Abstract

The hydrolysis of plant glucosinolates by myrosinases (thioglucosidases) originates metabolites with chemopreventive properties. In this study, the ability to hydrolyze the glucosinolate sinigrin by cultures or protein extracts of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum WCFS1 was assayed. This strain possesses myrosinase-like activity as sinigrin was partly hydrolyzed by induced cultures but not by protein extracts. The 11 glycoside hydrolase GH1 family proteins, annotated as 6-phospho-β-glucosidases, were the proteins most similar to plant myrosinases. The activity of these proteins was assayed against sinigrin and synthetic glucosides. As expected, none of the proteins assayed possessed myrosinase activity against sinigrin or the synthetic β-thio-glucoside derivative or against the β-glucoside. However, all 11 proteins were active on the phosphorylated-β-glucoside derivative. Moreover, only eight of these proteins were active on phospho-β-thioglucose. These results supported that, in L. plantarum WCFS1, glucosinolates may undergo previous phosphorylation, and GH1 proteins are the glycosidases involved in the hydrolysis of phosphorylated glucosinolates.

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