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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 1999, p. 2520-2526, Vol. 65, No. 6
Research Institute for Food Science, Kyoto
University, Uji, Kyoto 611-0011, Japan
Received 14 December 1998/Accepted 24 March 1999
An enzymatic route for the depolymerization of a
heteropolysaccharide (xanthan) in Bacillus sp. strain GL1,
which was closely related to Brevibacillus thermoruber, was
determined by analyzing the structures of xanthan depolymerization
products. The bacterium produces extracellular xanthan lyase catalyzing
the cleavage of the glycosidic bond between pyruvylated mannosyl and
glucuronyl residues in xanthan side chains (W. Hashimoto et al., Appl.
Environ. Microbiol. 64:3765-3768, 1998). The modified xanthan after
the lyase reaction was then depolymerized by extracellular
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Microbial System for Polysaccharide Depolymerization: Enzymatic
Route for Xanthan Depolymerization by Bacillus sp.
Strain GL1
-D-glucanase to a tetrasaccharide, without the terminal
mannosyl residue of the side chain in a pentasaccharide, a repeating
unit of xanthan. The tetrasaccharide was taken into cells and converted
to a trisaccharide (unsaturated glucuronyl-acetylated mannosyl-glucose)
by
-D-glucosidase. The trisaccharide was then converted
to the unsaturated glucuronic acid and a disaccharide
(mannosyl-glucose) by unsaturated glucuronyl hydrolase. Finally, the
disaccharide was hydrolyzed to mannose and glucose by
-D-mannosidase. This is the first complete report on
xanthan depolymerization by bacteria. Novel
-D-glucanase, one of the five enzymes involved in the
depolymerization route, was purified from the culture fluid. This
enzyme was a homodimer with a subunit molecular mass of 173 kDa and was
most active at pH 6.0 and 45°C. The enzyme specifically acted on
xanthan after treatment with xanthan lyase and released the tetrasaccharide.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Research
Institute for Food Science, Kyoto University, Uji, Kyoto 611-0011, Japan. Phone: 81-774-38-3768. Fax: 81-774-38-3767. E-mail:
hasimoto{at}food2.food.kyoto-u.ac.jp.
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