Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny

In this thesis, enzymes acting on the primary cell wall hemicellulose xyloglucan are studied.  Xyloglucans are ubiquitous in land plants which make them an important polysaccharide to utilise for microbes and a potentially interesting raw material for various industries.  The function of xyloglucans...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eklöf, Jens
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Glykovetenskap 2011
Subjects:
XTH
XET
XEH
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-31677
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7415-932-5
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-316772013-01-08T13:07:58ZPlant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and PhylogenyengEklöf, JensKTH, GlykovetenskapStockholm : KTH Royal Institute of Technology2011xyloglucanxyloglucanasesXTHXETXEHendoglucanasesEG16Molecular biologyMolekylärbiologiIn this thesis, enzymes acting on the primary cell wall hemicellulose xyloglucan are studied.  Xyloglucans are ubiquitous in land plants which make them an important polysaccharide to utilise for microbes and a potentially interesting raw material for various industries.  The function of xyloglucans in plants is mainly to improve primary cell wall characteristics by coating and tethering cellulose microfibrils together.  Some plants also utilise xyloglucans as storage polysaccharides in their seeds. In microbes, a variety of different enzymes for degrading xyloglucans have been found.  In this thesis, the structure-function relationship of three different microbial endo-xyloglucanases from glycoside hydrolase families 5, 12 and 44 are probed and reveal details of the natural diversity found in xyloglucanases.  Hopefully, a better understanding of how xyloglucanases recognise and degrade their substrate can lead to improved saccharification processes of plant matter, finding uses in for example biofuel production. In plants, xyloglucans are modified in muro by the xyloglucan transglycosylase/hydrolase (XTH) gene products.  Interestingly, closely related XTH gene products catalyse either transglycosylation (XET activity) or hydrolysis (XEH activity) with dramatically different effects on xyloglucan and on cell wall characteristics.  The strict transglycosylases transfer xyloglucan segments between individual xyloglucan molecules while the hydrolases degrade xyloglucan into oligosaccharides.  Here, we describe and determine, a major determinant of transglycosylation versus hydrolysis in XTH gene products by solving and comparing the first 3D structure of an XEH, Tm-NXG1 and a XET, PttXET16-34.  The XEH activity was hypothesised, and later confirmed to be restricted to subset of the XTH gene products.  The in situ localisation of XEH activity in roots and hypocotyls of Arabidopsis was also visualised for the first time.  Furthermore, an evolutionary scheme for how XTH gene products developed from bacterial beta-1,3;1,4 glucanases was also presented based on the characterisation of a novel plant endo-glucanase, PtEG16-1. The EG16s are proposed to predate XTH gene products and are with activity on both xyloglucan and beta-1,3;1,4 glucans an “intermediate” in the evolution from beta-1,3;1,4 glucanases to XTH gene products. QC 20110401Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-31677urn:isbn:978-91-7415-932-5Trita-BIO-Report, 1654-2312 ; 2011:07application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic xyloglucan
xyloglucanases
XTH
XET
XEH
endoglucanases
EG16
Molecular biology
Molekylärbiologi
spellingShingle xyloglucan
xyloglucanases
XTH
XET
XEH
endoglucanases
EG16
Molecular biology
Molekylärbiologi
Eklöf, Jens
Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
description In this thesis, enzymes acting on the primary cell wall hemicellulose xyloglucan are studied.  Xyloglucans are ubiquitous in land plants which make them an important polysaccharide to utilise for microbes and a potentially interesting raw material for various industries.  The function of xyloglucans in plants is mainly to improve primary cell wall characteristics by coating and tethering cellulose microfibrils together.  Some plants also utilise xyloglucans as storage polysaccharides in their seeds. In microbes, a variety of different enzymes for degrading xyloglucans have been found.  In this thesis, the structure-function relationship of three different microbial endo-xyloglucanases from glycoside hydrolase families 5, 12 and 44 are probed and reveal details of the natural diversity found in xyloglucanases.  Hopefully, a better understanding of how xyloglucanases recognise and degrade their substrate can lead to improved saccharification processes of plant matter, finding uses in for example biofuel production. In plants, xyloglucans are modified in muro by the xyloglucan transglycosylase/hydrolase (XTH) gene products.  Interestingly, closely related XTH gene products catalyse either transglycosylation (XET activity) or hydrolysis (XEH activity) with dramatically different effects on xyloglucan and on cell wall characteristics.  The strict transglycosylases transfer xyloglucan segments between individual xyloglucan molecules while the hydrolases degrade xyloglucan into oligosaccharides.  Here, we describe and determine, a major determinant of transglycosylation versus hydrolysis in XTH gene products by solving and comparing the first 3D structure of an XEH, Tm-NXG1 and a XET, PttXET16-34.  The XEH activity was hypothesised, and later confirmed to be restricted to subset of the XTH gene products.  The in situ localisation of XEH activity in roots and hypocotyls of Arabidopsis was also visualised for the first time.  Furthermore, an evolutionary scheme for how XTH gene products developed from bacterial beta-1,3;1,4 glucanases was also presented based on the characterisation of a novel plant endo-glucanase, PtEG16-1. The EG16s are proposed to predate XTH gene products and are with activity on both xyloglucan and beta-1,3;1,4 glucans an “intermediate” in the evolution from beta-1,3;1,4 glucanases to XTH gene products. === QC 20110401
author Eklöf, Jens
author_facet Eklöf, Jens
author_sort Eklöf, Jens
title Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
title_short Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
title_full Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
title_fullStr Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
title_full_unstemmed Plant and microbial xyloglucanases: Function, Structure and Phylogeny
title_sort plant and microbial xyloglucanases: function, structure and phylogeny
publisher KTH, Glykovetenskap
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-31677
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7415-932-5
work_keys_str_mv AT eklofjens plantandmicrobialxyloglucanasesfunctionstructureandphylogeny
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