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Do rumen Bacteroidetes utilize an alternative mechanism for cellulose degradation?


ABSTRACT: Uncultured and therefore uncharacterized Bacteroidetes lineages are ubiquitous in many natural ecosystems which specialize in lignocellulose degradation. However, their metabolic contribution remains mysterious, as well-studied cultured Bacteroidetes have been shown to degrade only soluble polysaccharides within the human distal gut and herbivore rumen. We have interrogated a reconstructed genome from an uncultured Bacteroidetes phylotype that dominates a switchgrass-associated community within the cow rumen. Importantly, this characterization effort has revealed the first preliminary evidence for polysaccharide utilization locus (PUL)-catalyzed conversion of cellulose. Based on these findings, we propose a further expansion of the PUL paradigm and the saccharolytic capacity of rumen Bacteroidetes species to include cellulose, the most abundant terrestrial polysaccharide on Earth. Moreover, the perspective of a cellulolytic PUL lays the foundation for PULs to be considered an alternative mechanism for cellulose degradation, next to cellulosomes and free-enzyme systems.

SUBMITTER: Naas AE 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4128358 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Do rumen Bacteroidetes utilize an alternative mechanism for cellulose degradation?

Naas A E AE   Mackenzie A K AK   Mravec J J   Schückel J J   Willats W G T WG   Eijsink V G H VG   Pope P B PB  

mBio 20140805 4


Uncultured and therefore uncharacterized Bacteroidetes lineages are ubiquitous in many natural ecosystems which specialize in lignocellulose degradation. However, their metabolic contribution remains mysterious, as well-studied cultured Bacteroidetes have been shown to degrade only soluble polysaccharides within the human distal gut and herbivore rumen. We have interrogated a reconstructed genome from an uncultured Bacteroidetes phylotype that dominates a switchgrass-associated community within  ...[more]

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