Gut microbiome of the largest living rodent harbors unprecedented enzymatic systems to degrade plant polysaccharides

Author:

Cabral Lucelia,Persinoti Gabriela F.ORCID,Paixão Douglas A. A.,Martins Marcele P.,Morais Mariana A. B.ORCID,Chinaglia Mariana,Domingues Mariane N.ORCID,Sforca Mauricio L.,Pirolla Renan A. S.,Generoso Wesley C.ORCID,Santos Clelton A.ORCID,Maciel Lucas F.,Terrapon NicolasORCID,Lombard Vincent,Henrissat BernardORCID,Murakami Mario T.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe largest living rodent, capybara, can efficiently depolymerize and utilize lignocellulosic biomass through microbial symbiotic mechanisms yet elusive. Herein, we elucidate the microbial community composition, enzymatic systems and metabolic pathways involved in the conversion of dietary fibers into short-chain fatty acids, a main energy source for the host. In this microbiota, the unconventional enzymatic machinery from Fibrobacteres seems to drive cellulose degradation, whereas a diverse set of carbohydrate-active enzymes from Bacteroidetes, organized in polysaccharide utilization loci, are accounted to tackle complex hemicelluloses typically found in gramineous and aquatic plants. Exploring the genetic potential of this community, we discover a glycoside hydrolase family of β-galactosidases (named as GH173), and a carbohydrate-binding module family (named as CBM89) involved in xylan binding that establishes an unprecedented three-dimensional fold among associated modules to carbohydrate-active enzymes. Together, these results demonstrate how the capybara gut microbiota orchestrates the depolymerization and utilization of plant fibers, representing an untapped reservoir of enzymatic mechanisms to overcome the lignocellulose recalcitrance, a central challenge toward a sustainable and bio-based economy.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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