4.8 Article

A marine bacterial enzymatic cascade degrades the algal polysaccharide ulvan

Journal

NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 803-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41589-019-0311-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) through the Research Unit FOR2406 'Proteogenomics of Marine Polysaccharide Utilization' (POMPU) [BO 1862/17-1, HE 7217/2-1, SCHW 595/10-1]
  2. DFG [HE 7217/1-1]
  3. French National Research Agency (ANR) [ANR-10-BTBR-04, ANR-14-CE19-0020-01]
  4. Institute of Marine Biotechnology e.V.

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Marine seaweeds increasingly grow into extensive algal blooms, which are detrimental to coastal ecosystems, tourism and aquaculture. However, algal biomass is also emerging as a sustainable raw material for the bioeconomy. The potential exploitation of algae is hindered by our limited knowledge of the microbial pathways-and hence the distinct biochemical functions of the enzymes involved-that convert algal polysaccharides into oligo- and monosaccharides. Understanding these processes would be essential, however, for applications such as the fermentation of algal biomass into bioethanol or other value-added compounds. Here, we describe the metabolic pathway that enables the marine flavobacterium Formosa agariphila to degrade ulvan, the main cell wall polysaccharide of bloom-forming Ulva species. The pathway involves 12 biochemically characterized carbohydrate-active enzymes, including two polysaccharide lyases, three sulfatases and seven glycoside hydrolases that sequentially break down ulvan into fermentable monosaccharides. This way, the enzymes turn a previously unexploited renewable into a valuable and ecologically sustainable bioresource.

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