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Home › Publications › Complete genome sequence of the complex carbohydrate-degrading marine bacterium, Saccharophagus degradans strain 2-40(T)

Complete genome sequence of the complex carbohydrate-degrading marine bacterium, Saccharophagus degradans strain 2-40(T)

Published in:

Plos Genetics 4(5) (May 2008)

Author(s):

Weiner, R. M., Taylor, L. E., Henrissat, B., Hauser, L., Land, M., Coutinho, P. M., Rancurel, C., Saunders, E. H., Longmire, A. G., Zhang, H. T., Bayer, E. A., Gilbert, H. J., Larimer, F., Zhulin, I. B., Ekborg, N. A., Lamed, R., Richardson, P. M., Borovok, I., Hutcheson, S.

DOI:

ARTN e1000087 DOI 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000087

Abstract:

The marine bacterium Saccharophagus degradans strain 2-40 (Sde 2-40) is emerging as a vanguard of a recently discovered group of marine and estuarine bacteria that recycles complex polysaccharides. We report its complete genome sequence, analysis of which identifies an unusually large number of enzymes that degrade >10 complex polysaccharides. Not only is this an extraordinary range of catabolic capability, many of the enzymes exhibit unusual architecture including novel combinations of catalytic and substrate-binding modules. We hypothesize that many of these features are adaptations that facilitate depolymerization of complex polysaccharides in the marine environment. This is the first sequenced genome of a marine bacterium that can degrade plant cell walls, an important component of the carbon cycle that is not well-characterized in the marine environment.

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