Novel lipolytic enzymes identified from metagenomic library of deep-sea sediment

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Abstract

Metagenomic library was constructed from a deep-sea sediment sample and screened for lipolytic activity. Open-reading frames of six positive clones showed only 33-58% amino acid identities to the known proteins. One of them was assigned to a new group while others were grouped into Families I and V or EstD Family. By employing a combination of approaches such as removing the signal sequence, coexpression of chaperone genes, and low temperature induction, we obtained five soluble recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli. The purified enzymes had optimum temperatures of 30-35 °C and the cold-activity property. Among them, one enzyme showed lipase activity by preferentially hydrolyzing p-nitrophenyl palmitate and p-nitrophenyl stearate and high salt resistance with up to 4M NaCl. Our research demonstrates the feasibility of developing novel lipolytic enzymes from marine environments by the combination of functional metagenomic approach and protein expression technology. © 2011 Jeong Ho Jeon et al.

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Lee, J. H., Jeon, J. H., Kim, J. T., Lee, H. S., Kim, S. J., Kang, S. G., & Choi, S. H. (2011). Novel lipolytic enzymes identified from metagenomic library of deep-sea sediment. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/271419

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