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  6. Structure and regulation of the cellulose degradome in Clostridium cellulolyticum
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Structure and regulation of the cellulose degradome in Clostridium cellulolyticum

Date Issued
May 8, 2013
Author(s)
Xu, Chenggang
Huang, Ranran
Teng, Lin
Wang, Dongmei
Hemme, Christopher L.
Borovok, Ilya
He, Qiang  
Lamed, Ralph
Bayer, Edward A,
Zhou, Jizhong
Xu, Jian
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/16273
Abstract

Background


Many bacteria efficiently degrade lignocellulose yet the underpinning genome-wide metabolic and regulatory networks remain elusive. Here we revealed the “cellulose degradome” for the model mesophilic cellulolytic bacterium Clostridium cellulolyticum ATCC 35319, via an integrated analysis of its complete genome, its transcriptomes under glucose, xylose, cellobiose, cellulose, xylan or corn stover and its extracellular proteomes under glucose, cellobiose or cellulose.

Results

Proteins for core metabolic functions, environment sensing, gene regulation and polysaccharide metabolism were enriched in the cellulose degradome. Analysis of differentially expressed genes revealed a “core” set of 48 CAZymes required for degrading cellulose-containing substrates as well as an “accessory” set of 76 CAZymes required for specific non-cellulose substrates. Gene co-expression analysis suggested that Carbon Catabolite Repression (CCR) related regulators sense intracellular glycolytic intermediates and control the core CAZymes that mainly include cellulosomal components, whereas 11 sets of Two-Component Systems (TCSs) respond to availability of extracellular soluble sugars and respectively regulate most of the accessory CAZymes and associated transporters. Surprisingly, under glucose alone, the core cellulases were highly expressed at both transcript and protein levels. Furthermore, glucose enhanced cellulolysis in a dose-dependent manner, via inducing cellulase transcription at low concentrations.

Conclusion

A molecular model of cellulose degradome in C. cellulolyticum (Ccel) was proposed, which revealed the substrate-specificity of CAZymes and the transcriptional regulation of core cellulases by CCR where the glucose acts as a CCR inhibitor instead of a trigger. These features represent a distinct environment-sensing strategy for competing while collaborating for cellulose utilization, which can be exploited for process and genetic engineering of microbial cellulolysis.

Subjects

Cellulose degradation...

Transcription

Two-component systems...

Catabolite control pr...

CcpA-like

LacI family

Disciplines
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Recommended Citation
Biotechnology for Biofuels 2013, 6:73 doi:10.1186/1754-6834-6-73
Embargo Date
July 9, 2013
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

1754_6834_6_73.pdf

Size

1.61 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

f093b3f7523bddb9683fd007e509ef42

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