Increased cellulose production from sucrose with reduced levan accumulation by an acetobacter strain harboring a recombinant plasmid

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Abstract

Cellulose production from sucrose by Acetobacter strains is accompanied by the accumulation of a water-soluble polysaccharide, called levan. To improve cellulose productivity, a levansucrase-deficient mutant, LD-2, was derived from Acetobacter strain 757 and used as a host for the construction of recombinant strains. An LD-2 mutant harboring a plasmid containing the sucrase gene, sucZE3, from Zymomonas mobilis together with zliS, a gene that encodes a secretion-activating factor under the control of the Escherichia coli lac promoter, had sucrase activity and produced much cellulose and little levan in a medium containing sucrose. In addition, a mutant levansucrase gene, mutant sacB, from Bacillus subtilis, which encodes a protein with little levan-forming activity, was generated by site-directed mutagenesis and introduced into the LD-2 mutant. This introduction also resulted in the higher cellulose productivity and little levan. © 1998, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Tonouchi, N., Yanase, H., Kojima, Y., Tsuchida, T., Yoshinaga, F., & Horinouchi, S. (1998). Increased cellulose production from sucrose with reduced levan accumulation by an acetobacter strain harboring a recombinant plasmid. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 62(5), 833–836. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.62.833

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