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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4218-4227, Vol . 186,
No . 13
Regulation of Expression of Cellulosomes and Noncellulosomal (Hemi)Cellulolytic
Enzymes in Clostridium cellulovorans during Growth on Different Carbon
Sources
Sung Ok Han,1 Hee-Yeon Cho,1 Hideaki Yukawa,2
Masayuki Inui,2 and Roy H . Doi1*
Section of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis,
Davis, California 95616,1 Research Institute of Innovative Technology
for the Earth, Kyoto 619-0292, Japan2
Received 27 October 2003/ Accepted 29 March 2004
Cellulosomes and noncellulosomal (hemi)cellulolytic enzymes are
produced by Clostridium cellulovorans to degrade plant cell
walls . To understand their synergistic relationship, changes in mRNA
and protein expression in cellulosomes and noncellulosomal
(hemi)cellulolytic enzymes (hereafter called noncellulosomal enzymes)
of cultures grown on cellobiose, cellulose, pectin, xylan, and corn
fiber or mixtures thereof were examined . Cellulase expression,
favored particularly by the presence of Avicel, was found with all
substrates . Comparison of cellulosome and noncellulosomal enzymes
showed that expression profiles were strongly affected by the carbon
source . High xylanase or pectate lyase expression was observed when
C . cellulovorans was grown on xylan or pectin, respectively .
Mixed carbon substrates (cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture or corn
fiber) induced a wider variety of enzymes than a single carbon
source, such as cellobiose, pectin, or xylan . Cellulosomal proteome
profiles were more affected by the carbon source than the
noncellulosomal enzymes . Transcription and protein analyses revealed
that cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes were expressed
simultaneously on mixed carbon sources, but their degree of
inducibility varied when the substrate was either cellulose or
cellobiose . Cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes had synergistic
activity on various carbon substrates . These results indicated that
expression of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes is highly influenced
by the available carbon source and that synergy between cellulosomes
and noncellulosomal enzymes contribute to plant cell wall
degradation .
Lignocellulose, the most abundant renewable resource in nature, is
composed of the polymers cellulose, hemicellulose, pectin, and lignin
(37) . The main carbohydrate constituents of lignocellulosic
material, i.e., cellulose, xylan, and pectin, consist of main
chains of ß-1,4-linked pyranosyl units which can be variously
substituted . For efficient degradation of cellulose, hemicellulose,
and pectin, a number of different enzyme activities are necessary,
including activities to cleave the glycosidic bonds, and to remove
substituent groups (46) .
Clostridium cellulovorans is a mesophilic, anaerobic, spore-forming
bacterium which can utilize cellulose, xylan, pectin, and several
other carbon sources (7, 35) . C .
cellulovorans produces an extracellular enzyme complex (called a
cellulosome) containing a variety of (hemi)cellulolytic subunits
attached to the nonenzymatic scaffolding protein CbpA (2,
7, 31) . All cellulosomal enzymatic subunits
contain a twice-repeated sequence called the dockerin domain
that is generally lacking in noncellulosomal (hemi)cellulolytic
enzymes (we will refer to these enzymes as noncellulosomal enzymes) .
The dockerin domains bind to the hydrophobic domains of CbpA termed
cohesins (43, 47) . The formation of these
complexes is necessary for the efficient degradation of crystalline
cellulose (2, 3, 7,
31, 33) . However, some noncellulosomal
enzymes of C . cellulovorans, such as EngD (14),
EngF (32), ArfA (19), and BgaA
(19), are not bound to this multienzyme complex . These
proteins appear to be part of an ancillary enzyme system for
the hydrolysis of polysaccharides . The roles of noncellulosomal
cellulases in the degradation of crystalline cellulose are still
unknown . So far, we have identified 13 cellulosomal subunits and 4
noncellulosomal enzymes produced by C . cellulovorans (Table
1) . The most abundant enzymes analyzed previously are these
known enzymes, although there may be a few additional unidentified
ones (5, 6, 19-21,
23, 28, 32,
38-41) . The genome sequence analysis
of Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 revealed at least 11
proteins that are confidently identified as cellulosome components
(30) . Despite the extensive research that has been
devoted to the components of the cellulosomal enzyme subunits, there
is comparatively little information available about the
noncellulosomal enzymes of C . cellulovorans . Furthermore, no
studies have been performed at the gene and protein levels concerning
the regulation and relationship between the cellulosome and the
noncellulosomal enzymes .
| TABLE 1 . Cellulosomes and noncellulosomal protein subunits of C .
cellulovorans
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The synergy between cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes is
assumed to be necessary for effective plant cell wall degradation (6),
but how the expression of these fractions is coordinated under
different growth conditions is not known . The cellulosomal enzyme
subunit EngB (11) has high homology to a noncellulosomal
enzyme, EngD (15), in the NH2-terminal
region, which suggested that a comparison of these two enzymes would
be fruitful . With the emergence of high-throughput transcription and
proteomic technologies, it is now possible to monitor, in parallel,
the expression levels of many genes and proteins under different
growth conditions (48) . A systematic display of the
entire system of cellulase enzymes found in Clostridium
cultures has not been reported . In this paper, we report the
application of a combination of transcriptional and proteomic
analyses to cellulosomal and noncellulosomal subunits, such as EngB
and EngD . We also show the proteomic profiles, subunit patterns, and
synergy of cellulosomes and noncellulosomal proteins .
Bacterial strain and growth conditions. C . cellulovorans
ATCC 35296 was grown under strictly anaerobic conditions at 37°C in
round-bottom flasks containing a previously described medium (33,
35), which included 0.5% (wt/vol) cellobiose, 1.0%
(wt/vol) Avicel (microcrystalline cellulose; FMC Corporation), 1.0%
xylan (birch wood; Sigma), 1.0% pectin (apples; Sigma), and/or 1%
corn fiber (CF) . CF and cellulose-arabinoxylan (CAX) complexes
provided by David B . Johnston of the U.S . Department of Agriculture
were used as plant cell wall substrates (8-10) .
CAX is produced from CF by removing fat and starch . The determination
of cell mass in cultures was based on bacterial protein estimates
as described previously (16) .
Nucleic acid isolation. Chromosomal DNA of C .
cellulovorans was isolated by using a genomic DNA purification
kit (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions . Total RNA
was extracted from C . cellulovorans broth cultures using an
RNeasy kit (Qiagen) with the additional step of treatment with RNAlater
RNA stabilization reagent (Ambion) and RNase-free DNase (Promega)
according to the manufacturers' instructions .
Northern blot analysis. RNA samples (10 µg) were denatured
in RNA sample buffer at 65°C for 10 min . RNA sample buffer consists
of 250 µl of formamide, 83 µl of 37% (wt/vol) formaldehyde, 83 µl
of 6x loading dye (Promega), 50 µl of
10x MOPS (morpholinepropanesulfonic
acid) buffer (20 mM MOPS, 5 mM sodium acetate, 1 mM EDTA [pH
7.0]), and 34 µl of distilled water . The RNAs were separated through
1% agarose gels in MOPS buffer with 2% (vol/vol) formaldehyde . DNA
probes were synthesized by PCR by using specific oligonucleotides
derived from the C . cellulovorans sequence as a template (Table
2) . The probes were nonradioactively labeled by random
priming using digoxigenin (DIG) High Prime (Roche) . To add the
correct amount of probe for hybridization, serial dilutions of each
probe (0.05 to 10 pg) were spotted onto a nylon membrane, and
the labeling sensitivity (amount of labeled DNA per spot) was
determined . RNA was transferred overnight to a positively charged
nylon membrane (Roche) by capillary transfer using 20x
standard saline-citrate (1x SSC
is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate [pH 7]) . Hybridization was
performed for 16 to 20 h at 50°C in DIG Eazy Hyb buffer solution
(Roche) . Washing of the membrane and detection of specific
transcripts on the blots were performed by using the DIG luminescence
detection kit (Roche) and its recommended protocol .
| TABLE 2 . PCR primers used for synthesis of the gene-specific probes
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RNA slot blot analysis. Total RNAs were diluted into
appropriate concentrations with water and followed by adding two
times the volume of the RNA sample buffer . After 10-min incubation at
65°C to denature the RNA, the samples were applied to a positively
charged nylon membrane (Roche) by using a Hybri-slot apparatus
(Gibco-BRL), and the membrane was baked for 30 min at 120°C under
vacuum . Filters were hybridized with specific probes as described
above for Northern blot analysis .
Preparation of cellulosome and noncellulosomal enzymes. The
cellulosome was purified from culture supernatants of C .
cellulovorans cells as described previously (33) . The
culture supernatants (250 or 1,000 ml) were obtained by
centrifugation after 3 to 5 days of growth with different carbon
sources . The supernatants were concentrated by 80% ammonium sulfate
saturation and dialyzed . The extracellular material was then mixed
with Avicel, which resulted in binding of the cellulosome complex
and some noncellulosomal enzymes to Avicel . After incubation
for 1 h at 4°C, the suspension was poured into a column . The column
was washed with 3 volumes of 100 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) to
elute the unattached fractions . These unattached fractions were saved
as the noncellulosomal fraction after concentration by
ultrafiltration using an Ultrafree Biomax centrifugal filter unit
(Millipore) with a 10-kDa-cutoff membrane . The bound fraction was
eluted from the cellulose column with deionized water and
concentrated with an Ultrafree Biomax centrifugal filter unit (10-kDa
cutoff; Millipore) . In most cases, the noncellulosomal enzymes, which
were mainly EngF and EngD, bound to Avicel was less than 5% of the
total Avicel-binding protein, which was analyzed by gel filtration on
a Sephacryl S-200 column (2.6 by 75 cm; Pharmacia) . The concentration
of purified protein was measured by the method of Bradford (4)
with a protein assay kit from Bio-Rad, using bovine serum albumin as
the standard .
SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis. Isoelectric focusing
(IEF) gels were cast using ReadyPrep rehydration sample buffer
(Bio-Rad) (1, 12) . Aliquots of sample
containing 100 µg of the protein were loaded onto each gel . Each
sample was subjected to two-dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis
in duplicate to control for gel-to-gel variations . After IEF,
the gels were equilibrated in two equilibration buffers (6 M urea, 2%
sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 0.375 M Tris-HCl [pH 8.8], 20%
glycerol) . Dithiothreitol (2%, wt/vol) was added to the first
equilibration buffer, and iodoacetamide (2.5%, wt/vol) was added to
the second equilibration buffer . The second-dimension gels were cast
using a linear gradient of 4 to 15% polyacrylamide . The equilibrated
tube gels were secured to the 2-D gels using agarose, and
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed as
described previously (12, 22) . Proteins
were fixed in the gels by soaking in a solution containing 40%
(vol/vol) methanol and 10% (vol/vol) acetic acid for approximately 1
h and subsequently visualized by Coomassie blue staining (Genomic
Solutions) . For Western blot (immunoblot) analysis, proteins
were separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto a polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane (Immobilon-P; Millipore) . The membrane was
treated with antibody (diluted 1:5,000) and stained as described
previously (40) .
Mass spectrometry analysis. Mass spectrometric analysis was
performed to identify the cellulosome and noncellulosomal proteins
separated by 2-D PAGE (44) . Proteins of interest
were excised from the gel and subjected to in-gel digestion with
trypsin . Peptide mass spectra were acquired using a matrix-assisted
laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass
spectrometer (Biflex III; Bruker), and corresponding proteins were
identified by peptide mass finger printing (http://www.matrixscience.com) .
MS/MS spectra for the digested peptides were also acquired by
nanospraying the peptide mixtures into a Q-TOF mass spectrometer
(QSTAR; Sciex) . Further identification of proteins was made with de
novo sequencing of the obtained MS/MS spectra followed by BLAST
search . All protein identifications were verified by comparison with
theoretical molecular weights and isoelectric points .
Assays of enzymatic activity. The enzymatic activities on
Avicel (for cellulase), carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) (for
endoglucanase), pectin (for pectate lyase), xylan (for xylanase), CAX
(for mixed enzymes), and CF (for mixed enzymes) were assayed at pH
6.0 and 37°C by measuring the liberated reducing sugars as
D-glucose equivalents by the Somogyi-Nelson
method (36, 45) . CAX preparations
consisted mainly of 21% cellulose and 68% arabinoxylan, and CF
preparations consisted mainly of 15% cellulose, 35% arabinoxylan, 8%
lignin, and 20% starch . Each reaction mixture consisted of 250 µl of
a 1% substrate solution, 100 µl of 250 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH
6.0), and 150 µl of an enzyme solution . The incubation times
were 30 min for endoglucanase, pectate lyase, xylanase, and
CAXase activities and 18 h for cellulase and CFase enzyme activities .
One unit of each enzyme activity was defined as the amount of enzyme
which released 1 µmol of reducing sugar per min under the condition
indicated, except for Avicelase and CFase assays, where 1 unit of
enzyme activity is the amount of enzyme which released 1 µmol of
reducing sugar per h .
Induction of cellulosomal and noncellulosomal gene transcription under
different growth conditions. Expression of the five cellulosomal genes
cbpA, engE, pelA, xynA, and engB
was studied by Northern blot analysis together with four
noncellulosomal genes, engD, engF, arfA, and bgaA .
The first experiments were performed with medium containing
cellobiose, cellulose, pectin, or xylan as the only carbon source,
and the results were compared to those obtained with cellulose plus
pectin, cellulose plus xylan, cellulose plus pectin and xylan, and
cellulose plus pectin and xylan . Because the primary aims were to
obtain data on general regulatory patterns of the genes under
conditions where the bacterium is growing in the presence of chosen
carbon sources and to avoid possible repression, the total RNA was
isolated from cells in mid-log growth phase . Accordingly, all probes
used were of similar length (approximately 350 bp) (Table
2) and were labeled to a similar sensitivity in
order to obtain results which would allow comparison of the relative
expression levels of the genes .
Cellobiose caused expression of all the genes tested, except for
pelA and bgaA, which were not detected under the conditions
used (Fig . 1, lane 1) . Significant expression of most of
the genes could be observed with cellulose (Fig . 1,
lane 2) . With cellulose, the expression of cbpA and engE
was particularly high . The pectate lyase gene pelA was
expressed strongly with the pectin-based medium; pectin was the only
substrate that allowed significant expression of pelA (Fig.
1, lane 3) . Pectin also induced cbpA,
engE, and engB . Xylan caused especially high expression of
the xylanase (xynA),
-L-arabinofuranosidase
(arfA), and
-L-arabinopyranosidase
(bgaA) genes and was also the most potent carbon source
resulting in induction of these particular genes (Fig .
1, lane 4) . When cellulose was mixed with pectin and/or xylan,
many of the genes were expressed (Fig . 1, lanes 5
to 8) . No expression of pelA and xynA occurred with only the
cellulose medium, but addition of pectin (Fig . 1, lane
5) and/or xylan (Fig . 1, lane 6) to the cellulose
medium efficiently induced pelA and/or xynA gene
expression (Fig . 1, lanes 5 to 8) . Interestingly,
the ratio between cellulose, pectin, and xylan had an effect on
cellulase induction . A higher ratio of cellulose to xylan
(cellulose/pectin/xylan ratio of 3:1:1 [wt/wt]) (Fig . 1, lane
7) induced most of the genes more strongly than a lower ratio
of cellulose to xylan (cellulose/pectin/xylan ratio of 2:1:2 [wt/wt])
(Fig . 1, lane 8) .
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FIG . 1 . Northern blot analysis of expression of five cellulosomal and
four noncellulosomal genes in C . cellulovorans grown on different
carbon sources . Total RNA was isolated from C . cellulovorans
cultivated on medium containing 0.5% cellobiose (lane 1), 1% cellulose
(Avicel) (lane 2), 1% pectin (lane 3), 1% xylan (lane 4), 1%
cellulose-pectin mixture (cellulose/pectin ratio of 3:2 [wt/wt]) (lane
5), 1% cellulose-xylan mixture (cellulose/xylan ratio of 3:2 [wt/wt])
(lane 6), 1% cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture (cellulose/pectin/xylan
ratio of 3:1:1 [wt/wt]) (lane 7), or 1% cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture
(cellulose/pectin/xylan ratio of 2:1:2 [wt/wt]) (lane 8) as the sole
carbon sources . RNA (5 µg) was subjected to electrophoresis through 1.5%
formaldehyde gels and transferred to nylon membranes, which were
subsequently probed with the DIG-labeled specific probes (Table
2) . The gene-specific probes used are indicated on the
left . Ethidium bromide staining of rRNA is shown as a loading control.
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It was confirmed that higher concentrations of xylan to cellulose in
the medium repressed cellulase and hemicellulase induction
(cellulose/xylan ratio of 1:3 [wt/wt]) (data not shown) . Some of the
substrates clearly induced stronger expression of only a certain set
of genes . Although it is a general inducing compound, cellulose
induced the expression of cellulase genes, such as cbpA-exgS
and engE, most strongly . The media commonly used to promote
high expression of cellulase and hemicellulase are based on mixtures
of plant materials . The artificial carbon mixture of cellulose,
pectin, and xylan strongly provoked cellulase and hemicellulase
expression (Fig . 1, lanes 7 and 8), whereas
cellulose, pectin, or xylan alone did not . The xylanase and pectate
lyase genes of C . cellulovorans showed a markedly different
pattern of expression from that of the cellulases . High xylanase or
pectate lyase gene expression was observed only when xylan or pectin
was the growth substrate, respectively .
Relative transcriptional levels of cellulosomal engB and
noncellulosomal engD under different growth conditions. To
determine whether EngB and EngD are regulated coordinately when cells
are grown on different carbon sources, changes in the expression
levels of the genes were monitored during the cultivation of C .
cellulovorans with either cellobiose, cellulose, pectin, xylan,
cellulose plus pectin, cellulose plus xylan, or cellulose plus pectin
and xylan as the carbon source (Fig . 2A) . The mRNA
levels of engB in bacteria grown on medium containing pectin
remained clearly higher than the levels in bacteria grown on medium
containing cellobiose, cellulose, or xylan (Fig . 2B) .
In a separate slot blot experiment, the expression level of
engD from cells grown on medium containing 0.5% cellobiose was
shown to be higher than that of cells grown on medium containing
cellulose (Fig . 2B) . Like engB expression, strong
induction of engD by cellulose plus pectin was observed, and
cellulose plus xylan also induced engD mRNA, although less
effectively . Low levels of engD mRNA were detected at
different stages of growth with medium containing only pectin or
xylan (Fig . 2B) .
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FIG . 2 . Relative levels of engB and engD transcripts in
C . cellulovorans grown on different sugars and at different growth
phases . (A) C . cellulovorans growth curve . RNA slot blot analyses
were conducted with the same concentrations of RNA (0.5 µg) isolated
from C . cellulovorans cultivated on medium containing 0.5%
cellobiose (Cb), 1% cellulose (C) (Avicel), 1% pectin (P), 1% xylan (X),
1% cellulose-pectin mixture (CP) (cellulose/pectin ratio of 3:2
[wt/wt]), 1% cellulose-xylan mixture (CX) (cellulose/xylan ratio of 3:2
[wt/wt]), 1% cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture with a
cellulose/pectin/xylan ratio of 3:1:1 (wt/wt) (CPX1) or 2:1:2 (wt/wt)
(CPX2) as the sole carbon sources . The times (in hours) in the growth
curve in panel A are shown in panel B also . The DIG-labeled engB
and engD probes were prepared (each from 1 µg of template) by
random primed labeling (see Materials and Methods) . The carbon source in
the culture medium is indicated to the left of the blots.
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It is noteworthy that expression of engB and engD was similar
at different stages of growth in the presence of certain carbon
sources, such as cellulose-pectin mixtures . Also, the presence of
cellulose, pectin, and xylan from the beginning of the cultivation
induced engB and engD transcription (Fig . 2B),
and this level was comparable or slightly higher than that obtained
by cultivation with cellulose plus pectin . These results indicate
that the engB and engD genes were expressed
simultaneously, while their degree of induction varied slightly
depending on different carbon sources, such as cellobiose or
cellulose .
Relative expression levels of cellulosomal (EngB) and noncellulosomal
(EngD) enzyme subunits under different growth conditions. The 2-D gels
(SDS-polyacrylamide gels) for the cellulosomal enzymes (Fig.
3A and B) indicated a large population of dense
protein spots . Most distinctive spots were identified as known
cellulosomal enzymes (Fig . 3A and B) and noncellulosomal
enzymes (Fig . 3C and D) by Western blot analysis
(Fig . 3E) and/or by the 2-D locations of
recombinant proteins (Fig . 3F) . On average, about
20 cellulosomal and 30 noncellulosomal spots were detected . The mass
spectrometry technique was also used to identify proteins separated
on 2-D gels . The peptide mass fingerprinting of CbpA, EngE, ExgS,
PelA, EngH, and EngL obtained from the MALDI-TOF analysis
unambiguously identified the spots found on the 2-D gels (data not
shown) . The putative EngK protein migrated to two spots located at
molecular mass of 97,024 daltons and pI 5.7 in the 2-D gel in Fig.
3A . The mass spectra of EngK showed the amino acid
sequences of tryptic peptides VNQVGYLPGVAK, ATMVSVGELLR,
QVPTTLDQTFEFR, and TPLNWYLK, which perfectly matched the entire
sequence of EngK (41) . The spot presumably identified as EngF
(Fig . 3C) was also confirmed by analysis of five tryptic
peptides, TNPLSTVDTNR, VTNNFVAQTDGTYK, LSNDWNSNVLR, LNSLTSLDPGSDK,
and ATPLVQLLR .
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FIG . 3 . 2-D PAGE of C . cellulovorans cellulosomal (A and B) and
noncellulosomal (C and D) enzyme preparations visualized with Coomassie
blue . Panels A to D show the gel zone defined by pH 3 to 7 (A and B) and
pH 4 to 8 (C and D) and molecular mass of 16 to 250 kDa . The arrows
point to the locations of the enzymes . (E) 2-D Western blot of
cellulosomal fractions of crude culture supernatants from cells grown on
1% cellulose incubated with anti-EngB antibody . (F) 2-D gel
electrophoresis of the purified recombinant EngD (1 µg) (14) .
The locations of the EngB (E) and EngD (F) proteins are circled.
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To complement the transcriptional analysis, 2-D PAGE patterns of
cellulosomal and noncellulosomal enzymes from cells grown in the
presence of cellulose, pectin, and/or xylan were compared . The
cellulosomal and noncellulosomal protein spots reproducibly showed
differences in abundance under growth with various carbon substrates
(Fig . 4) . Several cellulosomal proteins appeared to
be up-regulated in the cellulose- and cellulose-plus-pectin-induced
cultures (Fig . 4A to D) . Arrows in Fig . 4
identify all the previously reported proteins, such as CbpA, EngE,
EngK, ExgS, and EngL (Table 1) . Differences in the
amounts of each protein are obvious . The synthesis of CbpA was
significantly increased in the presence of cellulose or cellulose
plus pectin (Fig . 4A to D, spots 1) . Using
polyclonal rabbit antibodies directed against CbpA, 2-D Western blots
showed a similar high expression pattern of CbpA with cells grown on
cellulose or cellulose plus pectin (Fig . 5A to D) .
The EngE expression pattern was not different in cells grown on
cellulose or samples containing cellulose (Fig . 4A
to D, spots 2, and 5E to H) . The 2-D Western blot analysis showed
that XynA was induced only in medium containing xylan (Fig .
5K and L) . When subjected to 1-D SDS-PAGE, the relative
proportions of certain constituents were dramatically different in
cellulosomes from different carbon sources (Fig . 6A) .
Particularly with the cellulose cultures, the relative proportion of
the 60-kDa fraction was the highest, and that of the 65-kDa fraction
was the lowest (Fig . 6A, lane 1) . The most
distinguishable pattern among different carbon source fractions was
found with cellulosomes isolated from the CF fraction (Fig.
6A, lane 7) .
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FIG . 4 . 2-D PAGE of cellulosomal (A to D) and noncellulosomal (E to H)
fractions of crude culture supernatants from cells grown on various
carbon sources . Cells were grown on 1% cellulose (Avicel) (A and E), 1%
cellulose-pectin mixture (3:2 [wt/wt]) (B and F), 1% cellulose-xylan
mixture (3:2 [wt/wt]) (C and G), and 1% cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture
(3:1:1 [wt/wt]) (D and H) . The gel images are oriented with the IEF
dimension shown on the horizontal axis and the SDS-PAGE dimension on the
vertical axis . The approximate pI is indicated along the horizontal
axis . The positions of the SDS-PAGE molecular mass standards (in
kilodaltons) are presented along the vertical axis . The locations of the
enzymes are indicated by the arrows and numbers as follows: in panels A
to D, 1, CbpA; 2, EngE; 3, EngK; 4, PelA; 5, ExgS; 6, EngH; 7, EngL; 8,
XynA; 9, EngB; and 10, ManA; in panels E to H, 1, BgaA; 2, EngF; 3,
EngD; and 4, ArfA . The locations of the EngB (protein 9 in panels A to
D) and EngD (protein 3 in panels E to H) proteins are circled.
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FIG . 5 . 2-D Western blot of C . cellulovorans cellulosomes and
noncellulosomal proteins incubated with anti-CbpA (A to D), anti-EngE (E
to H), anti-XynA (I to L), and anti-ArfA (M to P) . Cellulosomal (A to L)
and noncellulosomal (M to P) fractions were isolated from crude culture
supernatants from medium containing 1% cellulose (A, E, I, and M), 1%
cellulose-pectin mixture (3:2 [wt/wt]) (B, F, J, and N), 1%
cellulose-xylan mixture (3:2 [wt/wt]) (C, G, K, and O), and 1%
cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture (3:1:1 [wt/wt]) (D, H, L, and P) . The
locations of the enzyme subunits are circled.
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FIG . 6 . SDS-PAGE analysis and Western blot profile of cellulosomal (A)
and noncellulosomal (B) components from cells grown on different carbon
sources . Lanes: 1, 1% cellulose (Avicel); 2, 1% cellulose-pectin mixture
(3:2 [wt-wt]); 3, 1% cellulose-xylan mixture (3:2 [wt/wt]); 4, 1%
cellulose-pectin-xylan mixture (3:1:1 [wt/wt]); 5, 1% xylan; 6, 1%
pectin; 7, 1% CF . SDS-PAGE was performed with a 4 to 15% gradient
polyacrylamide gel . After electrophoresis, the gels were either stained
with Coomassie blue or immunoblotted with anti-EngB or anti-EngD
antiserum . The positions of molecular mass markers (M) (in kilodaltons)
are indicated to the left of the gels.
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Noncellulosomal proteome profiles were also dramatically different in
the presence or absence of certain carbon sources such as pectin
(Fig . 4E to H) . The expression patterns of cells grown
on cellulose or cellulose plus xylan (Fig . 4E, G, and H)
were very similar . However, the cellulose-pectin mixture-induced
culture showed different enzyme profiles (Fig . 4F) . Some
spots of these cultures were absent (Fig . 4F) . In
2-D Western blot analyses, ArfA was detected in most samples tested
(Fig . 5M to P) . The putative BgaA spot (Fig.
4E to H, spot 1) was significantly different
depending on the carbon source . The putative EngF spot was highly
induced only by cellulose (Fig . 4E to H, spots 2) .
The proteins that were absent in certain cultures were probably
repressed . The 30-, 45-, 50-, 65-, and 120-kDa polypeptides were more
abundant in the noncellulosomal fraction than in the cellulosomal
fraction (Fig . 6B) . These results showed that the
noncellulosomal pattern of proteins was quite different from that of
the cellulosomal fraction . The absence or presence of certain protein
bands in samples indicated that the occurrence of certain
noncellulosomal proteins was dependent on different carbon sources
(Fig . 4E to H and 6B) .
The appearance of the EngB spot was strongly dependent upon
cellulose or cellulose-plus-pectin induction (Fig . 4A, B, and
D) . The noncellulosomal EngD spot was also regulated by
cellulose-plus-pectin induction, but not by cellulose induction (Fig.
4E to H) . When subjected to the Western blot
analysis, anti-EngB antibody reacted with cellulosomal enzymes from
all carbon sources (Fig . 6A) . Anti-EngD antibody
reacted most with EngD present in the noncellulosomal fractions,
except for the noncellulosomal fraction from cells grown on CF (Fig.
6B) . The proteins derived from cells grown in
cellulose plus pectin reacted most strongly with anti-EngD antibody
(Fig . 6B, lanes 2 and 4) .
The proteomic profiles of both cellulosomes and noncellulosomal
enzymes were dependent on different carbon cultures . The patterns of
expression of EngB and EngD were observed to be similar, regardless
of the carbon source, even though the EngD band was very prominent
when the medium contained the cellulose-pectin mixture .
Synergistic effects between cellulosomes and noncellulosomal proteins
during growth on different carbon sources. To determine whether there
is a synergistic relationship between cellulosomes and
noncellulosomal enzymes on different carbon sources, we measured
degradation activity by using cellulosomal and noncellulosomal enzyme
mixtures (1:1, vol/vol) . When cellulosome and noncellulosomal enzyme
mixtures were incubated with CMC, Avicel, pectin, xylan, CAX, and CF,
the amount of reducing sugar released increased significantly
compared with that released by the cellulosomal or noncellulosomal
fraction alone, and a large synergistic effect was observed on CMC
for all cultures grown on different carbon sources (Table
3) .
| TABLE 3 . Comparison of enzyme activities of cellulosomes and
noncellulosomal enzymes and their synergistic effects with different
carbon sources
|
|
On the other hand, although the pectate lyase or xylanase synergistic
effects by cellulosomal and noncellulosomal enzyme mixtures were not
detected for some substrate polymers, increases of synergistic
coefficient values were observed for cellulose-pectin and CF when the
fraction mixtures were used . Of special interest was the increase of
degradation activity observed with cellulosomal and noncellulosomal
enzyme mixtures from the culture grown on cellulose, pectin, and
xylan when CAX and CF were the substrates (Table 3) .
These results suggest that the cellulosomes and noncellulosomal
enzymes may be induced, depending on the carbon source in the growth
medium, and that both cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes
synergistically contribute to plant cell wall depolymerization by
C . cellulovorans .
Cellulose, xylan, and pectin exist in nature in close proximity in
plant cell walls, and C . cellulovorans has enzymes to ensure
efficient utilization of these complex polymers (16,
17, 19, 20,
28) . Various natural substrates may induce secreted enzymes
that can degrade very precisely particular combinations of polysaccharides
and chemical bonds found in a carbon substrate (13,
18, 24, 26,
27, 29) . In order to further elucidate the
influence of the composition of complex plant cell walls on enzyme
production, artificial mixed substrates containing xylan and/or
pectin with cellulose were investigated in this study . C .
cellulovorans was grown on these different substrates alone or in
mixture, and the relationship between carbon source, growth, and
enzyme composition was investigated . The data presented in this paper
demonstrate specific and common regulatory patterns in the expression
of cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes by C . cellulovorans
and additionally due to simultaneous analyses, a picture of
their relative expression levels under different culture conditions .
It was reported previously that carbon sources in the medium have an
effect on the subunit composition of the cellulosome (25,
42) . Our recent report described the transcriptional analysis
of cellulases and their regulation at the mRNA level of C .
cellulovorans (16, 17) .
However, the desired end point for elucidation of the systematic
regulation of cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes is not only
the analysis of mRNA transcript levels but also the accurate
measurement of protein expression profiles and their respective
activities under different growth conditions . This study examined the
relationship between mRNA and protein expression levels along with
their activity for cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes under
different culture conditions .
The largest number of cellulosomal enzymes was observed when cells
were grown on mixtures containing pectin and xylan, indicating that
the inducers in mixed substrates stimulated wider gene expression
(Fig . 4) . The highest levels of cellulosomal subunits,
such as CbpA, EngE, and ExgS, occurred during cultivation on
cellulose or when cellulose was one of the components in a substrate
mixture (Fig . 1, 4, and 6) .
It was found that the levels of major enzyme subunits were generally
higher in cells grown on cellulose-pectin mixed substrates than those
of cells grown on a single substrate . The general trend observed was
that a higher ratio of cellulose in the mixture resulted in higher
levels of cellulase production (Fig . 1 and
2) . The highest Avicelase activity was also found in cellulosomal
fractions purified from Avicel cultures (Table 3) .
On the other hand, the CMCase activity for the cellulosomal fractions
did not show a large variation with the different carbon sources
used . These results suggested that the major cellulosomal subunits,
CbpA, EngE, and ExgS, are constitutively expressed and can be induced
by certain carbon sources, such as Avicel . Very low levels of xynA
transcripts were shown to be present in uninduced cells, and these
transcripts were induced in the presence of xylan (Fig .
1 and 5) . Significantly higher levels of
pelA were measured only with cultures grown on pectin or a
cellulose-pectin mixture (Fig . 1) . Thus, there
appear to be (hemi)cellulose-degrading mechanisms in C . cellulovorans
which mediate partial and strict control of expression of various
genes encoding different extracellular hydrolases .
To analyze the synergistic effect between cellulosomes and noncellulosomal
enzymes, various enzyme fractions were mixed and tested for
activity on different carbon sources . A broad range of cellulosomes
and noncellulosomal enzymes from cells grown on different carbon
sources retained relatively high activity against CMC, Avicel,
pectin, xylan, CAX, and CF, as shown in Table 3 .
Interestingly, the enzyme mixture of the cellulosomal fraction and
noncellulosomal fraction showed the highest specific activity and
synergy degrees against natural substrates, such as CF . These results
implied that there is an advantage of associating cellulosomes and
noncellulosomal enzymes for the efficient degradation of a mixed
carbon source, such as plant cell walls . It was found that higher
enzyme levels generally resulted when the carbon source used for
growth was a mixture of the carbon substrates . On the other hand, the
synergism between cellulosomal enzymes (EngE, EngH, EngM, and ExgS)
and noncellulosomal enzymes (EngD and EngF) on the degradation of
CMC can be considered the most dominant effect on the degradation
of CMC by mixed endoglucanases . These results imply that synergy
between cellulosomes and noncellulosomal enzymes allows C .
cellulovorans to vary the cellulosome and noncellulosomal subunit
composition while retaining high activity against certain carbon
substrates .
Little is known about the regulatory mechanism of cellulosomes and
noncellulosomal enzymes in C . cellulovorans, but this study
showed that both enzyme fractions were coordinately expressed with
specific carbon sources . Certain carbon sources provoked high levels
of expression of one protein or set of proteins, while the effect on
expression of other proteins was weaker or insignificant, and this
pattern could be reversed with other carbon sources . Understanding
the roles and relationships of cellulosomes and noncellulosomal
proteins acting on specific substrates is important for the
development of an efficient artificial enzyme system for the
conversion of cellulosic biomass to valuable sugars . One of our
ultimate goals is the preparation of designer cellulosomes, which
could degrade cellulose efficiently for industrial purposes . Studying
the roles and relationships of enzyme components from the C .
cellulovorans cellulase system acting on complex substrates is a
key to the development of artificial cellulase and hemicellulase
combinations targeted to biomasses with particular carbon
compositions .
We thank David B . Johnston of the U.S . Department of Agriculture for
the gift of CF and CAX . We are also grateful to Young Jin Lee and
Young Moo Lee for providing access to the molecular structure
facility .
This research was supported in part by the Research Institute of
Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE), Japanese Ministry of
Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), and grant DE-DDF03-92ER20069 from
the U.S . Department of Energy .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Section of Molecular
and Cellular Biology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616 . Phone:
(530) 752-3191 . Fax: (530) 752-3085 . E-mail:
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