MOLECULAR CLONING AND SEQUENCE ANALYSIS OF CHITINASE GENE chiA FROM LOCAL ISOLATE OF Bacillus licheniformis MS1

Authors

  • S. A. MOSTAFA Department of Microbial Molecular Biology, Agriculture Genetic Engineering Research Institute (AGERI), ARC, Giza, Egypt

Abstract

Detection of chitin-degrading bacteria from natural sources such as rhizosphere soil is useful for the isolation of bacteria that produce antifungal or other novel compounds. A high correlation between chitinolysis and production of bioactive compounds has been reported (Chen et al., 1991; Pisano et al., 1992; Hoster et al., 2005). Microorganisms, which secret a complex of mycolytic enzymes, are considered to be used as bio- logical control agents of plant diseases (Helisto et al., 2001; Chang et al., 2003; Hoster et al., 2005). Chitin hydrolysis is performed by a major pathway composed of three separate enzymes to break down polymeric chitin to chitin oligosaccharides, diacetylchitobiose and N- actylglucosamine, separately or synergistically and consecutively in the degradation of chitin to free N-actylglucosamine. Endochitinase (E.C. 3.2.1.14) is a poly (1,4-(N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminide))-glycanohydrolases,  which produce multimers of β-N-acetylglucosamine by random hydrolysis of β-1-4-linkages in chitin and chitodextrins  while Exochitinase (E.C. 3.2.1.52) β-1,4-N-acetylhexosaminidase, is catalyzing the sequential release of soluble dimers starting at the non-reducing end of the polymer. Chitobiases (E.C. 3.2.1.30) or β-N-acetylglucosaminidase, helps the hydrolysis of chitobiose into monomers of N-actylglucosamine (Souza et al., 2003). It is though that chitin hydrolysis occurs either by a sequential or synergetic action of endochitinase, exochitinase, and chitobiases (Tanaka et al., 2003). While exoand endo-chitinases are able to depolymerize chitin alone. The presence of both activities significantly increases the efficiency of chitinolytic system (Howard et al., 2003). Recently, the cloning and expression of the chitinase gene and its introduction into the biologically susceptible species or the construction of recombinant strains with new capacities have been recommended to be one of the interesting areas of chitinase studies and applications. Chitinase genes have been cloned and characterized from many microorganisms (Ueda et al., 2003; Hobel et al., 2005; Yano et al., 2005; Yong et al., 2006). Some of which were either transformed into plants and/or bacterial strains to increase their ability to control phytopathogens (Koby et al., 1994; Punja, 2001) or were high level of expression in Escherichia coli cells to enhance the activity of Bacillus thuringiensis to control pests (Regev et al., 1996; Sampson and Gooday, 1998). Chitinase has received increased attention because of their potential application in the biological control of plants-pathogenic fungi and pests, as well as in the bioconversion of shellfish chitin wastes (Chang et al., 2003; Hoster et al., 2005). In our previous study, local isolate of Bacillus licheniformis MS1 isolated from agricultural fields, Giza, Egypt, was found to be one of the most producing a large amount of chitinase enzyme (Kamil et al., 2007). For this reason this isolate was selected in the present study for cloning, sequencing and molecular analysis of its chitinase gene (chiA).

References

Arnold, K., L. Bordoli, J. Kopp and T. Schwede (2006). The SWISS-MODEL Workspace: A web-based environment for protein structure homology modelling. Bioinformatics, 22: 195-201.

Carozzi, N., V. C. W.Kramer, Warren S. Evola and M. G. Koziel (1991). Prediction of insecticidal activity of Bacillus thuringiensis strains by polymerase chain reaction product profile. Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 57: 3057-3061.

Chang, W., S. Chen and S. L. Wang (2003). An antifungal chitinase produced by Bacillus cereus with shrimp and crab shell powder as a carbon source. Curr. Microbiol., 47: 102-108.

Chen, H. C., M. Y. Huang, M. W. Moody and S. T. Jiang (1991). Distribution and hydrolytic enzyme activities of aerobic, heterotrophic bacteria isolated from grass prawn, Penaeus monodon. J. Fish Soc. Taiwan, 18: 301-310

Guex, N. and M. C. Peitsch (1997). SWISS-MODEL and the Swiss-PdbViewer: An environment for comparative protein modelling. Electrophoresis, 18: 2714-2723.

Helisto, P., G. Aktuganov, N. Galimzianova, A. Melentjev and T. Korpela (2001). Lytic enzyme complex of an antagonistic Bacillus sp. X-b. isolation and purification of components. J. Chromatogr. B, 758: 197-205.

Hobel, C. F. V., G. O. Hreggvidsson, V. T. Marteinsson, F. Bahrani-Mougeot, J. M. Einarsson and J. K. Kristjansson (2005). Cloning, expression, and characterization of a highly thermostable family 18 chitinase from Rhodothermus marinus. Extremophiles, 9: 53-64.

Hoster, F., J. E. Schmitz and R. Daniel (2005). Enrichment of chitinolytic microorganisms: isolation and characterization of a chitinase exhibiting antifungal activity against phytopathogenic fungi from a novel Streptomyces strain. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 66: 434-442.

Howard, M. B., N. A. Ekborg, L. E. Taylor, R. M. Weiner and S. W. Hutcheson (2003). Genomic analysis and initial characterization of the chitinolytic system of Microbulbifer degradans strain 2-40. J. Bacteriol., 185: 3352-3360.

Kamil, Z., S. Mostafa, M. Rizk and S. Mostafa (2007). Isolation and identification of rhizosphere soil chitinolytic bacteria and their potential in antifungal biocontrol. Global J. Mol. Sci., 2: 57-66.

Koby, S., H. Schickler, I. Chet and A. B. Oppenheim (1994). The chitinase encoding Tn7-based ChiA gene endows Pseudomanas fluorescence with the capacity to control plant pathogen in soil. Gene, 147: 81-83.

Papanikolau, Y., G. Prag, G. Tavlas, E. C. Vorgias, B. A. Oppenheim and K. Petratos (2001). High resolution structural analyses of mutant chitinase A complexes with substrates provide new insight into the mechanism of catalysis. Biochem., 40: 11338-11343.

Pisano, M. A., M. J. Sommer and L. Tars (1992). Bioactivity of chitinolytic actinomycetes from marine origin. Appl. Microbiol. Biotech., 36: 553-555

Punja, Z. K. (2001). Genetic engineering of plants to enhance resistance to fungal pathogens a review of progress and future prospects. Can. J. Plant Pathol., 23: 216-235.

Regev, A., M. Keller, N. Strizhov, B. Sneh, E. Prudovsky, I. Chet, I. Ginzberg, Z. Koncz-Kalman C. Koncz and S. Schell (1996). Synergistic activity of a Bacillus thuringiensis delta-endotoxin and a bacterial endochitinase against Spodoptera littoralis larvae. Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 62: 3581-3586.

Rey, M. W., P. Ramaiya, B. A. Nelson and et al. (2004). Complete genome sequence of the industrial bacterium Bacillus licheniformis and comparisons with closely related Bacillus species. Genome Biol., 5: 77.

Sampson, M. N. and G. W. Gooday (1998). Involvement of chitinases of Bacillus thuringiensis during pathogenesis in insects. Microbiol.,

: 2189-2194.

Schwede, T., J. Kopp, N. Guex and M. C. Peitsch (2003). SWISS-MODEL: an automated protein homology-modeling server. Nucleic Acids Research, 31: 3381-3385.

Souza, R. F., R. C. Gomes, R. R. R. Coe-lho, C. S. Alviano and R. M. A. Soares (2003). Purification and characterization of an endochitinase produced by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. FEMS Microbiol. Lett., 222: 45-50.

Tanaka, T., T. Fukui, H. Atomi and T. Imanaka (2003). Characterization of an exo-beta-D-glucosaminidase involved in a novel chitinolytic pathway from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakamensis KOD1. J. Bacteriol., 185: 5175-5181.

Thamthiankul, S., S. Suan-Ngay, S. Tantimavanich and W. Panbangred (2001). Chitinase from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. pakistani. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 56: 395-401.

Ueda, M., M. Kojima, T. Yoshikawa, N. Mitsuda, K. Araki, T. Kawaguchi, K. Miyatake, M. Arai and T. Fukamizo (2003). A novel type of family 19 chitinase from Aeromonas sp. No.10S-24: Cloning, sequence, expression, and the enzymatic properties. FEBS J., 270: 2513-2520.

Yano, S., N. Rattanakit, M. Wakayama and T. Tachiki (2005). Cloning and expression of Bacillus circulans KA-304 gene encoding chitinase I, which participates in protoplast formation of Schizophyllum commune. Biosci Biotechnol. Biochem., 69: 602-609.

Yong, T., J. Hong, L. Zhang-Fu, Z. Li, D. Xiu-Qiong, T. Ke and L. Shi-Gui (2006). Cloning and Expression of a Chitinase Gene from Sanguibacter sp. C4. Acta Genet. Sin., 33: 1037-1046.

Downloads

Published

2016-01-12

Issue

Section

Articles