Agarose-Degrading Characteristics of a Deep-Sea Bacterium Vibrio Natriegens WPAGA4 and Its Cold-Adapted GH50 Agarase Aga3420

8Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Up until now, the characterizations of GH50 agarases from Vibrio species have rarely been reported compared to GH16 agarases. In this study, a deep-sea strain, WPAGA4, was isolated and identified as Vibrio natriegens due to the maximum similarity of its 16S rRNA gene sequence, the values of its average nucleotide identity, and through digital DNA-DNA hybridization. Two circular chromosomes in V. natriegens WPAGA4 were assembled. A total of 4561 coding genes, 37 rRNA, 131 tRNA, and 59 other non-coding RNA genes were predicted in the genome of V. natriegens WPAGA4. An agarase gene belonging to the GH50 family was annotated in the genome sequence and expressed in E. coli cells. The optimum temperature and pH of the recombinant Aga3420 (rAga3420) were 40 °C and 7.0, respectively. Neoagarobiose (NA2) was the only product during the degradation process of agarose by rAga3420. rAga3420 had a favorable stability following incubation at 10-30 °C for 50 min. The Km, Vmax, and kcat values of rAga3420 were 2.8 mg/mL, 78.1 U/mg, and 376.9 s-1, respectively. rAga3420 displayed cold-adapted properties as 59.7% and 41.2% of the relative activity remained at 10 3 °C and 0 °C, respectively. This property ensured V. natriegens WPAGA4 could degrade and metabolize the agarose in cold deep-sea environments and enables rAga3420 to be an appropriate industrial enzyme for NA2 production, with industrial potential in medical and cosmetic fields.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zhang, M., Wang, J., Zeng, R., Wang, D., Wang, W., Tong, X., & Qu, W. (2022). Agarose-Degrading Characteristics of a Deep-Sea Bacterium Vibrio Natriegens WPAGA4 and Its Cold-Adapted GH50 Agarase Aga3420. Marine Drugs, 20(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/md20110692

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free