Antarctic tundra soil metagenome as useful natural resources of cold-active lignocelluolytic enzymes
Cited 11 time in
Cited 11 time in
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Title
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Antarctic tundra soil metagenome as useful natural resources of cold-active lignocelluolytic enzymes
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Other Titles
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남극툰드라 토양메타지놈 분석을 통한 저온활성 리그노셀룰로오즈 분해효소 탐색
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Authors
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Oh, Han Na
Park, Doyoung
Seong, Hoon Je
Kim, Dockyu
Sul, Woo Jun
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Subject
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Microbiology
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Keywords
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Antarctica; CAZy; Metagenomics; SMRT sequencing; cold-active enzymes; lignocellulose degradation
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Issue Date
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2019-10
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Citation
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Oh, Han Na, et al. 2019. "Antarctic tundra soil metagenome as useful natural resources of cold-active lignocelluolytic enzymes". JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, 57(10): 865-873.
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Abstract
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Lignocellulose composed of complex carbohydrates and aromatic heteropolymers is one of the principal materials for the production of renewable biofuels. Lignocellulose-degrading genes from cold-adapted bacteria have a potential to increase the productivity of biological treatment of lignocellulose biomass by providing a broad range of treatment temperatures. Antarctic soil metagenomes allow to access novel genes encoding for the cold-active lignocellulose-degrading enzymes, for biotechnological and industrial applications. Here, we investigated the metagenome targeting cold-adapted microbes in Antarctic organic matter-rich soil to mine lignolytic and celluloytic enzymes by performing single molecule, real-time metagenomic (SMRT) sequencing. In the assembled Antarctic metagenomic contigs with relative long reads, we found that 162 (1.42%) of total 11,436 genes were annotated as carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZy). Actinobacteria, the dominant phylum in this soil's metagenome, possessed most of candidates of lignocellulose catabolic genes like glycoside hydrolase families (GH13, GH26, and GH5) and auxiliary activity families (AA7 and AA3). From phylogenetic relationships with cellular and environmental enzymes, several genes having potential for participating in overall lignocellulose degradation were also found. The results indicated the presence of lignocellulose-degrading bacteria in Antarctic tundra soil and the potential benefits of the lignocelluolytic enzymes as candidates for cold-adapted enzymes which will be used for the future biofuel-production industry.
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URI
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https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/10952
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DOI
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12275-019-9217-1
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Type
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Article
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Station
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King Sejong Station
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Indexed
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SCIE
- Appears in Collections
- 2019-2019, Modeling responses of terrestrial organisms to environmental changes on King George Island (19-19) / Lee, Hyoungseok (PE19090)
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