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Transcriptome and Zymogram Analyses Reveal a Cellobiose-Dose Related Reciprocal Regulatory Effect on Cellulase Synthesis in H1

Overview
Journal Front Microbiol
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2018 Jan 10
PMID 29312203
Citations 5
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Abstract

The rumen bacterium H1 efficiently hydrolyzes cellulose. To gain insights into the regulatory mechanisms of cellulase synthesis, comparative transcriptome analysis was conducted for cultures grown on 2% filter paper, 0.5 and 0.05% cellobiose, and 0.5% birchwood xylan. It was found that cellulose induced a majority of (hemi)cellulases, including 33 cellulases and a cellulosomal scaffoldin (1.3- to 22.7-fold); seven endoxylanases, two mannanases, and two pectatelyases (2- to 16-fold); and pyruvate formate-lyase (PFL, 1.5- to 7-fold). Noticeably, 3- and 2.5-fold increased transcription of a cellobiohydrolase and the cellulosomal scaffoldin precursor were detected in 0.05% than in 0.5% cellobiose. Consistently, 9- and 4-fold higher specific cellobiohydrolase activities were detected in the filter paper and 0.05% cellobiose culture. SDS- and native-PAGE zymograms of cellulose-enriched proteins from the filter paper culture displayed cellulase activities, and cellulolytic "complexes" were enriched from the filter paper- and 0.05% cellobiose-cultures, but not from the 0.5% cellobiose culture. LC-MS/MS identified the cellulosomal scaffoldin precursor in the "complexes" in addition to cellulase, hemicellulase, and PFL proteins. The addition of 0.5% cellobiose, but not 0.05% cellobiose remarkably inhibited strain H1 to degrade filter paper. Therefore, this work reveals a cellobiose-dose related regulatory mechanism of cellulase synthesis by lower for induction and higher for repression, which has extended our understanding of the regulation of microbial cellulase synthesis.

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