Abstract

Microbial exopolysaccharides (EPS) are the substrates for a wide range of enzymes most of which are highly specific. The enzymes are either endoglycanases or polysaccharide lyases and their specificity is determined by carbohydrate structure with uronic acids often playing a major role. The presence of various acyl substituents frequently has little effect on the action of many of the polysaccharases but markedly inhibits some of the polysaccharide lyases including alginate and gellan lyases. The commonest sources of such enzymes can be either microorganisms or bacteriophages. These specific polysaccharide-degrading enzymes can yield oligosaccharide fragments, which are amenable to NMR and other analytical techniques. They have thus proved to be extremely useful in providing information about microbial polysaccharide structures and were routinely used in many such studies. Complex systems containing various mixtures of enzymes may also be effective in the absence of single enzymes but may be difficult to obtain with reproducible activities. Such preparations may also cause extensive degradation of the polysaccharide structure and thus prove less useful in providing information. Commercially available enzyme preparations have seldom proved capable of degrading microbial heteropolysaccharides, although some are active against bacterial alginates and homopolysaccharides including bacterial cellulose and curdlan.

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