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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2007, p. 8863-8870, Vol. 189, No. 24
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01141-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Microbiology and Cell Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida
Received 18 July 2007/ Accepted 24 September 2007
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-1,2-xylotriose. Genomic libraries derived from this bacterium have now allowed cloning and sequencing of a unique aldouronate utilization gene cluster comprised of genes encoding signal transduction regulatory proteins, ABC transporter proteins, and the enzymes AguA (GH67
-glucuronidase), XynA2 (GH10 endoxylanase), and XynB (GH43 β-xylosidase/
-arabinofuranosidase). Expression of these genes, as well as xynA1 encoding the secreted GH10 endoxylanase, is induced by growth on MeGAXn and repressed by glucose. Sequences in the yesN, lplA, and xynA2 genes within the cluster and in the distal xynA1 gene show significant similarity to catabolite responsive element (cre) defined in Bacillus subtilis for recognition of the catabolite control protein (CcpA) and consequential repression of catabolic regulons. The aldouronate utilization gene cluster in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 operates as a regulon, coregulated with the expression of xynA1, conferring the ability for efficient assimilation and catabolism of the aldouronate product generated by a multimodular cell surface-anchored GH10 endoxylanase. This cluster offers a desirable metabolic potential for bacterial conversion of hemicellulose fractions of hardwood and crop residues to biobased products. |
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-1,2-linked 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronopyranosyl residues. Variable substitutions on xylose residues may include 2'- and 3'-O-acetyl esters, as well as
-1,2- or
-1,3-linked L-arabinofuranosyl residues (24). Additional substituents may include O-feruloyl and O-p-coumaroyl esters linked to hydroxyl groups on the arabinofuranosyl residues. Both yeast and bacteria have been developed for the bioconversion of glucose derived from the cellulose fraction, and bacteria have been developed for the bioconversion of pentoses, principally xylose, from the hemicellulose fraction (9, 11, 12). Pretreatment has relied on a combination of chemical and enzymatic hydrolytic procedures to solubilize the hemicellulose fraction and release fermentable xylose and to depolymerize the cellulose to fermentable glucose. Pretreatment protocols are still being developed to provide cost-effective production of ethanol and other biobased products from these resources (13). The use of xylanolytic systems to enhance the extracellular depolymerization of methylglucuronoxylan and to efficiently assimilate and metabolize the products of depolymerization has become a promising route to more complete conversion of cellulosic biomass to alternative fuels and chemicals.
The natural processing of methylglucuronoxylans is catalyzed by the combined action of endoxylanases,
-glucuronidases, arabinosidases, and esterases (7, 18, 24). Xylanolytic bacteria secrete endoxylanases of the glycohydrolase families GH5, GH10, and GH11 that catalyze the depolymerization of the xylan backbone with the generation of different products (4, 18). The GH10 endoxylanases generate xylobiose, xylotriose, and the aldotetrauronate, methylglucuronoxylotriose (MeGAX3), in which β-1,4-linked D-xylotriose is substituted at the nonreducing terminus with
-1,2-linked 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronate. Bacteria that secrete a GH10 endoxylanase may assimilate and metabolize all of the products derived from the depolymerization of MeGAXn. The utilization of the aldouronate requires the expression of genes encoding transporters,
-glucuronidase, and enzymes that convert xylooligosaccharides to xylose and have been found in several gram-positive bacteria (16, 21, 22, 25).
We previously reported on the isolation and characterization of an aggressively xylanolytic gram-positive endospore-forming bacterium, Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2, which secretes a multimodular cell-anchored GH10 endoxylanase (23). The rapid and complete utilization of MeGAXn without accumulation of the aldotetrauronate, methylglucuronoxylotriose (MeGAX3), in the medium implicated an efficient system for assimilation and complete metabolism of aldouronates. A structural gene, aguA, has been cloned from genomic DNA of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 and expressed in Escherichia coli with the formation of a recombinant GH67
-glucuronidase (AguA) that catalyzes the conversion of MeGAX3 to methylglucuronate and xylotriose. This gene is followed by xynA2, encoding an intracellular GH10 endoxylanase catalytic domain (XynA2) that processes the xylotriose product generated by the action of AguA on MeGAX3 (17). Here we report the identification of an aldouronate-utilization regulon of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 that includes genes for the extracellular depolymerization of methylglucuronoxylans, the assimilation of aldouronate products, and the intracellular release of monosaccharides. This coordinately regulated process in which xylan depolymerization and product assimilation are coupled in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 provides a favorable system for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to biobased products.
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Partial digestion of genomic DNA. To determine the optimal amount of enzyme to use for digestion, 360 mg of plugs was equilibrated two times in 50 ml of TBE (90 mM Tris-borate, 2 mM EDTA [pH 8.0]) for 15 min, rinsed with 15 ml of 0.1% Triton X-100, chopped into a slurry and distributed into six 1.5-ml centrifuge tubes. A brief centrifugation (12,000g, 30 s) packed the agarose slurry and the supernatants were removed by aspiration. To each tube containing approximately 60 µl of packed plugs were added 10 µl of 40 mM spermidine, 10 µl of 10x HindIII reaction buffer, and 1 µl of bovine serum albumin (10 mg/ml). Water was added to adjust the final volume to 100 µl. The mixtures were equilibrated on ice for 30 min, and various amounts (0.05 to 0.7 U) of HindIII were added to each tube, equilibrated further for 15 min, and finally incubated at 37°C for 30 min to allow restriction digestion. The reactions were immediately stopped by adding 11 µl of 0.5 M EDTA (pH 8.0).
Field inversion gel electrophoresis. Slurries of agarose gel plugs were loaded into the wells of a 1% agarose (Bio-Rad) gel in 0.5x TBE or 1x TAE buffer (40 mM Tris-HCl, 20 mM acetic acid, 1 mM EDTA [pH 8.3]). Electrophoresis was carried out by using the FIGE MAPPER apparatus (Bio-Rad) set at program 8, which separated DNA fragments in the 25- to 150-kb range. The initial current was 47 to 50 mA, and the run lasted 20 h. At completion, 0.5 g of an agarose gel piece containing HindIII-digested DNA ranging in size from 20 to 48 kb was cut out and treated with 6 U of Gelase (Epicenter) at 45°C. The released DNA was ready to be ligated to the cosmid vector.
Construction of cosmid library. Size-selected HindIII-digested genomic DNA fragments were ligated to the HindIII-digested and dephosphorylated cosmid vector pCC1 (Epicenter). Ligation products were packaged into lambda phage packaging extracts (Epicenter) and electroporated into E. coli EPI300 (Epicenter) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Transformed E. coli was plated onto LB-chloramphenicol plates (LB broth [3] in 1.5% Bacto agar containing chloramphenicol at 12.5 µg/ml), and the colonies were picked and stored individually in wells of 9X12 microtiter plates supplemented with LB-chloramphenicol media.
Screening of cosmid library for aldouronate utilization genes. Pooled cultures from 300 transformants were screened for the presence of the aguA gene by PCR using the primers PF54 and PR569 (Table 1). Cosmid DNA preparations from positive transformants were sequenced.
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TABLE 1. Nucleotide sequences of primers used in this study
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RT-PCR. Real-time RT-PCR was performed in 16-µl reactions, each containing 100 to 200 ng of RNA, 3.2 µl of 0.25 µM primer pair mixtures, and 8 µl of 2x iScript SYBR mix (Bio-Rad iScript). A typical reaction consisted of the following steps: (i) incubation with reverse transcriptase for 10 min at 58°C; (ii) melting for 3 min at 95°C; (iii) 45 cycles of 10 s at 95°C, 20 s at 58°C, and 20 s at 72°C; and (iv) one cycle of melting curve determination. The reactions were conducted in the Bio-Rad iCycler iQ real-time detection system. The primer pairs used for RNA transcript detection were rre178f and rre459r for yesN, sbp1081f and sbp1361r for yesM, agua1069f and agua1354r for aguA, xyl247f and xyl623r for xynA2, bex948f and bex1291r for xynB, and xynA1-2237f and xynA1-2503r for xynA1. The primer pairs for the flanking genes were amp10f and amp204r for the aminopeptidase gene and oxr535f and oxr774r for the oxidoreductase gene. The primer pair used for probing the readthrough transcript from ytcP to aguA were perm-agua791f and perm-agua81r (Table 1). A total of 15,272 bp of cosmid VC2 was sequenced and submitted to GenBank (accession number EU024644).
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-glucuronidase. VC1 had a 28-kb insert, while VC2 had a 35-kb insert. Analyses by restriction digestion showed that VC1 and VC2 shared a majority of fragments, indicating that they were from the same genomic region. Sequence organization of the aldouronate gene cluster in cosmid VC2. VC2 yielded the 486-bp aguA-specific product by PCR screening with primers PF54 and PR569. These primers were established as specific for the aguA gene identified and sequenced from genomic DNA derived from Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 (17). Cosmid VC2 insert DNA was digested into smaller fragments which were then inserted into pUC19 to facilitate nucleotide sequencing. The results are shown in Fig. 1.
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FIG. 1. Genomic organization of aldouronate-utilization operons in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2.
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-glucuronidase. This aguA gene was followed by a xynA2 gene encoding a 341-amino-acid protein with a GH10 endoxylanase catalytic domain. Following the xynA2 gene was a xynB gene encoding a 521-amino-acid protein, classified as β-xylosidase/arabinofuranosidase in the GH43 family. These three genes constituted a triad of structural genes expected to encode enzymes for the processing of the product generated by the anchored multimodular endoxylanase, XynA1, to xylose after assimilation by the cell. Immediately 5' to this triad were three genes that are presumed to encode proteins that comprise an ABC transporter complex. The expected translated products from this triad include a substrate binding protein (556 amino acids), a lipoprotein (286 amino acids), and a permease protein (306 amino acids). Immediately 5' to the ABC transporter triad were genes capable of encoding a transcription regulation element made up of two proteins: a receiver protein of an AraC-type response regulator of 522 amino acids and a histidine kinase protein of 572 amino acids. An amino peptidase gene was located 349 bp upstream of the transcription regulation unit, while 285 bp downstream of the xynB gene was an NADH-dependent flavin oxidoreductase gene.
Translation start sites of these genes were indicated by the presence of putative ribosome-binding sites (canonical sequence GGAGGG) (14) located 5 to 15 nucleotides 5' to the translation start sites ATG. These predicted protein products were compared to the archived sequences in GenBank. The genes encoding characterized proteins in the protein databases showing greatest similarity are summarized in Table 2. The average GC content of DNA of Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2 sequenced thus far (
33 kb) is 52%.
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TABLE 2. Identification of the relevant xylanolytic genes in the 15-kb genomic segment
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-glucuronidase protein of the glycohydrolase triad in the aldouronate-gene cluster. The promoter 5' to YesN was identified as having the greatest potential of the cluster. The FindTerm program (Softberry) was used to locate the rho-independent transcriptional stop sites. The transcriptional terminator upstream of yesN was located at 14 bp after the termination codon of the preceding amino peptidase gene and consisted of a 14/20-bp stem-9-bp loop, followed by a 7/8 AT stretch, and punctuated the beginning of the aldouronate utilization gene cluster. The site found downstream from xynB, consisting of a 13/14-bp stem-7-bp loop, followed by an 8/9 AT stretch, was located 16 bp after the termination codon for XynB and punctuated the end of the aldouronate utilization gene cluster. The same analyses applied to the xynA1 gene (23) identified a potential promoter immediately upstream. We also identified a stop site downstream from xynA1 located 1 bp after the termination codon and consisting of a 18/23-bp stem-4-bp loop, followed by a 4/7 AT stretch. The positions for different promoters and terminating sites are presented in Fig. 2.
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FIG. 2. Transcriptional regulation and gene expression of the aldouronate utilization genes in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2.
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ABC-type transporter.
The genes encoding the ABC-type transporter are found in the operon as a cassette of three ORFs. The first ORF in this cassette, lplA, encodes a protein similar to the substrate binding periplasmic component, UgpB, and identified by CDD Search to be at residues 38 to 384. The second coding sequence, lplB, codes for the transmembrane permease component, LplB, which spans the entire length of 286 residues and contains the sequence motif EAA-X3-G-X9-I-X-LP (residues 179 to 198), located in a cytoplasmic loop at a distance of
100 residues from the C terminus (20). The third coding sequence, ytcP, encodes a protein with another permease component, spanning residues 16 to 305. Analyses of similarities in sequence showed this ABC transporter to be most similar to B. halodurans C-125 loci 2111 to 2113 (49% [272 of 555], 73% [210 of 287], and 65% [193 of 293] identities in amino acids, respectively). Another similar ABC transporter identified was in C. cellulolyticum H10 Draft, loci 2757 to 2759.
Aldouronate processing functions.
An aguA gene was identified encoding a GH67
-glucuronidase with a calculated molecular mass of 77,876 Da and a pI of 5.4. This was the same aguA gene cloned and sequenced from genomic DNA and shown to encode a functional
-glucuronidase when expressed in E. coli (17). The identities derived from GenBank entries of AguA proteins were as follows: 63% to Aeromonas punctata, 62% to Geobacillus stearothermophilus T-6, 61% to B. halodurans C-125, and 57% to C. cellulolyticum H10. This protein is highly conserved with respect to catalytic sites. Based upon alignment with the two bacterial GH67
-glucuronidases of G. stearothermophilus T-6 and Cellvibrio japonicus, for which catalytic mechanisms have been elucidated (10, 15), glutamate and aspartate residues that participate in the acid/base-catalyzed reactions can be discerned. In AguA from Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 Glu401 and Asp373 are homologs of residues Glu392 and Asp364 in G. stearothermophilus T-6 and Glu393 and Asp365 in C. japonicus, which together with a water molecule constitute the catalytic general base. Similarly, Glu294 in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 probably corresponds to Glu285 in G. stearothermophilus T-6 and Glu292 in C. japonicus as the catalytic general acid. Catalysis results in the hydrolysis of the
-1,2-glycosidic bond between the 4-O-methylglucuronic acid residue and the xylose residue in the aldo-oligouronate substrate by an inverting mechanism.
A xynA2 gene follows aguA. The encoded XynA2 protein contains the catalytic domain of a GH10 endoxylanase spanning residues 10 to 332 of the 341 amino acids. Neither a signal sequence (determined by SignalP [2]) nor any carbohydrate binding module (CBM) was found in the protein sequence. XynA2 has a calculated molecular mass of 39,457 Da and a calculated pI of 5.3 and showed 60 to 61% identity to catalytic domains of GH10 xylanases presumed to function as intracellular enzymes in other bacteria, e.g., G. stearothermophilus T-6 and Thermotoga maritima MSB8.
The last gene in this triad and the last gene in this aldouronate utilization cluster, xynB, encodes a protein of 521 amino acids with an internal family GH43 β-xylosidase/
-arabinofuranosidase defined within residues 11 to 288. It did not have a signal peptide, had a calculated molecular mass of 57,783 Da, and had a calculated pI of 4.9. The encoded XynB protein sequence showed 40% identity to the XynB found in both Bacillus clausii KSM-K16 (gi:56962920) and Geobacillus thermoleovorans (gi:85717961).
Effects of xylan, glucose, and xylose on the relative levels of expression of aldouronate utilization genes. Analysis by real-time RT-PCR of the amount of mRNA produced under different growth conditions (Fig. 3) indicated coordinate induction and repression of expression of genes in this cluster, as well as expression of xynA1 encoding the secreted multimodular GH10 endoxylanase. When growing in only 0.5% yeast extract, all six genes (yesN, lplA, aguA, xynA2, xynB, and xynA1) were expressed, with aguA and xynB mRNAs being slightly more abundant. The levels of mRNA determined in cultures grown in 0.5% yeast extract-containing medium served as points of reference. When 0.5% xylan was added to the yeast extract-containing medium, expressions of the six genes were dramatically enhanced, from 18-fold in the case of the response regulator yesN to more than 200-fold in the case of the substrate binding protein lplA and the β-xylosidase xynB. In contrast, when 0.5% glucose was added to supplement yeast extract in the media instead of xylan, the relative levels of mRNA transcribed by the six monitored genes were all variously reduced to about two-thirds (67% for xynA2) and to as much as one-tenth (10% for aguA) of basal levels. The addition of 0.5% xylose, on the other hand, slightly induced expression, resulting in a 2.7-fold increase (xynA1) to a 19-fold increase (xynA2) over basal levels. In addition, by performing real-time RT-PCR with the primer pair perm-agua791f and perm-agua81r, readthrough transcripts from ytcP to aguA were also identified.
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FIG. 3. Aldouronate utilization gene expression in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 grown under different nutrient conditions. A colony of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 was dispersed in 420 µl of Zucker-Hankin (26) salts medium, and 100 µl of this suspension was added to each of four 8-ml portions of culture media in 250-ml baffle flasks containing 1x Zucker-Hankin, 0.5% yeast extract, and either no additional substrate ( ), or 0.5% xylose (
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Glucose repression and CcpA binding sites. In the real-time RT-PCR analyses, expressions of aldouronate utilization genes were reduced up to 10-fold for genes within the cluster and >3-fold for xynA1 outside this cluster when glucose was added to the culture medium containing yeast extract. Glucose catabolite repression in G. stearothermophilus (6) led to the identification of a 14-base canonical sequence (cre motif) within or immediately preceding genes responsive to such transcription repression. With visual inspection of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 sequences and analysis with the Prokaryotic Promoter Prediction program, at least five such sequences were detected: a sequence 5' to the response regulator yesN, a second sequence 5' to lplA, a third sequence about 100 bp 3' from the translation start site of lplA, a fourth sequence 5' to xynA2, and a fifth sequence 5' to xynA1, the endoxylanase gene located distal to this cluster (Table 3). The distribution of the CcpA binding sites, identified as cre sequences, were found in genes comprising the alduronate utilization cluster, as well as in xynA1, the gene encoding the secreted multimodular GH10 endoylanase (Fig. 2).
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TABLE 3. Candidate CcpA binding sites (cre sequences) and their locations 5' of aldouronate utilization genes in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2
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Data from real-time RT-PCR analyses indicated the genes within the aldouronate utilization cluster in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 were regulated as a unit by the same transcription signals and were differentially expressed compared to the flanking genes encoding amino peptidase and oxidoreductase. The coordinate expression of the aldouronate utilization gene cluster, along with the expression of the xynA1 gene encoding the multimodular and cell anchored GH10 endoxylanase, supports the case made earlier for the coupling of the depolymerization of methylglucuronoxylan with assimilation and processing of the product, MeGAX3 (23). The aldouronate utilization gene cluster, itself comprised of three potential operons coordinately responding to induction or repression (Fig. 2), may thus be considered a regulon. The coordinate response of these genes with xynA1 expands the scope of this regulon to the function of methylglucuronoxylan or xylan utilization. Further definition of these processes awaits the development of transformation systems in Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 or the expression of these systems in Bacillus spp. amenable to transformation.
Comparative genomic organizations of aldouronate utilization clusters. The organization of the aldouronate utilization gene clusters in bacteria that have been studied for this function is presented in Fig. 4. Although there are parallels, as noted above, there are also salient differences. There were no nucleotide-binding domains identified in this Paenibacillus ABC transporter cassette. Neither were genes encoding ATP-binding proteins detected in the four ORFs that precede the aguA gene in G. stearothermophilus T-6, where the first two ORFs were identified as an interrupted substrate binding protein and the last two ORFs were identified as permeases (21). It has been noted in different gram-positive bacteria that a single ATPase may serve more than one set of substrate-binding and membrane-associated proteins that comprise typical ABC transporter systems (19, 20). In the case of T. maritima MSB8 (16), where five ORFs were located adjacent to aguA, two ORFs were identified as genes encoding ATP-binding proteins and were located between genes encoding a substrate binding protein and two permeases.
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FIG. 4. Comparison of aldouronate utilization gene organizations in bacteria in which evidence supports relationships of gene function to substrate utilization.
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An ortholog of the Paenibacillus xynA2, the third gene in the aldouronate utilization triad, is found also in the vicinity of gene clusters in T. maritima MSB8 and G. stearothermophilus that include orthologs of aguA. In G. stearothermophilus T6, the corresponding gene, xynA2, is located immediately upstream of the genes encoding the ABC transporter and AguA (Fig. 4). This encodes a protein of 339 amino acids and is transcribed in the same direction as the transporter genes. However, a major transcriptional termination site functionally delineates this gene from transporter genes and aguA located immediately downstream (21). An ortholog, xynB (TM0070), encoding a protein of 347 amino acids, is located in the genome of T. maritima MSB8 at a position 17.4 kb from aguA (TM0055), separated by 14 intervening genes. The xynA2 of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR encodes a GH10 endoxylanase that cleaves the xylotriose molecule to xylose and xylobiose, where xylotriose is a product of the hydrolysis of MeGAX3 by
-glucuronidase encoded by the adjacent aguA gene (17; unpublished data).
Development of bacteria for bioconversion of methylglucuronoxylan. The rapid and complete utilization of methylglucuronoxylan, along with the synchronized induction and repression of the genes comprising the xylan utilization regulon, supports further development of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 for the direct conversion of methylglucuronoxylan to biobased products. Growth under conditions of oxygen limitation allows formation of acetate, ethanol, lactate, and succinate. Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 isolate has been approved for complete genome sequencing by the DOE Joint Genome Institute. From this we expect to gain further insight into the metabolic potential of this bacterium, both for the depolymerization and assimilation of polysaccharides comprising cellulosic biomass and for the conversion of carbohydrate components to specific products.
The compact configuration of the aldouronate utilization gene cluster from Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2 and its coordinate control recommend it as a cassette for the transformation of other gram-positive bacteria that have been or may be developed for efficient fermentation of xylose. Additional transformation with the xynA1 gene encoding the multimodular GH10 endoxylanase may provide the products for assimilation and subsequent metabolism. The presence of CBMs for interaction with cellulosic polysaccharides and surface layer homology domains that anchor the catalytic domain and associated substrates to the surface of the cell generate products that are in turn rapidly assimilated into the cell. The collective properties that allow extracellular depolymerization, assimilation, and metabolism are presumably the basis for the aggressive xylanolytic activity of Paenibacillus sp. strain JDR-2. Through genetic engineering, gram-positive bacterial biocatalysts may then be developed for the digestion and vectorial conversion of the hemicellulose fraction of cellulosic resources to renewable fuels and chemicals.
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This research was supported by U.S. Department of Energy grants DE FC36-99GO10476 and DE FC36-00GO10594, the Consortium for Plant Biotechnology Research Project GO12026-198 (DE FG36-02GO12026), and the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida Experiment Station, as CRIS Project MCS 3763.
Published ahead of print on 5 October 2007. ![]()
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-glucuronidase complexed with its substrate and products. J. Biol. Chem. 279:3014-3024.
-glucuronidase, GlcA67A, of Cellvibrio japonicus utilizes the carboxylate and methyl groups of aldobiouronic acid as important substrate recognition determinants. J. Biol. Chem. 278:20286-20292.This article has been cited by other articles:
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