Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
DOI 10.1186/s13568-015-0121-8
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Open Access
Simultaneous bioethanol distillery
wastewater treatment and xylanase production
by the phyllosphere yeast Pseudozyma
antarctica GB-4(0)
Takashi Watanabe1,2, Ken Suzuki1, Ikuo Sato1, Tomotake Morita3, Hideaki Koike4, Yukiko Shinozaki1,
Hirokazu Ueda1, Motoo Koitabashi1 and Hiroko K Kitamoto1*
Abstract
Bioethanol production using lignocellulosic biomass generates lignocellulosic bioethanol distillery wastewater
(LBDW) that contains a large amount of xylose, making it a potential inexpensive source of xylose for biomaterials
production. The main goal of this study was the production of useful enzymes from LBDW during treatment of this
wastewater. In this study, we found that xylose strongly induced two yeast strains, Pseudozyma antarctica T-34 and
GB-4(0), to produce novel xylanases, PaXynT and PaXynG, respectively. The nucleotide sequence of PaXynT [accession No. DF196774 (GAC73192.1)], obtained from the genome database of strain T-34 using its N-terminal amino acid
sequence, was 91% identical to that of PaXynG (accession No. AB901085), and the deduced amino acid sequence
is 98% identical. The specific activities of the purified PaXynT and PaXynG were about 52 U/mg. The optimal pH and
temperature for both enzymes’ activities were 5.2 and 50°C, respectively. They hydrolyzed xylan to xylose and neither
had β-xylosidase (EC 3.2.1.37) activity, indicating that they are endo-β-xylanases (EC 3.2.1.8). With these results, we
expect that PaXyns can be employed in saccharizing lignocellulosic biomass materials for the production of useful
products just like other endoxylanases. After 72 h of LBDW fed-batch cultivation using a jar-fermentor, strain GB-4(0)
produced 17.3 U/ml (corresponding to about 0.3 g/l) of PaXynG and removed 63% of dissolved organic carbon and
87% of dissolved total phosphorus from LBDW. These results demonstrate the potential of P. antarctica for xylanase
production during LBDW treatment.
Keywords: Xylanase, Pseudozyma antarctica, Jar-fermentor, Xylose inducible, Lignocellulosic bioethanol distillery
wastewater, Wastewater treatment
Introduction
Wastewater treatment system that uses yeasts could
remove large amounts of organic compounds (10,000
COD mg/l/day), requires little space, and discharges little
waste sludge (Yoshizawa 1978). This method is useful for
treating food, brewing, and beverage industry wastewater (Yoshizawa 1978; Watanabe et al. 2009). Furthermore,
the utilization of high strength wastewater is considered
*Correspondence:
[email protected]
1
National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences (NIAES),
3-1-3 Kannondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8604, Japan
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
as an attractive way to produce useful materials, single
cell protein, lactic acid, methane, and enzymes (lipase
and protease) (Siso 1996; Angenent et al. 2004). Accordingly, using yeasts were suitable for high yield production
of useful materials from high strength wastewater (Watanabe et al. 2013a, 2014a).
Producing bioethanol from lignocellulosic biomass
generates lignocellulosic bioethanol distillery wastewater (LBDW) that contains high concentrations of
organic compounds (30,000–60,000 COD mg/l). The
cost of LBDW treatment directly increases the cost of
bioethanol production. Since the ethanol-producing
yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not ferment xylose
© 2015 Watanabe et al. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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and indicate if changes were made.
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
(Matsushika et al. 2008), the resulting LBDW is found to
contain a large amount of xylose, making it a potential
inexpensive source of fermentable xylose.
A non-pathogenic basidiomycetous yeast, Pseudozyma
antarctica has an ability to assimilate various kinds of
carbon sources (Boekhout 2011). Recently, we found
that P. antarctica GB-4(0) efficiently removed organic
compounds from shochu (a Japanese traditional distilled
liquor) distillery wastewater (Watanabe et al. 2013b).
The whole genome sequence of P. antarctica T-34 had
already been determined and annotated (Morita et al.
2013). Moreover, we discovered that P. antarctica produces a cutinase-like enzyme (CLE), designated as PaE
(22-kDa), which efficiently degrades various synthetic
biodegradable polyesters (Kitamoto et al. 2011; Shinozaki et al. 2013), and that the PaE productivity was
increased by xylose (Watanabe et al. 2014b). For scaleup production of PaE, under xylose feeding cultivation
of P. antarctica using a jar fermentor (Watanabe et al.
2014b), we found a highly secreted 33-kDa unknown
protein (unpublished data). If this 33-kDa unknown protein is a useful enzyme, it could be efficiently produced
from large amounts of cheap xylose containing in LBDW
during treatment.
A basidiomycetous yeast, Cryptococcus sp. strain S-2
(Masaki et al. 2012) and a yeast-like fungus, Aureobasidium pullulans (Dobberstein and Emeis 1989) secrete
xylanases from xylose. Endo-β-xylanases (EC 3.2.1.8),
which hydrolyze xylopyranosyl linkages of β-1,4-xylan,
the principal type of hemicellulose, are useful for saccharizing lignocellulosic biomass materials for the production of bioethanol and other useful chemicals (Biely
1985). Xylanases are also utilized in paper and pulp
industries (Pokhrel and Viraraghavan 2004) and pretreatment of animal feeds (Beg et al. 2001). The utilization of
LBDW, a cheap substrate for xylanase production, would
be an attractive way to reduce xylanase production costs,
while treating LBDW.
In this study, we attempted to purify and identify the
33-kDa unknown proteins from P. antarctica T-34 and
GB-4(0) using the genomic DNA sequence of T-34. After
confirming that these proteins were xylanases, their biochemical properties were characterized. The xylanase of
GB-4(0) was produced from LBDW derived from rice
straw hydrolysate in large scale using a jar-fermentor.
Materials and methods
Strains
Pseudozyma antarctica GB-4(0) was isolated from rice
husks (Kitamoto et al. 2011) whereas P. antarctica T-34
was isolated from Mt. Tsukuba soil sample (Kitamoto
et al. 1990). These strains were deposited in the Genebank at the National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences
Page 2 of 9
(NIAS), Japan [accession numbers: T-34, MAFF 306900;
GB-4(0), MAFF 306999].
Cultivation conditions
The two yeast strains were pre-cultivated in test tubes
containing 5 ml of YM medium (0.3% yeast extract,
0.3% malt extract, 0.5% peptone, 1% dextrose) at 30°C
with reciprocal shaking at 160 rpm for 24 h. The precultures (100 µl) were added to 100 ml flasks containing 20 ml of modified fungal minimum medium (FMM)
(0.3% yeast extract, 0.2% NaNO3, 0.06% KH2PO4, 0.06%
MgSO4·7H2O) with 8% xylose or beechwood xylan.
Xylose and other nutrients were separately autoclaved
(121°C, 20 min). The cultures were cultivated at 30°C
with rotary shaking at 200 rpm for 96 h.
Every 24 h, 1-ml aliquots of the culture were harvested
and centrifuged at 15,000 rpm for 5 min. The pellets were
dried at 105°C for 2 h and their dry cell weights were
measured to investigate cell growth. At the same time,
the xylanase activities of the supernatant were measured
as described below.
Enzyme activity
Xylanase activity was determined using xylan as the substrate at 30°C for 30 min. The reaction mixture contained
15 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 5.2), 1.0% (w/v) beechwood xylan (Sigma-Aldrich Japan), and 100 µl of culture
supernatant in a total volume of 1 ml. After the reaction,
the amount of reducing sugar was analyzed by the modified Somogyi–Nelson method (Hatanaka and Kobara
1980) with d-xylose as the standard. One unit (U) of xylanase activity was defined as 1 µmol of d-xylose liberated
per min in the reaction mixture.
β-Xylosidase activity was also determined using the
synthetic substrate p-nitrophenyl-β-d-xylopyranoside
(pNP-X) (Iefuji et al. 1996). The reaction mixture contained 200 µl of 4 mM pNP-X solution, 600 µl of 30 mM
sodium acetate buffer (pH 5.2) and 200 µl of enzyme
solution in a total volume of 1 ml. After 30 min, 2 ml of
0.2 M Tris–HCl buffer (pH 8.5) was added to stop the
enzyme reaction. One unit of β-xylosidase activity was
defined as 1 µmol of p-nitrophenol released per min.
Electrophoresis
Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed according to the method
of Laemmli (1970) using a 14.1% polyacrylamide slab
gel. Proteins were visualized by Coomassie brilliant blue
(CBB) staining using Phast Gel Blue R (GE Healthcare)
and by silver staining (2D-Silver stain II “Daiichi”; Daiichi
Pure Chemicals Co., Ltd. Tokyo, Japan).
The proteins were transferred to PVDF membranes
(Pall, Port Washington, NY, USA) by semidry blotting.
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
Page 3 of 9
The 33-kDa band corresponding to P. antarctica T-34
protein, which was designated as PaXynT was excised
and its N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined
using ABI Procise 491HT (Applied Biosystems, Foster
City, CA, USA).
Genomic DNA isolation
The two yeast strains were cultivated in 5 ml of YM
medium overnight. The cultures were centrifuged, and
genomic DNA was isolated from the cell pellets using Dr.
GenTLE for Yeast (Takara, Kyoto, Japan).
Sequencing of the PaXyn genes
The N-terminal peptide sequence of the PaXynT was
searched in the annotated whole genome sequences of
P. antarctica T-34 (Morita et al. 2013), and was used to
obtain its genomic sequence. To determine the nucleotide sequence of the unknown protein produced by P.
antarctica GB-4(0), designated as PaXynG, forward
primers (PaXynF1, PaXynF2, PaXynF3, and PaXynF4)
and reverse primers (PaXynR1, PaXynR2, PaXynR3, and
PaXynR4) were designed based on the genomic sequence
of PaXynT. The primer sequences and their positions
in the T-34 gene are shown in Table 1. The entire gene
for PaXynG was obtained by PCR amplification using
the above primers and genomic DNA of P. antarctica
GB-4(0) as template. The reaction was performed using
TaqEX (Takara, Kyoto, Japan) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Amplified DNA fragments were
subjected to 1% agarose gel electrophoresis and were
purified using QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen,
Hilden, Germany). The sequences of the PCR products were determined using BigDye Terminator Cycle
Sequence V3.1 Kit with the same primers and Applied
Biosystems 3100 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems,
Foster City, CA, USA).
Table 1 Primers used for sequencing of PaXynG gene of
P. antarctica GB-4(0)
After 96 h flask cultivation of both strains, the culture
supernatants obtained after centrifugation (7,000×g,
10 min, 4°C) were filtered using a membrane filter
(ADVANTEC® C045A090C, 0.45 µm, Toyo Roshi Kaisha,
Ltd. Japan). One-ml aliquots of filtrates were applied to
a TSK-GEL3000SWXL column (Tosoh) in 50 mM acetate sodium buffer (pH 5.2) containing 0.3 M NaCl at a
flow rate of 0.5 ml/min. The absorbance was measured
at 280 nm. Fractions containing enzyme activity were
concentrated, desalted using Amicon Ultra-15 10000
MWCO (MILLIPORE), and filtered using a syringe filter
(ADVANTEC® DISMIC®-25cs, 0.2 µm, Toyo Roshi Kaisha, Ltd.). The filtrate (100 µl) was mixed with 900 µl of
50 mM Na-phosphate buffer (pH 7.1) containing 1.3 M
ammonium sulfate. The mixture (1 ml) was applied to
a hydrophobic interaction column (Phenyl Superose
HR 5/5; GE Healthcare UK Ltd.) with a linear gradient
(1.2–0 M) of ammonium sulfate in 50 mM Na-phosphate
buffer (pH 7.1) at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min. Fractions
containing enzyme activity were concentrated, desalted,
and filtered as described above. Protein concentration
was measured with a protein assay kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA).
Enzyme pH and temperature properties
Optimal pH for enzyme activity was determined at 30°C
for 30 min with beechwood xylan as substrate using several 15 mM buffers: sodium acetate-HCl (pH 2.0–4.0),
sodium acetate (pH 4.0–5.2), sodium phosphate (pH 5.2–
6.8), and Tris–HCl (pH 6.8–8.0). To estimate pH stability,
the enzyme solutions were incubated at pH ranging from
2.0 to 8.0 using the above buffers for 1 h at 30°C. The
residual xylanase activity was then determined at pH 5.2.
Optimal temperature for activity was determined at pH
5.2 for 30 min at different temperatures (30–70°C) with
beechwood xylan as substrate. Thermostability was estimated by incubating the enzyme sample in water bath at
30–70°C for 30 min. After heat treatment, samples were
chilled on ice and residual xylanase activity was determined as described above.
Positiona
Primer
name
Primer sequence
PaxynF1
5′-GAAGGCTGAAGCTTTGGCTCTGACAT-3′
−600 to −574
−120 to −93
Xylan hydrolysis and end product analysis
PaxynF2
5′-CATGCTTGAAGCTCCAAGAAGATATAA-3′
PaxynF3
5′-CACTCGCAGCTGCCTTCGTGGGTGCAG-3′
361 to 387
PaxynF4
5′-GAAGGCAGTCTGCTCGGCCGCTCCCGA-3′
841 to 867
PaxynR1
5′-TGTGGTGTTTGTTTGGCGTTTTTGCTT-3′
0 to −26
PaxynR2
5′-ATCCCACGCGTACACCTTGCCCTTGTA-3′
480 to 453
PaxynR3
5′-CCCACGCAGTTGGACTGGGCCAGGCAG-3′
PaxynR4
5′-CGAGCGCGATTTTCTCCGAGTCTAAA-3′
a
Purification
960 to 933
1,390 to 1,365
Positions of the nucleotides in the PaXynT gene sequence of P. antarctica T-34.
Purified PaXynG was used to determine the end products
of beechwood xylan hydrolysis. The reactions were conducted at pH 5.2 and 30°C. After incubations at 10, 20,
and 30 min, the reactions were stopped by boiling. The
hydrolysis products were separated by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) according to the method of La Grange
et al. (2001). Samples of the reaction mixtures, containing
20 µg of xylose-equivalent sugars, were applied to a TLC
sheet (Silica gel 60 F254, Merck, Darmstadt, Germany)
that was placed in a chamber containing 7:1:2 solvent
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
Page 4 of 9
mixture of n-propanol:ethanol:H2O. A xylooligosaccharides standard mixture (20 µg/µl) containing xylose (X1),
xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3), and xylotetraose (X4) was
also used. The sugar spots were identified by spraying 1%
anthrone dissolved in 75% sulfuric acid, followed by heating (Morita et al. 2010). Hydrolyzed xylose was measured
using a d-xylose assay kit (Megazyme, Ireland) according
to the manufacturer’s manual.
above was inoculated into 2–l of 4-times-diluted LBDW.
After 24 h cultivation, LBDW was continuously added at
a rate of 1 l/day using a peristaltic pump.
The cultivation conditions were as follows: aeration
rate was 2 LPM; agitation value was 500 rpm; dissolved
oxygen (DO) was maintained at around 25% of saturated
value; pH was controlled at 6.0 with 14% ammonia solution, which also provided a nitrogen source for the culture; temperature was 30°C.
Jar‑fermentor cultivation
Pseudozyma antarctica GB-4(0) was used for the jarfermentor cultivation experiments. A 30-ml pre-culture
was grown in a 300-ml flask at 30°C with rotary shaking at 200 rpm for 24 h in YM medium. This culture was
then used to inoculate the 5-l jar fermentor containing
3 l of PaXyn production medium [0.2% yeast extract,
0.2% NaNO3, 0.2% (NH4)2SO4, 0.04% KH2PO4, 0.04%
MgSO4·7H2O, and 2% xylose]. Batch cultivation was performed until all the xylose was depleted (around 24 h).
Then, xylose-fed-batch cultivation was performed to
induce PaXynG production by adding fed medium [0.2%
yeast extract, 0.085% YNB w/o amino acid and ammonium sulfate (Difco) and 20% xylose] at a feeding rate of
500 ml/day using a peristaltic pump. Xylose and other
nutrients were separately autoclaved (121°C, 20 min).
LBDW derived from rice straw hydrolysate was kindly
provided by Biomaterial in Tokyo Co., Ltd. The concentration of xylose (6.7%) was measured with a d-xylose
assay kit (Megazyme, Ireland). Analysis of LBDW using
standard methods (APHA et al. 1998) showed the following components: dissolved organic carbon (DOC),
52,000 mg/l, dissolved total nitrogen (DTN), 550 mg/l,
and dissolved total phosphorus (DTP), 600 mg/l. It has a
pH of 4.2. The pre-culture (30 ml) prepared as described
Accession number
The accession number of the genomic sequence encoding PaXynG of P. antarctica GB-4(0) registered in DBBJ
is AB901085.
Results
Production of xylanase from P. antarctica GB‑4(0)
When cultivated in flask with modified FMM with 8%
xylose, P antarctica GB-4(0) produces a 33-kDa unknown
protein (Figure 1b, indicated by the arrow). Productions
of some xylanases are reported to have been induced by
xylose (Furukawa et al. 2009; Gielkens et al. 1999; Masaki
et al. 2012; Dobberstein and Emeis 1989). Among the
Pseudozyma species found to have the ability to secrete
xylanases are P. hubiensis NCIM3574 (Adsul et al. 2009)
and P. brasiliensis sp. nov. strain GHG001 (Borges et al.
2014). These findings led us to speculate that the 33-kDa
unknown protein produced by P. antarctica strains could
also be xylanases. With this assumption, we investigated the time course of xylanase activity of P. antarctica
GB-4(0) culture.
Xylanase activity was detected in the culture and was
found to have gradually increased with time (Figure 1a).
At 96 h, 49.9 U/ml of xylanase activity and cell growth
a
b (kDa)
120
OD660
100
50
Xylanase
80
40
60
30
40
20
20
10
0
0
24
48
Time (h)
72
0
96
Xylanase activity (U/mL)
60
OD660
M 24 48 72 96 (h)
200
116
97
66
45
31
21
14
7
Figure 1 Time course of xylanase (PaXynG) production by P. antarctica GB-4(0) with modified FMM containing 8% xylose in flask cultivation. a Cell
growth (closed triangles) and xylanase (open squares) production. Each result is the average of three different experiments. Error bars show standard
deviations. b SDS-PAGE of supernatants (5 µl) periodically sampled from the flask cultivation. The arrow at 33 kDa indicates PaXyn bands.
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
with an OD660 of 106.7 were obtained (Figure 1a). Simultaneously, the intensity of the 33-kDa band of GB-4(0)
on the SDS-PAGE gel increased with time (Figure 1b).
Xylan, being the substrate of xylanases, generally induces
xylanase production by microorganisms. However, with
modified FMM using 8% xylan instead of xylose under
the same cultivation conditions described previously, P.
antarctica GB-4(0) showed less xylanase activity (14.0 U/
ml). The 33-kDa band was also detected in this culture by
SDS-PAGE analysis (data not shown).
Nucleic acid and amino acid analysis of the two xylanases
Another P. antarctica strain, T-34, also produced xylanase (18.5 U/ml) under the same conditions with xylose,
and the 33-kDa unknown protein band was also detected
on SDS-PAGE gel (data not shown). In order to identify
the xylanase of strain GB-4(0), we referred to the DNA
sequence of the gene that encodes the 33-kDa unknown
protein of strain T-34 based on the database for its whole
genome sequence (Morita et al. 2013).
The N-terminal sequence (amino acids 35–44 after
cleavage of a signal peptide) of the 33-kDa unknown
protein from P. antarctica T-34 indicated that it corresponded to a gene with accession No. DF196774
(GAC73192.1) in the genome of P. antarctica T-34. This
gene contains the putative promoter region (600 bp),
1,026-bp ORF, the putative terminator region (300 bp),
and one putative intron (624–688) comprised of 64
nucleotides.
The deduced amino acid sequence contains 341 amino
acid residues (accession No. M9ME65) and the predicted
size of the mature protein (307 amino acid residues,
32.9 kDa) is almost the same as that estimated by SDSPAGE electrophoresis. A search of DDBJ (http://www.
ddbj.nig.ac.jp/) yielded a number of xylanases belonging
to glycosyl hydrolases (GH) 10 family, whose amino acid
Page 5 of 9
sequences are 57–77% identical to the 33-kDa unknown
protein of P. antarctica T-34 (Table 2). These results lend
support to our speculation that the 33-kDa unknown
protein is also a xylanase (PaXyn).
The genomic sequence encoding PaXynT of P. antarctica T-34, was used to design primers for the amplification of the genomic sequence encoding PaXynG of P.
antarctica GB-4(0). A single PCR product was obtained
and sequenced (1,954 bp, accession No. AB901085). The
nucleotide sequence encoding PaXynG was found to be
91% identical to that encoding PaXynT over the range
−600 to 1,390 of T-34. The deduced amino acid sequence
(341 amino acid residues) of PaXynG is 98% identical to
that of PaXynT.
Purification and characterization of PaXynG
The PaXynG was purified by gel-chromatography and
hydrophobic interaction-chromatography as described
in Table 3. Purification to homogeneity was confirmed by
observation of a single 33-kDa band on a silver stained
SDS-PAGE gel (Figure 2). Its specific activity was about
52 U/mg.
Its optimal pH was 5.2, and the optimal temperature
was 50°C (Table 4). It was stable over a wide pH range
(3.0–8.0), retaining 97% of their original activities after
1 h incubation (data not shown). The temperature at
which the enzyme lost half of their activity (a measure of
thermostability) was 57°C. It had no β-xylosidase activity. The same results were obtained with purified PaXynT
(Table 4).
A TLC analysis of products revealed that purified PaXynG hydrolyzed beechwood xylan to xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3), xylotetraose (X4), and other
xylooligosaccharides (Figure 3). The released xylose was
confirmed by detection with d-xylose assay kit (data not
shown).
Table 2 Percentages of sequence identity between PaXynT of P. antarctica T-34 and other xylanases
Microorganism
Putative function
Accession no.
Identity (%)
Protein size (aa)
P. antarctica T-34
Endo-1,4-β-D-xylanase
M9ME65
–
341
Ustilago hordei
Probable endo-1,4-β-xylanase
I2FWP8
77
342
Sporisorium reilianum
Probable endo-1,4-β-xylanase
E7A3D3
75
343
Aspergillus oryzae
Endo-1,4-β-xylanase F3
Q96VB6
65
323
Aspergillus sojae
Endo-1,4-β-D-xylanase
Q9P955
64
323
Penicillium oxalicum
Endo-1,4-β-xylanase
E1B2N4
61
330
Paecilomyces aerugineus
Endo-β-1,4-xylanase
G8ZAH1
61
326
Penicillium citrinum
Endo-1,4-β-xylanase
B1B533
60
327
Aspergillus terreus
Probable endo-1,4-β-xylanase C
Q0CBM8
59
326
Thermoascus aurantiacus
Endo-1,4-β-xylanase
P23360
57
329
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
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Table 3 Purification of P. antarctica GB-4(0) xylanase (PaXynG)
Total protein (mg)
Total activity (U)
Crude culture
90.0
G3000SWXL
18.0
5.9
Phenyl Superose HR 5/5
(kDa)
M 1
Specific activity (U/mg)
Yield (%)
Purification (fold)
1,287.2
14.3
100
924.8
51.4
71.8
3.6
306.0
52.3
23.8
3.7
1
2 3
X1
X2
X3
200
116
97
X4
66
45
M 0 10 20 30 M
31
Incubation time (min)
Figure 3 TLC analysis of products resulting from the hydrolysis of
beechwood xylan by purified PaXynG for the indicated incubation
times. Sugar standards (M) correspond to xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2),
and xylotriose (X3). The spot indicated by the arrow is xylose (X1).
21
14
Table 4 Biochemical characterization of PaXyns of P. antarctica T-34 and GB-4(0)
Biochemical characters
PaXynT of T‑34
PaXynG of GB‑4(0)
Optimal pH
5.2
5.2
Optimal temperature
50°C
50°C
pH stability
3.0–8.0
3.0–8.0
Thermostability
57°C
57°C
β-Xylosidaze activity
ND
ND
ND not detected.
Production of highly concentrated PaXynG
by xylose‑fed‑batch cultivation using a jar‑fermentor
Because P. antarctica GB-4(0) produced larger amounts
of PaXyn than T-34 in flask cultivation, GB-4(0) was used
in jar fermentor cultivation. After the initial low concentration of xylose (2%) was consumed (24 h), xylose was
fed into the PaXyn production medium. This resulted in
Simultaneous production of PaXynG from LBDW
during its treatment using a jar‑fermentor
In a preliminary examination, we found that P. antarctica GB-4(0) and T-34 could not grow on LBDW unless
it was diluted 4–5 times with water (data not shown).
300
30
Dry cell weight
Xylanase
25
250
20
200
15
150
10
100
5
50
0
0
0
24
48
Xylanase activity (U/mL)
Figure 2 SDS-PAGE of PaXynG of P. antarctica GB-4(0). Lane M molecular standard, lane 1 culture medium, lane 2 TSK-Gel G3000SWXL-purified PaXynG, lane 3 Phenyl Superose HR 5/5-purified PaXynG.
a DO value around 50% of saturation (data not shown);
and 232.4 U/ml (corresponding to 4.5 g/l) of PaXynG was
obtained after 72 h (Figure 4).
Dry cell weight (g/L)
7
72
Time (h)
Figure 4 PaXynG production by P. antarctica GB-4(0) with xylose
feeding using a jar fermentor. Cell growth (closed triangles) and PaXynG production (open squares) with 2% xylose. Xylose feeding began
after 24 h. Each result is the average of two different experiments.
Error bars show standard deviations.
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
Page 7 of 9
Thus, LBDW-fed-batch cultivation was initially carried
out with 4-times-diluted LBDW. After the initial carbon
sources, that could be utilized by P. antarctica GB-4(0),
was consumed (24 h), non-diluted LBDW was fed into
the culture using a peristaltic pump. This resulted in a
DO value around 60% of saturation (data not shown);
17.3 U/ml (0.3 g/l) of PaXynG was obtained after 72 h
(Figure 5a). PaXynG was detected as a 33-kDa band on a
CBB stained SDS-PAGE gel (Figure 5b).
In terms of wastewater treatment, over 99% of
the xylose content of the LBDW was consumed
after 72-h cultivation of P. antarctica GB-4(0). The
resulting effluent DOC and DTP were 12,000 and
48 mg/l, respectively. The total amount of influent DOC ((26,000 mg + 104,000 mg)/4 l) and DTP
((300 mg + 1,200 mg)/4 l) were calculated as 32,500 and
375 mg/l, respectively. Thus, considering these values,
30
25
Dry cell weight
Xylanase
25
20
20
15
15
10
10
5
5
0
0
24
48
Xylanase activity (U/mL)
Dry cell weight (g/L)
a
0
72
Time (h)
b
(kDa)
M
24
32
48
56
7 2 (h)
200
116
97
66
45
31
21
14
7
Figure 5 LBDW-fed cultivation of P. antarctica GB-4(0) using a jar
fermentor. a Cell growth (closed triangles) and PaXynG production
(open squares) with 4-times-diluted LBDW. LBDW feeding began after
24 h. Each result is the average of two different experiments. Error
bars show standard deviations. b SDS-PAGE of supernatants (5 µl)
periodically sampled from the jar fermentor cultivation. The arrow at
33 kDa indicates PaXynG bands.
the removal ratios were calculated to be 63 and 87%,
respectively. Day removal ratio of DOC (6.8 kg/m3/day)
was much higher compared to that removed by activated
sludge (0.5–1.0 kg/m3/day) (Watanabe et al. 2013a).
Discussion
In this study, we attempted to produce useful materials
from LBDW by cultivating P. antarctica during treatment
of this wastewater. We first identified the highly-secreted
33-kDa unknown proteins in the culture of P. antarctica GB-4(0) and T-34 cultivated with xylose to be novel
xylanases (PaXyns). Next, we determined the genomic
sequence for PaXyn of P. antarctica T-34 (PaXynT) using
the annotated whole genome sequence (Morita et al.
2013). P. antarctica GB-4(0) produced higher PaXyn
than P. antarctica T-34 (Figure 1). Using the sequence
encoding PaXynT, we successfully identified the genomic
sequence for PaXyn of P. antarctica GB-4(0) (PaXynG).
Xylanases are classified into two substantial groups,
GH 10 and 11 family, on the basis of their structures
(Kimura et al. 2010). The sequence similarity of these
PaXyns indicated that they belong to GH10 family xylanases which exhibit higher affinity for shorter liner β-1,4xylooligosaccharides than GH11 family xylanases (Biely
et al. 1997).
The optimal pH, optimal temperature, pH stability, and
thermostability of the both PaXyns are almost the same
(Table 4). They produced xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2),
xylotriose (X3), and other xylooligosaccharides from
xylan (Figure 3) and did not have any β-xylosidase activity (Table 4). These data indicate that they are endoxylanases (1,4-β-d-xylan xylanohydrolases (EC 3.2.1.8)).
Since these PaXyns did not have any β-xylosidase activity,
they could not hydrolyze xylobiose to xylose. Thus, the
detected xylose might have resulted from the hydrolysis of xylotriose and other xylooligosaccharides by PaXyns. With this result, it is possible that just like the other
endoxylanases (Biely 1985), PaXyns could be employed
in saccharizing lignocellulosic biomass materials for the
production of useful products.
The production of PaXyns was strongly induced by xylose;
a yield of 4.5 g/l of PaXynG was produced by P. antarctica
GB-4(0) in 72 h (0.0625 g/l/h) with xylose fed-batch cultivation using a jar fermentor (Figure 4). This yield is comparable with 8.1 g/l of recombinant xylanase (PtxynA) of
Paecilomyces thermorphila produced by a methylotrophic
yeast Pichia pastoris in 228 h (0.0355 g/l/h) with methanol fed-batch cultivation using a jar fermentor (Fan et al.
2012). The results show that P. antarctica is an attractive producer of native xylanase. After centrifugation,
Watanabe et al. AMB Expr (2015) 5:36
about 3 l of supernatant was obtained from 3.5 l of jar culture. The rate of xylanase production (produced PaXynG,
4.5 g/l × 3 l = 13.5 g)/(consumed xylose, 60 g + 200 g = 260
g) by this strain was calculated to be 0.052 g/g.
The hydrolysate of lignocelluloses contains not only
fermentable sugars but also toxic compounds that inhibit
cell growth, such as furans and organic acids (Okuda
et al. 2008). Since these compounds are also generated
during fermentation and distillation processes, they
are expected to be present in LBDW. It is probably the
reason why P. antarctica GB-4(0) could not grow in
non-diluted LBDW. However, with LBDW fed-batch cultivation, about 0.3 g/l of PaXynG was produced by P. antarctica GB-4(0) in 72 h. After centrifugation, about 3.5 l
of supernatant was obtained from 4.0 l of jar culture. This
is equivalent to the xylanase production rate of about
0.006 g/g (produced PaXynG, 0.3 g/l × 3.5 l = 1.05 g/consumed xylose of LBDW, 34.5 g + 134 g = 168.5 g).
PaXynG production by P. antarctica GB-4(0) from
LBDW, resulted in the removal of 63% of DOC and 87%
of DTP. Because ammonia solution was added for pH
control and nitrogen source, DTN removal ratio could
not be accurately estimated. However, since the initial
DTN was low, the residual DTN is expected to consist
mainly of PaXynG which could be easily recovered by
ultrafiltration. In the case of shochu distillery wastewater,
we previously confirmed that the yeast-treated wastewater was efficiently treated by a combination of nitrification/denitrification cycle treatment and activated sludge
process (Watanabe et al. 2009, 2013c). In a laboratoryscale demonstration, 50 cycles (25 days) removed 98.9%
of DOC, 95.7 of DTN, and 94.1% of DTP from barley shochu distillery wastewater (Watanabe et al. 2013c). Thus,
it can be expected that the remaining DOC, DTN, and
DTP of P. antarctica GB-4(0)-treated LBDW could also
be easily removed by additional conventional wastewater
treatment methods. These results indicated that xylanase
production by P. antarctica GB-4(0) from LBDW could
also contribute to the cutting of LBDW treatment cost.
Abbreviations
COD: chemical oxygen demand; DOC: dissolved organic carbon; DO: dissolved
oxygen; DTN: dissolved total nitrogen; DTP: dissolved total phosphorus;
FMM: fungal minimum medium; LBDW: lignocellulosic bioethanol distillery
wastewater; PaXynG: xylanase of P. antarctica GB-4(0); PaXynT: xylanase of P.
antarctica T-34; SDS-PAGE: Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; TLC: thin-layer chromatography
Authors’ contributions
TW designed the study, carried out most of the biological studies and statistical analyses, and drafted the manuscript. KS carried out the purification of
PaXyns. IS analyzed xylanase activity. TM identified genomic sequence of
PaXyn of P. antarctica T-34. HK helped in the genomic sequence analysis of
PaXyns. YS helped in the purification of PaXyns. HU helped in the characterization of PaXyns. MK interpreted the data and revised the manuscript. HKK
conceived and planned the study, and helped in drafting the manuscript. All
authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Page 8 of 9
Author details
National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences (NIAES), 3-1-3 Kannondai,
Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8604, Japan. 2 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science,
1-8 Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-8472, Japan. 3 Research Institute for Innovation
in Sustainable Chemistry, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba Central 5-2, 1-1-1 Higashi, Tsukuba,
Ibaraki 305-8565, Japan. 4 Bioprocess Research Institute, National Institute
of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba Central 6,
1-1-1 Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8566, Japan.
1
Acknowledgments
We thank Prof. Haruyuki Iefuji, Ehime University, Japan, for his helpful discussions and Mrs. Xiao-hong Cao, for technical assistance. LBDW derived from
hydrolysate of rice straw was kindly provided by Biomaterial in Tokyo Co.,
Ltd. This work was supported by a grant of science and technology research
promotion program for agriculture, forestry, fisheries and food industry; by a
Research Fellowship of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
for Young Scientists, and by a JSPS KAKENHI Grant (No. 23 10107).
Compliance with ethical guidelines
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Received: 9 February 2015 Accepted: 19 May 2015
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