Abstract

BackgroundChitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide on earth and as such a great target for bioconversion applications. The phylum Bacteroidetes is one of nature’s most ubiquitous bacterial lineages and is essential in the global carbon cycle with many members being highly efficient degraders of complex carbohydrates. However, despite their specialist reputation in carbohydrate conversion, mechanisms for degrading recalcitrant crystalline polysaccharides such as chitin and cellulose are hitherto unknown.ResultsHere we describe a complete functional analysis of a novel polysaccharide utilization locus (PUL) in the soil Bacteroidete Flavobacterium johnsoniae, tailored for conversion of chitin. The F. johnsoniae chitin utilization locus (ChiUL) consists of eleven contiguous genes encoding carbohydrate capture and transport proteins, enzymes, and a two-component sensor–regulator system. The key chitinase (ChiA) encoded by ChiUL is atypical in terms of known Bacteroidetes-affiliated PUL mechanisms as it is not anchored to the outer cell membrane and consists of multiple catalytic domains. We demonstrate how the extraordinary hydrolytic efficiency of ChiA derives from synergy between its multiple chitinolytic (endo- and exo-acting) and previously unidentified chitin-binding domains. Reverse genetics show that ChiA and PUL-encoded proteins involved in sugar binding, import, and chitin sensing are essential for efficient chitin utilization. Surprisingly, the ChiUL encodes two pairs of SusC/D-like outer membrane proteins. Ligand-binding and structural studies revealed functional differences between the two SusD-like proteins that enhance scavenging of chitin from the environment. The combined results from this study provide insight into the mechanisms employed by Bacteroidetes to degrade recalcitrant polysaccharides and reveal important novel aspects of the PUL paradigm.ConclusionsBy combining reverse genetics to map essential PUL genes, structural studies on outer membrane chitin-binding proteins, and enzymology, we provide insight into the mechanisms employed by Bacteroidetes to degrade recalcitrant polysaccharides and introduce a new saccharolytic mechanism used by the phylum Bacteroidetes. The presented discovery and analysis of the ChiUL will greatly benefit future enzyme discovery efforts as well as studies regarding enzymatic intramolecular synergism.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-016-0674-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide on earth and as such a great target for bioconversion applications

  • The chitin utilization locus (ChiUL) of F. johnsoniae consists of eleven genes that encode four enzymes, a predicted inner membrane transporter, a predicted two-component sensor/regulator system (TCS), and two individual SusC/D-like pairs (CusC/D, chitin utilization system; Fig. 1)

  • The enzymes encoded by the ChiUL were all predicted to participate in chitin turnover, and include a multimodular chitinase (ChiA), comprising two glycoside hydrolase family 18 (GH18) domains, a second GH18 chitinase (ChiB), a GH20 N-acetylhexosaminidase, and a glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (NagB)

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Summary

Introduction

Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide on earth and as such a great target for bioconversion applications. The phylum Bacteroidetes is one of nature’s most ubiquitous bacterial lineages and is essential in the global carbon cycle with many members being highly efficient degraders of complex carbohydrates. Despite their specialist reputation in carbohydrate conversion, mechanisms for degrading recalcitrant crystalline polysaccharides such as chitin and cellulose are hitherto unknown. Additional PULs encoded within uncultured Bacteroidetes lineages from the rumen of herbivores have demonstrated broad hemicellulose-degrading activities [9, 10] As these PULs target more heterogeneous structures than the Sus, they encode a larger number of enzymes, reflecting the complexity of the target polysaccharides

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