Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Cell Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Escherichia coli
is being developed as a biocatalyst for bulk chemical production from inexpensive carbohydrates derived from lignocellulose. Potential substrates include the soluble xylodextrins (xyloside, xylooligosaccharide) and xylobiose that are produced by treatments designed to expose cellulose for subsequent enzymatic hydrolysis. Adjacent genes encoding xylobiose uptake and hydrolysis were cloned from
Klebsiella oxytoca
M5A1 and are functionally expressed in ethanologenic
E. coli
. The xylosidase encoded by
xynB
contains the COG3507 domain characteristic of glycosyl hydrolase family 43. The
xynT
gene encodes a membrane protein containing the MelB domain (COG2211) found in Na
+
/melibiose symporters and related proteins. These two genes form a bicistronic operon that appears to be regulated by xylose (XylR) and by catabolite repression in both
K. oxytoca
and recombinant
E. coli
. Homologs of this operon were found in
Klebsiella pneumoniae
,
Lactobacillus lactis
,
E. coli
,
Clostridium acetobutylicum
, and
Bacillus subtilis
based on sequence comparisons. Based on similarities in protein sequence, the
xynTB
genes in
K. oxytoca
appear to have originated from a gram-positive ancestor related to
L. lactis
. Functional expression of
xynB
allowed ethanologenic
E. coli
to metabolize xylodextrins (xylosides) containing up to six xylose residues without the addition of enzyme supplements. 4-O-methylglucuronic acid substitutions at the nonreducing termini of soluble xylodextrins blocked further degradation by the XynB xylosidase. The rate of xylodextrin utilization by recombinant
E. coli
was increased when a full-length
xynT
gene was included with
xynB
, consistent with
xynT
functioning as a symport. Hydrolysis rates were inversely related to xylodextrin chain length, with xylobiose as the preferred substrate. Xylodextrins were utilized more rapidly by recombinant
E. coli
than
K. oxytoca
M5A1 (the source of
xynT
and
xynB
). XynB exhibited weak arabinosidase activity, 3% that of xylosidase.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
22 articles.
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