4.6 Article

Comparative Biochemical Characterization of Three Exolytic Oligoalginate Lyases from Vibrio splendidus Reveals Complementary Substrate Scope, Temperature, and pH Adaptations

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 80, Issue 14, Pages 4207-4214

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01285-14

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0008743]
  2. Energy Efficiency & Resources Core Technology Program of KETEP
  3. Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy, Republic of Korea [201320200000420]
  4. WTU joint research grants from Konkuk University
  5. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0008743] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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Marine microbes use alginate lyases to degrade and catabolize alginate, a major cell wall matrix polysaccharide of brown sea-weeds. Microbes frequently contain multiple, apparently redundant alginate lyases, raising the question of whether these enzymes have complementary functions. We report here on the molecular cloning and functional characterization of three exotype oligoalginate lyases (OalA, OalB, and OalC) from Vibrio splendidus 12B01 (12B01), a marine bacterioplankton species. OalA was most active at 16 degrees C, had a pH optimum of 6.5, and displayed activities toward poly-beta-D-mannuronate [poly(M)] and poly-alpha-L-guluronate [poly(G)], indicating that it is a bifunctional enzyme. OalB and OalC were most active at 30 and 35 degrees C, had pH optima of 7.0 and 7.5, and degraded poly(M.G) and poly(M), respectively. Detailed kinetic analyses of oligoalginate lyases with poly(G), poly(M), and poly(M.G) and sodium alginate as substrates demonstrated that OalA and OalC preferred poly(M), whereas OalB preferred poly(M.G). The catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K-m) of OalA against poly(M) increased with decreasing size of the substrate. OalA showed k(cat)/K-m from 2,130 mg(-1) ml s(-1) for the trisaccharide to 224 mg(-1) ml s(-1) for larger oligomers of similar to 50 residues, and 50.5 mg(-1) ml s(-1) for high-molecular-weight alginate. Although OalA was most active on the trisaccharide, OalB and OalC preferred dimers. Taken together, our results indicate that these three Oals have complementary substrate scopes and temperature and pH adaptations.

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