spp. possess a great metabolic versatility and grow heterotrophically on various carbon sources, such as different sugars and peptides. Known sugar transporters in predominantly belong to ABC transport systems. Although several ABC transporters for sugar uptake have been characterized in the crenarchaeon , only one homologue of these transporters, the maltose/maltooligomer transporter, could be identified in the closely related Comparison of the transcriptome of MW001 grown on peptides alone and peptides in the presence of d-xylose allowed for the identification of the ABC transporter for d-xylose and l-arabinose transport and the gaining of deeper insights into pentose catabolism under the respective growth conditions. The d-xylose/l-arabinose substrate binding protein (SBP) (Saci_2122) of the ABC transporter is unique in and shares more similarity to bacterial SBPs of the carbohydrate uptake transporter-2 (CUT2) family than to any characterized archaeal one. The identified pentose transporter is the first CUT2 family ABC transporter analyzed in the domain of Single-gene deletion mutants of the ABC transporter subunits exemplified the importance of the transport system for d-xylose and l-arabinose uptake. Next to the transporter operon, enzymes of the aldolase-independent pentose catabolism branch were found to be upregulated in N-Z-Amine and d-xylose medium. The α-ketoglutarate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (KGSADH; Saci_1938) seemed not to be essential for growth on pentoses. However, the deletion mutant of the 2-keto-3-deoxyarabinoate/xylonate dehydratase (KDXD [also known as KDAD]; Saci_1939) was no longer able to catabolize d-xylose or l-arabinose, suggesting the absence of the aldolase-dependent branch in Thermoacidophilic microorganisms are emerging model organisms for biotechnological applications, as their optimal growth conditions resemble conditions used in certain biotechnologies such as industrial plant waste degradation. Because of its high genome stability, is especially suited as a platform organism for such applications. For use in (ligno)cellulose degradation, it was important to understand pentose uptake and metabolism in This study revealed that only the aldolase-independent Weimberg pathway is required for growth of MW001 on d-xylose and l-arabinose. Moreover, employs a CUT2 ABC transporter for pentose uptake, which is more similar to bacterial than to archaeal ABC transporters. The identification of pentose-inducible promoters will expedite the metabolic engineering of for its development into a platform organism for (ligno)cellulose degradation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5772230PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01273-17DOI Listing

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