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The novel catabolic pathway of 3,6-anhydro-L-galactose, the main component of red macroalgae, in a marine bacterium

Authors
Yun, Eun JuLee, SaeyoungKim, Hee TaekPelton, Jeffrey G.Kim, SooahKo, Hyeok-JinChoi, In-GeolKim, Kyoung Heon
Issue Date
May-2015
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, v.17, no.5, pp.1677 - 1688
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume
17
Number
5
Start Page
1677
End Page
1688
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/93689
DOI
10.1111/1462-2920.12607
ISSN
1462-2912
Abstract
The catabolic fate of the major monomeric sugar of red macroalgae, 3,6-anhydro-L-galactose (AHG), is completely unknown in any organisms. AHG is not catabolized by ordinary fermentative microorganisms, and it hampers the utilization of red macroalgae as renewable biomass for biofuel and chemical production. In this study, metabolite and transcriptomic analyses of Vibrio sp., a marine bacterium capable of catabolizing AHG as a sole carbon source, revealed two key metabolic intermediates of AHG, 3,6-anhydrogalactonate (AHGA) and 2-keto-3-deoxy-galactonate; the corresponding genes were verified in vitro enzymatic reactions using their recombinant proteins. Oxidation by an NADP(+)-dependent AHG dehydrogenase and isomerization by an AHGA cycloisomerase are the two key AHG metabolic processes. This newly discovered metabolic route was verified in vivo by demonstrating the growth of Escherichia coli harbouring the genes of these two enzymes on AHG as a sole carbon source. Also, the introduction of only these two enzymes into an ethanologenic E.coli strain increased the ethanol production in E.coli by fermenting both AHG and galactose in an agarose hydrolysate. These findings provide not only insights for the evolutionary adaptation of a central metabolic pathway to utilize uncommon substrates in microbes, but also a metabolic design principle for bioconversion of red macroalgal biomass into biofuels or industrial chemicals.
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