Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains

Proteins constitute a particularly bioavailable subset of organic carbon and nitrogen in aquatic environments but must be hydrolyzed by extracellular enzymes prior to being metabolized by microorganisms. Activities of extracellular peptidases (protein-degrading enzymes) have frequently been assayed...

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Main Authors: Lauren Mullen, Malcolm X Shabazz High School Aquatic Biogeochemistry Team, Kim Boerrigter, Nicholas Ferriero, Jeff Rosalsky, Abigail van Buren Barrett, Patrick J. Murray, Andrew D. Steen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00368/full
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spelling doaj-d048145e7a9542afa3537a5c95d20e622020-11-24T23:00:18ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2018-03-01910.3389/fmicb.2018.00368315834Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono MountainsLauren Mullen0Malcolm X Shabazz High School Aquatic Biogeochemistry Team1Kim Boerrigter2Kim Boerrigter3Nicholas Ferriero4Jeff Rosalsky5Abigail van Buren Barrett6Patrick J. Murray7Andrew D. Steen8Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United StatesMalcolm X Shabazz High School, Newark, NJ, United StatesMalcolm X Shabazz High School, Newark, NJ, United StatesHarvard College, Cambridge, MA, United StatesMalcolm X Shabazz High School, Newark, NJ, United StatesPocono Environmental Education Center, Dingmans Ferry, PA, United StatesDepartment of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United StatesMalcolm X Shabazz High School, Newark, NJ, United StatesDepartment of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United StatesProteins constitute a particularly bioavailable subset of organic carbon and nitrogen in aquatic environments but must be hydrolyzed by extracellular enzymes prior to being metabolized by microorganisms. Activities of extracellular peptidases (protein-degrading enzymes) have frequently been assayed in freshwater systems, but such studies have been limited to substrates for a single enzyme [leucyl aminopeptidase (Leu-AP)] out of more than 300 biochemically recognized peptidases. Here, we report kinetic measurements of extracellular hydrolysis of five substrates in 28 freshwater bodies in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area in the Pocono Mountains (PA, United States) and near Knoxville (TN, United States), between 2013 and 2016. The assays putatively test for four aminopeptidases (arginyl aminopeptidase, glyclyl aminopeptidase, Leu-AP, and pyroglutamyl aminopeptidase), which cleave N-terminal amino acids from proteins, and trypsin, an endopeptidase, which cleaves proteins mid-chain. Aminopeptidase and the trypsin-like activity were observed in all water bodies, indicating that a diverse set of peptidases is typical in freshwater. However, ratios of peptidase activities were variable among sites: aminopeptidases dominated at some sites and trypsin-like activity at others. At a given site, the ratios remained fairly consistent over time, indicating that they are driven by ecological factors. Studies in which only Leu-AP activity is measured may underestimate the total peptidolytic capacity of an environment, due to the variable contribution of endopeptidases.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00368/fullextracellular enzymesaminopeptidaseendopeptidasefreshwatertrypsinprotein
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren Mullen
Malcolm X Shabazz High School Aquatic Biogeochemistry Team
Kim Boerrigter
Kim Boerrigter
Nicholas Ferriero
Jeff Rosalsky
Abigail van Buren Barrett
Patrick J. Murray
Andrew D. Steen
spellingShingle Lauren Mullen
Malcolm X Shabazz High School Aquatic Biogeochemistry Team
Kim Boerrigter
Kim Boerrigter
Nicholas Ferriero
Jeff Rosalsky
Abigail van Buren Barrett
Patrick J. Murray
Andrew D. Steen
Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
Frontiers in Microbiology
extracellular enzymes
aminopeptidase
endopeptidase
freshwater
trypsin
protein
author_facet Lauren Mullen
Malcolm X Shabazz High School Aquatic Biogeochemistry Team
Kim Boerrigter
Kim Boerrigter
Nicholas Ferriero
Jeff Rosalsky
Abigail van Buren Barrett
Patrick J. Murray
Andrew D. Steen
author_sort Lauren Mullen
title Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
title_short Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
title_full Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
title_fullStr Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
title_full_unstemmed Potential Activities of Freshwater Exo- and Endo-Acting Extracellular Peptidases in East Tennessee and the Pocono Mountains
title_sort potential activities of freshwater exo- and endo-acting extracellular peptidases in east tennessee and the pocono mountains
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Proteins constitute a particularly bioavailable subset of organic carbon and nitrogen in aquatic environments but must be hydrolyzed by extracellular enzymes prior to being metabolized by microorganisms. Activities of extracellular peptidases (protein-degrading enzymes) have frequently been assayed in freshwater systems, but such studies have been limited to substrates for a single enzyme [leucyl aminopeptidase (Leu-AP)] out of more than 300 biochemically recognized peptidases. Here, we report kinetic measurements of extracellular hydrolysis of five substrates in 28 freshwater bodies in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area in the Pocono Mountains (PA, United States) and near Knoxville (TN, United States), between 2013 and 2016. The assays putatively test for four aminopeptidases (arginyl aminopeptidase, glyclyl aminopeptidase, Leu-AP, and pyroglutamyl aminopeptidase), which cleave N-terminal amino acids from proteins, and trypsin, an endopeptidase, which cleaves proteins mid-chain. Aminopeptidase and the trypsin-like activity were observed in all water bodies, indicating that a diverse set of peptidases is typical in freshwater. However, ratios of peptidase activities were variable among sites: aminopeptidases dominated at some sites and trypsin-like activity at others. At a given site, the ratios remained fairly consistent over time, indicating that they are driven by ecological factors. Studies in which only Leu-AP activity is measured may underestimate the total peptidolytic capacity of an environment, due to the variable contribution of endopeptidases.
topic extracellular enzymes
aminopeptidase
endopeptidase
freshwater
trypsin
protein
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00368/full
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