4.7 Article

Cultivable Alginate Lyase-Excreting Bacteria Associated with the Arctic Brown Alga Laminaria

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages 2481-2491

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/md10112481

Keywords

alginate lyase-excreting bacteria; psychrophilic; Arctic; Laminaria; diversity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Founda-tion of China [41176130, 41106161, 31025001, 31070061, 31000034]
  2. Hi-Tech Research and Development program of China [2011AA09070303, 2012AA092105, 2012AA092103]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province, PR China [JQ200910, ZR2009DZ002]
  4. Independent Innovation Foundation of Shandong University [2009TS079]

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Although some alginate lyases have been isolated from marine bacteria, alginate lyases-excreting bacteria from the Arctic alga have not yet been investigated. Here, the diversity of the bacteria associated with the brown alga Laminaria from the Arctic Ocean was investigated for the first time. Sixty five strains belonging to nine genera were recovered from six Laminaria samples, in which Psychrobacter (33/65), Psychromonas (10/65) and Polaribacter (8/65) were the predominant groups. Moreover, 21 alginate lyase-excreting strains were further screened from these Laminaria-associated bacteria. These alginate lyase-excreting strains belong to five genera. Psychromonas (8/21), Psedoalteromonas (6/21) and Polaribacter (4/21) are the predominant genera, and Psychrobacter, Winogradskyella, Psychromonas and Polaribacter were first found to produce alginate lyases. The optimal temperatures for the growth and algiante lyase production of many strains were as low as 10-20 degrees C, indicating that they are psychrophilic bacteria. The alginate lyases produced by 11 strains showed the highest activity at 20-30 degrees C, indicating that these enzymes are cold-adapted enzymes. Some strians showed high levels of extracellular alginate lyase activity around 200 U/mL. These results suggest that these algiante lyase-excreting bacteria from the Arctic alga are good materials for studying bacterial cold-adapted alginate lyases.

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