Authors
Benjamin Pluvinage, Julie M Grondin, Carolyn Amundsen, Leeann Klassen, Paul E Moote, Yao Xiao, Dallas Thomas, Nicholas A Pudlo, Anuoluwapo Anele, Eric C Martens, G Douglas Inglis, Richard ER Uwiera, Alisdair B Boraston, D Wade Abbott
Publication date
2018/3/13
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
9
Issue
1
Pages
1043
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
In red algae, the most abundant principal cell wall polysaccharides are mixed galactan agars, of which agarose is a common component. While bioconversion of agarose is predominantly catalyzed by bacteria that live in the oceans, agarases have been discovered in microorganisms that inhabit diverse terrestrial ecosystems, including human intestines. Here we comprehensively define the structure–function relationship of the agarolytic pathway from the human intestinal bacterium Bacteroides uniformis (Bu) NP1. Using recombinant agarases from Bu NP1 to completely depolymerize agarose, we demonstrate that a non-agarolytic Bu strain can grow on GAL released from agarose. This relationship underscores that rare nutrient utilization by intestinal bacteria is facilitated by the acquisition of highly specific enzymes that unlock inaccessible carbohydrate resources contained within unusual polysaccharides …
Total citations
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