Diversity of glycosyl hydrolases from cellulose-depleting communities enriched from casts of two earthworm species

dc.contributor.authorBeloqui, Ana
dc.contributor.authorNechitaylo, Taras Y.
dc.contributor.authorLopez-Cortes, Nieves
dc.contributor.authorGhazi, Azam
dc.contributor.authorGuazzaroni, Maria-Eugenia
dc.contributor.authorPolaina, Julio
dc.contributor.authorStrittmatter, Axel W.
dc.contributor.authorReva, Oleg N.
dc.contributor.authorWaliczek, Agnes
dc.contributor.authorYakimov, Michail M.
dc.contributor.authorGolyshina, Olga V.
dc.contributor.authorFerrer, Manuel
dc.contributor.authorGolyshin, Peter N.
dc.date.accessioned2011-03-23T06:53:25Z
dc.date.available2011-03-23T06:53:25Z
dc.date.issued2010-09
dc.description.abstractThe guts and casts of earthworms contain microbial assemblages that process large amounts of organic polymeric substrates from plant litter and soil; however, the enzymatic potential of these microbial communities remains largely unexplored. In the present work, we retrieved carbohydrate-modifying enzymes through the activity screening of metagenomic fosmid libraries from cellulose-depleting microbial communities established with the fresh casts of two earthworm species, Aporrectodea caliginosa and Lumbricus terrestris, as inocula. Eight glycosyl hydrolases (GHs) from the A. caliginosa-derived community were multidomain endo- -glucanases, -glucosidases, - cellobiohydrolases, -galactosidase, and -xylosidases of known GH families. In contrast, two GHs derived from the L. terrestris microbiome had no similarity to any known GHs and represented two novel families of -galactosidases/ -arabinopyranosidases. Members of these families were annotated in public databases as conserved hypothetical proteins, with one being structurally related to isomerases/dehydratases. This study provides insight into their biochemistry, domain structures, and activesite architecture. The two communities were similar in bacterial composition but significantly different with regard to their eukaryotic inhabitants. Further sequence analysis of fosmids and plasmids bearing the GH-encoding genes, along with oligonucleotide usage pattern analysis, suggested that those apparently originated from Gammaproteobacteria (pseudomonads and Cellvibrio-like organisms), Betaproteobacteria (Comamonadaceae), and Alphaproteobacteria (Rhizobiales).en
dc.identifier.citationBeloqui, A, Nechitaylo, TY, Lopez-Cortes, N, Ghazi, A, Guazzaroni, ME, Polaina, J, Strittmatter, AW, Reva, O, Waliczek, A, Yakimov, MM, Golyshina, OV, Ferrer, M & Golyshin, PN 2010, 'Diversity of glycosyl hydrolases from cellulose-depleting communities enriched from casts of two earthworm species', Applied and Environmental Microbiology, vol. 76, no. 17, pp. 5934–5946. [http://aem.asm.org/]en
dc.identifier.issn0099-2240
dc.identifier.other10.1128/AEM.00902-10
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/16102
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherAmerican Society for Microbiologyen_US
dc.rights© 2010, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.en_US
dc.subjectGlycosyl hydrolasesen
dc.subjectEarthworm casts analysisen
dc.subjectMicrobial communitiesen
dc.subject.lcshEnzymatic analysisen
dc.titleDiversity of glycosyl hydrolases from cellulose-depleting communities enriched from casts of two earthworm speciesen
dc.typeArticleen

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