PLoS Genetics (May 2008)

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

  • Ronald M Weiner,
  • Larry E Taylor,
  • Bernard Henrissat,
  • Loren Hauser,
  • Miriam Land,
  • Pedro M Coutinho,
  • Corinne Rancurel,
  • Elizabeth H Saunders,
  • Atkinson G Longmire,
  • Haitao Zhang,
  • Edward A Bayer,
  • Harry J Gilbert,
  • Frank Larimer,
  • Igor B Zhulin,
  • Nathan A Ekborg,
  • Raphael Lamed,
  • Paul M Richardson,
  • Ilya Borovok,
  • Steven Hutcheson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000087
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 5
p. e1000087

Abstract

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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.