Abstract

BackgroundClostridium thermocellum utilizes a wide variety of free and cellulosomal cellulases and accessory enzymes to hydrolyze polysaccharides present in complex substrates. To date only a few studies have unveiled the details by which the expression of these cellulases are regulated. Recent studies have described the auto regulation of the celC operon and determined that the celC–glyR3–licA gene cluster and nearby manB–celT gene cluster are co-transcribed as polycistronic mRNA.ResultsIn this paper, we demonstrate that the GlyR3 protein mediates the regulation of manB. We first identify putative GlyR3 binding sites within or just upstream of the coding regions of manB and celT. Using an electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), we determined that a higher concentration of GlyR3 is required to effectively bind to the putative manB site in comparison to the celC site. Neither the putative celT site nor random DNA significantly binds GlyR3. While laminaribiose interfered with GlyR3 binding to the celC binding site, binding to the manB site was unaffected. In the presence of laminaribiose, in vivo transcription of the celC–glyR3–licA gene cluster increases, while manB expression is repressed, compared to in the absence of laminaribiose, consistent with the results from the EMSA. An in vitro transcription assay demonstrated that GlyR3 and laminaribiose interactions were responsible for the observed patters of in vivo transcription.ConclusionsTogether these results reveal a mechanism by which manB is expressed at low concentrations of GlyR3 but repressed at high concentrations. In this way, C. thermocellum is able to co-regulate both the celC and manB gene clusters in response to the availability of β-1,3-polysaccharides in its environment.

Highlights

  • Clostridium thermocellum utilizes a wide variety of free and cellulosomal cellulases and accessory enzymes to hydrolyze polysaccharides present in complex substrates

  • Protein and DNA sequences suggest similarities in DNA binding between GlyR3 in C. thermocellum and CcpA in B. subtilis CcpA is a global regulatory protein in Bacillus subtilis that is known to regulate at least 44 different operons [25]

  • We aligned the helix-turnhelix domains of CcpA and the GlyR1, GlyR2 and GlyR3 LacI family proteins in C. thermocellum to determine the similarity of their DNA binding domains

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Summary

Introduction

Clostridium thermocellum utilizes a wide variety of free and cellulosomal cellulases and accessory enzymes to hydrolyze polysaccharides present in complex substrates. Clostridium thermocellum is an anaerobic, thermophilic, Gram-positive bacterium that has a highly efficient cellulolytic system [1]. This bacterium is considered a model organism for biofuels processing since it combines cellulolytic and ethanologenic abilities [1,2,3,4,5]. Cellulolytic activity is conferred by a combination of free glycoside hydrolases and an extracellular multi-enzyme cellulase complex called the cellulosome [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. An efficient transformation methodology has been developed for strain DSM 1313 [14] facilitating the development of an engineered strain capable of high ethanol titter [15]

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