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Antarctic tundra soil metagenome as useful natural resources of cold-active lignocelluolytic enzymesopen access

Authors
Oh, Han NaPark, DoyoungSeong, Hoon JeKim, DockyuSul, Woo Jun
Issue Date
Oct-2019
Publisher
Microbiological Society of Korea
Keywords
Antarctica; CAZy; cold-active enzymes; lignocellulose degradation; metagenomics; SMRT sequencing
Citation
Journal of Microbiology, v.57, no.10, pp 865 - 873
Pages
9
Journal Title
Journal of Microbiology
Volume
57
Number
10
Start Page
865
End Page
873
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/39033
DOI
10.1007/s12275-019-9217-1
ISSN
1225-8873
1976-3794
Abstract
Lignocellulose composed of complex carbohydrates and aromatic heteropolymers is one of the principal materials for the production of renewable biofuels. Lignocellulose-degrading genes from cold-adapted bacteria have a potential to increase the productivity of biological treatment of lignocellulose biomass by providing a broad range of treatment temperatures. Antarctic soil metagenomes allow to access novel genes encoding for the cold-active lignocellulose-degrading enzymes, for biotechnological and industrial applications. Here, we investigated the metagenome targeting cold-adapted microbes in Antarctic organic matter-rich soil (KS 2-1) to mine lignolytic and celluloytic enzymes by performing single molecule, real-time metagenomic (SMRT) sequencing. In the assembled Antarctic metagenomic contigs with relative long reads, we found that 162 (1.42%) of total 11,436 genes were annotated as carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZy). Actinobacteria, the dominant phylum in this soil’s metagenome, possessed most of candidates of lignocellulose catabolic genes like glycoside hydrolase families (GH13, GH26, and GH5) and auxiliary activity families (AA7 and AA3). The predicted lignocellulose degradation pathways in Antarctic soil metagenome showed synergistic role of various CAZyme harboring bacterial genera including Streptomyces, Streptosporangium, and Amycolatopsis. From phylogenetic relationships with cellular and environmental enzymes, several genes having potential for participating in overall lignocellulose degradation were also found. The results indicated the presence of lignocellulose-degrading bacteria in Antarctic tundra soil and the potential benefits of the lignocelluolytic enzymes as candidates for cold-active enzymes which will be used for the future biofuel-production industry. © 2019, The Microbiological Society of Korea.
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생명공학대학 (시스템생명공학과)
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