Abstract
Fucoidan is a hetero-sulfated polysaccharide found in brown algae and has received much attention as an ingredient in functional and health foods. The marine bacterial strain Luteolibacter algae H18 degrades fucoidan from Cladosiphon okamuranus. We purified the fucoidanase from a cell-free extract of L. algae H18, used it to decrease the molecular weight of deacetylated-fucoidan, determined the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme, and identified the gene involved in the degradation of fucoidan, fct114, in a draft genome sequence of strain H18. The gene product was heterologously produced in Escherichia coli and demonstrated to catalyze the degradation of deacetylated-fucoidan into lower molecular weight fragments. The mass of the gene product Fct114 is 112kDa (1026 amino acid residues). The general properties of the enzyme were investigated by measuring the amount of reducing ends produced from deacetylated-fucoidan during the reaction. The enzyme was inactive toward fucoidans from other brown seaweed species or toward polysaccharides such as alginic acid, carrageenan, hyaluronic acid, and chondroitin sulfate. The amino acid sequence of Fct114 shared less than 25% identity and had no conserved motifs when compared with previously identified fucoidanases from other marine bacterial strains. These data suggest that Fct114 is a novel polysaccharide-degrading enzyme.
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