Strain Construction and Process Development for Efficient Recombinant Production of Mannuronan C-5 Epimerases in Hansenula polymorpha
Anne Tøndervik,Randi Aune,Adelheid Degelmann,Michael Piontek,Helga Ertesvåg,Gudmund Skjåk-Bræk,Håvard Sletta +6 more
TL;DR: The results obtained point toward a future potential for using H. polymorpha in industrial production of mannuronan C-5 epimerases for in vitro tailoring of alginates.
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Abstract: Alginates are linear polysaccharides produced by brown algae and some bacteria and are composed of β-D-mannuronic acid (M) and α-L-guluronic acid (G). Alginate has numerous present and potential future applications within industrial, medical and pharmaceutical areas and G rich alginates are traditionally most valuable and frequently used due to their gelling and viscosifying properties. Mannuronan C-5 epimerases are enzymes converting M to G at the polymer level during the biosynthesis of alginate. The Azotobacter vinelandii epimerases AlgE1-AlgE7 share a common structure, containing one or two catalytic A-modules (A), and one to seven regulatory R-modules (R). Despite the structural similarity of the epimerases, they create different M-G patterns in the alginate; AlgE4 (AR) creates strictly alternating MG structures whereas AlgE1 (ARRRAR) and AlgE6 (ARRR) create predominantly G-blocks. These enzymes are therefore promising tools for producing in vitro tailor-made alginates. Efficient in vitro epimerization of alginates requires availability of recombinantly produced alginate epimerases, and for this purpose the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha is an attractive host organism. The present study investigates whether H. polymorpha is a suitable expression system for future large-scale production of AlgE1, AlgE4, and AlgE6. H. polymorpha expression strains were constructed using synthetic genes with reduced repetitive sequences as well as optimized codon usage. High cell density cultivations revealed that the largest epimerases AlgE1 (147 kDa) and AlgE6 (90 kDa) are subject to proteolytic degradation by proteases secreted by the yeast cells. However, degradation could be controlled to a large extent either by co-expression of chaperones or by adjusting cultivation conditions. The smaller AlgE4 (58 kDa) was stable under all tested conditions. The results obtained thus point toward a future potential for using H. polymorpha in industrial production of mannuronan C-5 epimerases for in vitro tailoring of alginates.
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Citations
Gut bacterial alginate degrading enzymes
TL;DR: Alginates are abundant marine anionic polysaccharides consumed by humans as discussed by the authors , which are depolymerized by a β-elimination reaction catalyzed by poly-saccharide lyases referred to as alginate lyases (ALs).
7
Mannuronate C-5 epimerases and their use in alginate modification
06 Mar 2023
TL;DR: Alginate is a polysaccharide consisting of β-D-mannuronate (M) and α-L-guluronate(G) produced by brown algae and some bacterial species as discussed by the authors .
5
Enzymatic characterization of a mannuronan C5-epimerase from the subtropical brown alga Cladosiphon okamuranus
Miu Sakagami,Yuki Ohnishi,Yasuhiro Kumaki,Tomoyasu Aizawa,Akira Inoue +4 more
TL;DR: The action of recombinant CoC5-1 on polymannuronate (polyM) increased the amount of gel formed in the presence of Ca^2+, indicating that CoC5-1 possesses MC5E activity, the first report of MC5E enzymatic activity in brown algae of the family Chordariaceae.
1
Mannuronate C-5 epimerases and their use in alginate modification.
Agnes Petersen,Anne Tøndervik,Margrethe Gaardløs,Helga Ertesvåg,Håvard Sletta,Finn Lillelund Aachmann +5 more
TL;DR: Alginate is a polysaccharide consisting of β-D-mannuronate (M) and α-L-guluronate(G) produced by brown algae and some bacterial species as mentioned in this paper .
Gut bacterial alginate degrading enzymes.
TL;DR: Alginates are abundant marine anionic polysaccharides consumed by humans as mentioned in this paper , which are depolymerized by a β-elimination reaction catalyzed by poly-saccharide lyases referred to as alginate lyases (ALs).
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TL;DR: Alginate is an important polysaccharide used widely in the food, textile, printing and pharmaceutical industries for its viscosifying, and gelling properties and the potential to utilize these bacterially produced or modified alginates for high‐value applications where defined material properties are required.
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Isolation of alginate-producing mutants of Pseudomonas fluorescens, Pseudomonas putida and Pseudomonas mendocina.
TL;DR: Spontaneous alginate-producing (muc) variants were isolated from strains of Pseudomonas fluorescens, P. putida and P. mendocina at a frequency of 1 in 10(8) by selecting for carbenicillin resistance by investigating the infrared spectrum of the bacterial exopolysaccharide.
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Molecular engineering as an approach to design new functional properties of alginate.
TL;DR: The application of a set of processive polymer-modifying epimerases for the preparation of novel alginates with highly improved functional properties essential for numerous applications as gel matrices shows that, by controlling alginate nanostructure, its macroscopic properties can be highly controlled.
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The Hansenula polymorpha (strain CBS4732) genome sequencing and analysis
Massoud Ramezani-Rad,Cornelis P. Hollenberg,Juergen Lauber,Holger Wedler,Eike Griess,Christian Wagner,Kaj Albermann,Jean Hani,Michael Piontek,Ulrike Dahlems,Gerd Gellissen +10 more
TL;DR: The methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha is a recognised model system for investigation of peroxisomal function, special metabolic pathways like methanol metabolism, of nitrate assimilation or thermostability, and the scientific and industrial significance of this organism is now being met by the characterisation of its entire genome.
118
Cloning and expression of three new Aazotobacter vinelandii genes closely related to a previously described gene family encoding mannuronan C-5-epimerases.
TL;DR: The cloning and expression of a family of five modular-type mannuronan C-5-epimerase genes from Azotobacter vinelandii is reported, with the identification of three additional structurally similar genes, designated algE6,AlgE7, and algY.
114