scholarly journals Metagenomic analysis of the Rhinopithecus bieti fecal microbiome reveals a broad diversity of bacterial and glycoside hydrolase profiles related to lignocellulose degradation

BMC Genomics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Xu ◽  
Weijiang Xu ◽  
Junjun Li ◽  
Liming Dai ◽  
Caiyun Xiong ◽  
...  
mBio ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Verastegui ◽  
J. Cheng ◽  
K. Engel ◽  
D. Kolczynski ◽  
S. Mortimer ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSoil microbial diversity represents the largest global reservoir of novel microorganisms and enzymes. In this study, we coupled functional metagenomics and DNA stable-isotope probing (DNA-SIP) using multiple plant-derived carbon substrates and diverse soils to characterize active soil bacterial communities and their glycoside hydrolase genes, which have value for industrial applications. We incubated samples from three disparate Canadian soils (tundra, temperate rainforest, and agricultural) with five native carbon (12C) or stable-isotope-labeled (13C) carbohydrates (glucose, cellobiose, xylose, arabinose, and cellulose). Indicator species analysis revealed high specificity and fidelity for many uncultured and unclassified bacterial taxa in the heavy DNA for all soils and substrates. Among characterized taxa,Actinomycetales(Salinibacterium),Rhizobiales(Devosia),Rhodospirillales(Telmatospirillum), andCaulobacterales(PhenylobacteriumandAsticcacaulis) were bacterial indicator species for the heavy substrates and soils tested. BothActinomycetalesandCaulobacterales(Phenylobacterium) were associated with metabolism of cellulose, andAlphaproteobacteriawere associated with the metabolism of arabinose; members of the orderRhizobialeswere strongly associated with the metabolism of xylose. Annotated metagenomic data suggested diverse glycoside hydrolase gene representation within the pooled heavy DNA. By screening 2,876 cloned fragments derived from the13C-labeled DNA isolated from soils incubated with cellulose, we demonstrate the power of combining DNA-SIP, multiple-displacement amplification (MDA), and functional metagenomics by efficiently isolating multiple clones with activity on carboxymethyl cellulose and fluorogenic proxy substrates for carbohydrate-active enzymes.IMPORTANCEThe ability to identify genes based on function, instead of sequence homology, allows the discovery of genes that would not be identified through sequence alone. This is arguably the most powerful application of metagenomics for the recovery of novel genes and a natural partner of the stable-isotope-probing approach for targeting active-yet-uncultured microorganisms. We expanded on previous efforts to combine stable-isotope probing and metagenomics, enriching microorganisms from multiple soils that were active in degrading plant-derived carbohydrates, followed by construction of a cellulose-based metagenomic library and recovery of glycoside hydrolases through functional metagenomics. The major advance of our study was the discovery of active-yet-uncultivated soil microorganisms and enrichment of their glycoside hydrolases. We recovered positive cosmid clones in a higher frequency than would be expected with direct metagenomic analysis of soil DNA. This study has generated an invaluable metagenomic resource that future research will exploit for genetic and enzymatic potential.


Symbiosis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-222
Author(s):  
Shaik Jakeer ◽  
Mahendra Varma ◽  
Juhi Sharma ◽  
Farnaz Mattoo ◽  
Dinesh Gupta ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (8) ◽  
pp. 2592-2601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kundi Zhang ◽  
Xiaohua Chen ◽  
Wolfgang H. Schwarz ◽  
Fuli Li

ABSTRACTTwo cellulolytic thermophilic bacterial strains, CS-3-2 and CS-4-4, were isolated from decayed cornstalk by the addition of growth-supporting factors to the medium. According to 16S rRNA gene-sequencing results, these strains belonged to the genusClostridiumand showed 98.87% and 98.86% identity withClostridiumstercorariumsubsp.leptospartumATCC 35414TandClostridiumcellulosiAS 1.1777T, respectively. The endoglucanase and exoglucanase activities of strain CS-4-4 were approximately 3 to 5 times those of strain CS-3-2, whereas the β-glucosidase activity of strain CS-3-2 was 18 times higher than that of strain CS-4-4. The xylanase activity of strain CS-3-2 was 9 times that of strain CS-4-4, whereas the β-xylosidase activity of strain CS-4-4 was 27 times that of strain CS-3-2. The enzyme activities in spent cultures following cocultivation of the two strains with cornstalk as the substrate were much greater than those in pure cultures or an artificial mixture of samples, indicating synergism of glycoside hydrolase secretomes between the two strains. Quantitative measurement of the two strains in the cocultivation system indicated that strain CS-3-2 grew robustly during the initial stages, whereas strain CS-4-4 dominated the system in the late-exponential phase. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of protein bands appearing in the native zymograms showed that ORF3880 and ORF3883 from strain CS-4-4 played key roles in the lignocellulose degradation process. Both these open reading frames (ORFs) exhibited endoglucanase and xylanase activities, but ORF3880 showed tighter adhesion to insoluble substrates at 4, 25, and 60°C owing to its five carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs).


2014 ◽  
Vol 60 (7) ◽  
pp. 469-476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee J. Pinnell ◽  
Eric Dunford ◽  
Patrick Ronan ◽  
Martina Hausner ◽  
Josh D. Neufeld

Bacteria responsible for cellulose hydrolysis in situ are poorly understood, largely because of the relatively recent development of cultivation-independent methods for their detection and characterization. This study combined DNA stable-isotope probing (DNA-SIP) and metagenomics for identifying active bacterial communities that assimilated carbon from glucose and cellulose in Arctic tundra microcosms. Following DNA-SIP, bacterial fingerprint analysis of gradient fractions confirmed isotopic enrichment. Sequenced fingerprint bands and clone library analysis of 16S rRNA genes identified active bacterial taxa associated with cellulose-associated labelled DNA, including Bacteroidetes (Sphingobacteriales), Betaproteobacteria (Burkholderiales), Alphaproteobacteria (Caulobacteraceae), and Chloroflexi (Anaerolineaceae). We also compared glycoside hydrolase metagenomic profiles from bulk soil and heavy DNA recovered from DNA-SIP incubations. Active populations consuming [13C]glucose and [13C]cellulose were distinct, based on ordinations of light and heavy DNA. Metagenomic analysis demonstrated a ∼3-fold increase in the relative abundance of glycoside hydrolases in DNA-SIP libraries over bulk-soil libraries. The data also indicate that multiple displacement amplification introduced bias into the resulting metagenomic analysis. This research identified DNA-SIP incubation conditions for glucose and cellulose that were suitable for Arctic tundra soil and confirmed that DNA-SIP enrichment can increase target gene frequencies in metagenomic libraries.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. e56565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Xu ◽  
Weijiang Xu ◽  
Fuya Yang ◽  
Junjun Li ◽  
Yunjuan Yang ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 288 (21) ◽  
pp. 14985-14992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan P. McAndrew ◽  
Joshua I. Park ◽  
Richard A. Heins ◽  
Wolfgang Reindl ◽  
Gregory D. Friedland ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 77 (19) ◽  
pp. 7007-7015 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A. Langston ◽  
Tarana Shaghasi ◽  
Eric Abbate ◽  
Feng Xu ◽  
Elena Vlasenko ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSeveral members of the glycoside hydrolase 61 (GH61) family of proteins have recently been shown to dramatically increase the breakdown of lignocellulosic biomass by microbial hydrolytic cellulases. However, purified GH61 proteins have neither demonstrable direct hydrolase activity on various polysaccharide or lignacious components of biomass nor an apparent hydrolase active site. Cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) is a secreted flavocytochrome produced by many cellulose-degrading fungi with no well-understood biological function. Here we demonstrate that the binary combination ofThermoascus aurantiacusGH61A (TaGH61A) andHumicola insolensCDH (HiCDH) cleaves cellulose into soluble, oxidized oligosaccharides. TaGH61A-HiCDH activity on cellulose is shown to be nonredundant with the activities of canonical endocellulase and exocellulase enzymes in microcrystalline cellulose cleavage, and while the combination of TaGH61A and HiCDH cleaves highly crystalline bacterial cellulose, it does not cleave soluble cellodextrins. GH61 and CDH proteins are coexpressed and secreted by the thermophilic ascomyceteThielavia terrestrisin response to environmental cellulose, and the combined activities ofT. terrestrisGH61 andT. terrestrisCDH are shown to synergize withT. terrestriscellulose hydrolases in the breakdown of cellulose. The action of GH61 and CDH on cellulose may constitute an important, but overlooked, biological oxidoreductive system that functions in microbial lignocellulose degradation and has applications in industrial biomass utilization.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tejpal Gill ◽  
Patrick Stauffer ◽  
Mark Asquith ◽  
Ted Laderas ◽  
Tammy M Martin ◽  
...  

Objective: To investigate whether axial spondyloarthritis (AxSpA) patients have an altered immunoglobulin A (IgA) response in the gut and oral microbial communities. Methods: We performed 16S rRNA gene (16S) sequencing on IgA positive (IgA+) and IgA negative (IgA-) fractions (IgA-SEQ) from feces (n=17 AxSpA; n=14 healthy) and saliva (n=17 AxSpA; n=12 healthy), as well as on IgA-unsorted fecal and salivary samples. PICRUSt2 was used to predict microbial metabolic potential in AxSpA patients and healthy controls (HCs). Results: IgA-SEQ revealed enrichment of several microbes in the fecal (Akkermansia, Ruminococcaceae, Lachnospira) and salivary (Prevotellaceae, Actinobacillus) microbiome in AxSpA patients as compared with HCs. Fecal microbiome from AxSpA patients showed a trend towards increased alpha diversity of the IgA+ fraction and decreased diversity in the IgA- fraction in comparison with HCs, while the salivary microbiome exhibits a significant decrease in alpha diversity in both IgA+ and IgA- fractions. Increased IgA coating of Clostridiales Family XIII correlated with disease severity. Inferred metagenomic analysis suggests perturbation of metabolites and metabolic pathways for inflammation (oxidative phosphorylation, glutathione metabolism) and metabolism (propanoate and butanoate metabolism) in AxSpA patients. Conclusions: Analyses of fecal and salivary microbes from AxSpA patients reveal distinct populations of immunoreactive microbes using novel IgA-SEQ approach, which were not captured by comparing their relative abundance with HCs. Predictive metagenomic analysis revealed perturbation of metabolites/metabolic pathways in AxSpA patients. Future studies on these immunoreactive microbes may lead to better understanding of the functional role of IgA in maintaining microbial structure and human health.


Hypertension ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 70 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seungbum Kim ◽  
Elaine M Richards ◽  
Yanfei Qi ◽  
Mohammed Mohammed ◽  
Eileen M Handberg ◽  
...  

Objectives: Recent studies have implicated changes of the gut pathology and altered microbiome in the animals of various hypertension models. However, these relationships in human hypertension are poorly understood. Thus, our objectives in this study was to test the hypothesis that microbiome from hypertensive patients (HTN) would be taxonomically and functionally differ from those of normotensive subjects. Design and Method: Fecal samples were collected from HTN (n=22, mean SBP 155.8±3.4mmHg) and reference subjects without hypertension (REF) (n=18, mean SBP 121.1±1.5mmHg) (see ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02188381 for detailed protocol). Gut microbiomes were analyzed using shotgun metagenomics and the USEARCH6.1 algorithm for OTU clustering. Taxonomy was assigned with Metaphlan. Qiime, Phyloseq and Galaxy web applications were used to further analyze the data. Results: Two beta diversity measures, principal coordinates analysis and partial least squares discriminant analysis, showed significantly different microbiome composition between the two groups (ANOSIM p=0.012). A heatmap based on significantly enriched functional genes from each cohort (P<0.05) also showed clustering of samples by group. Metagenomic analysis showed that the butyrate kinase gene and the abundance of butyrate producing bacteria were negatively correlated with SBP (R 2 =0.10 and P<0.05 for both). Additionally, functional analysis showed that HEME biosynthesis and hydroxyphenylacetate degradation were decreased in the HTN cohort (LDA score 2.15 and 1.95 respectively) suggesting inefficient nitric oxide synthesis and polyphenol digestion in HTN patients. Conclusions: 1) Significant difference in taxa of HTN from REF was observed. 2) Microbial genes linked to butyrate, nitric oxide and polyphenol were significantly decreased in HTN. Gene products of all these were shown to have important implications in cardiovascular diseases. Thus, our observations suggest that targeting of gut and its microbiota can offer a novel strategy for hypertension control.


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