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Journal article

Several genes encoding enzymes with the same activity are necessary for aerobic fungal degradation of cellulose in nature

In Plos One 2014, Volume 9, Issue 12, pp. e114138

Edited by Gasset, Maria

From

Department of Biotechnology, Chemistry and Environmental Engineering, Aalborg University, A.C. Meyers Vænge 15, 2450, Copenhagen SV, Denmark.1

The cellulose-degrading fungal enzymes are glycoside hydrolases of the GH families and lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases. The entanglement of glycoside hydrolase families and functions makes it difficult to predict the enzymatic activity of glycoside hydrolases based on their sequence. In the present study we further developed the method Peptide Pattern Recognition to an automatic approach not only to find all genes encoding glycoside hydrolases and lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases in fungal genomes but also to predict the function of the genes.

The functional annotation is an important feature as it provides a direct route to predict function from primary sequence. Furthermore, we used Peptide Pattern Recognition to compare the cellulose-degrading enzyme activities encoded by 39 fungal genomes. The results indicated that cellobiohydrolases and AA9 lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases are hallmarks of cellulose-degrading fungi except brown rot fungi.

Furthermore, a high number of AA9, endocellulase and β-glucosidase genes were identified, not in what are known to be the strongest, specialized lignocellulose degraders but in saprophytic fungi that can use a wide variety of substrates whereas only few of these genes were found in fungi that have a limited number of natural, lignocellulotic substrates.

This correlation suggests that enzymes with different properties are necessary for degradation of cellulose in different complex substrates. Interestingly, clustering of the fungi based on their predicted enzymes indicated that Ascomycota and Basidiomycota use the same enzymatic activities to degrade plant cell walls.

Language: English
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Year: 2014
Pages: e114138
ISSN: 19326203
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114138

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