PROFILING OF CELLULOSOMAL ENZYMES FROM THE HUMAN GUT BACTERIUM, RUMINOCOCCUS CHAMPANELLENSIS, REVEALS A FINE-TUNED SYSTEM FOR COHESIN-DOCKERIN RECOGNITION

Sarah Morais 1 Yonit Ben David 1 Lizi Bensoussan 1 Sylvia H. Duncan 2 Nicole M. Koropatkin 3 Eric C. Martens 3 Harry J. Flint 2 Edward A. Bayer 1
1Biological Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Sciences, Rehovot, Israel
2Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK
3Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

Ruminococcus champanellensis is considered a keystone species in the human gut that degrades microcrystalline cellulose efficiently and contains the genetic elements necessary for cellulosome production. The basic elements of its cellulosome architecture, mainly cohesin and dockerin modules from scaffoldins and enzyme-borne dockerins, have been characterized recently. In this study, we cloned, expressed and characterized all of the glycoside hydrolases that contain a dockerin module. Among the 25 enzymes: 10 cellulases, 4 xylanases, 3 mannanases, 2 xyloglucanases, 2 arabinofuranosidases, 2 arabinanases and one β-glucanase were assessed for their comparative enzymatic activity on their respective substrates. The dockerin specificities of the enzymes were examined by ELISA, and 80 positives out of 525 possible interactions were detected. Our analysis reveals a fine-tuned system for cohesin-dockerin specificity and the importance of diversity among the cohesin-dockerin sequences. Our results imply that cohesin-dockerin pairs are not necessarily assembled at random among the same specificity types, as generally believed for other cellulosome-producing bacteria, but reveal a more organized cellulosome architecture. Moreover our results highlight the importance of the cellulosome paradigm for cellulose and hemicellulose degradation by R. champanellensis in the human gut.









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