiently degrades plant cell walls. The recent genome release offers the opportunity to analyse its complete degradation system. A total of 148 putative carbohydrate-active enzymes were identified, and their modular structures and activities were predicted. Among them, 62 dockerin-containing proteins bear catalytic modules from numerous carbohydrate-active enzymes' families and whose diversity reflects the chemical and structural complexity of the plant carbohydrate. The composition of the cellulosomes produced by C. cellulolyticum upon growth on different substrates (cellulose, xylan, and wheat straw) was investigated by LC MS/MS. The majority of the proteins encoded by the cip-cel operon, essential for cellulose degradation, were detected in all cellulosome preparations. In the presence of wheat straw, the natural and most complex of the substrates studied, additional proteins predicted to be involved in hemicellulose degradation were produced. A 32-kb gene cluster encodes the majority of these proteins, all harbouring carbohydrate-binding module 6 or carbohydrate-binding module 22 xylan-binding modules along dockerins. This newly identified xyl-doc gene cluster, specialised in hemicellulose degradation, comes in addition of the cip-cel operon for plant cell wall degradation. Hydrolysis efficiencies determined on the different substrates corroborates the finding that cellulosome composition is adapted to the growth substrate.
تدمد: 1615-9853
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::c64d1e5cd054364bb51107e576dd1af0
https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200900311
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....c64d1e5cd054364bb51107e576dd1af0
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE