Exploiting fine-scale genetic and physiological variation of closely related microbes to reveal unknown enzyme functions

Ahmet H. Badur, Matthew J. Plutz, Geethika Yalamanchili, Sujit Sadashiv Jagtap, Thomas Schweder, Frank Unfried, Stephanie Markert, Martin F. Polz, Jan Hendrik Hehemann, Christopher V. Rao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Polysaccharide degradation by marine microbes represents one of the largest and most rapid heterotrophic transformations of organic matter in the environment. Microbes employ systems of complementary carbohydrate-specific enzymes to deconstruct algal or plant polysaccharides (glycans) into monosaccharides. Because of the high diversity of glycan substrates, the functions of these enzymes are often difficult to establish. One solution to this problem may lie within naturally occurring microdiversity; varying numbers of enzymes, due to gene loss, duplication, or transfer, among closely related environmental microbes create metabolic differences akin to those generated by knock-out strains engineered in the laboratory used to establish the functions of unknown genes. Inspired by this natural fine-scale microbial diversity, we show here that it can be used to develop hypotheses guiding biochemical experiments for establishing the role of these enzymes in nature. In this work, we investigated alginate degradation among closely related strains of the marine bacterium Vibrio splendidus. One strain, V. splendidus 13B01, exhibited high extracellular alginate lyase activity compared with other V. splendidus strains. To identify the enzymes responsible for this high extracellular activity, we compared V. splendidus 13B01 with the previously characterized V. splendidus 12B01, which has low extracellular activity and lacks two alginate lyase genes present in V. splendidus 13B01. Using a combination of genomics, proteomics, biochemical, and functional screening, we identified a polysaccharide lyase family 7 enzyme that is unique to V. splendidus 13B01, secreted, and responsible for the rapid digestion of extracellular alginate.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)13056-13067
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume292
Issue number31
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 4 2017

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular Biology
  • Cell Biology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Exploiting fine-scale genetic and physiological variation of closely related microbes to reveal unknown enzyme functions'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this