Cellulolytic microorganisms play a key role in the global carbon cycle by decomposing structurally diverse plant biopolymers from dead plant matter. These microorganisms, in particular anaerobes such as that are capable of degrading and catabolizing several different polysaccharides, require a fine-tuned regulation of the biosynthesis of their polysaccharide-degrading enzymes. In this study, we present a bacterial regulatory system involved in the regulation of genes enabling the metabolism of the ubiquitous plant polysaccharide xyloglucan. The characterization of knockout mutants suggests that the response regulator XygR and its cognate histidine kinase XygS are essential for growth on xyloglucan. Using and analyses, we show that XygR binds to the intergenic region and activates the expression of two polycistronic transcriptional units encoding an ABC transporter dedicated to the uptake of xyloglucan oligosaccharides and the two-component system itself together with three intracellular glycoside hydrolases responsible for the sequential intracellular degradation of the imported oligosaccharides into mono- and disaccharides. Interestingly, XygR also upregulates the expression of a distant gene coding for the most active extracellular cellulosomal xyloglucanase of by binding to the upstream intergenic region. is a Gram-positive, mesophilic, anaerobic, cellulolytic, and hemicellulolytic bacterium. The last property qualifies this species as a model species for the study of hemicellulose degradation, import of degradation products, and overall regulation of these phenomena. In this study, we focus on the regulation of xyloglucan dextrin import and intracellular degradation and show that the two components of the two-component regulation system XygSR are essential for growth on xyloglucan and that the response regulator XygR regulates the transcription of genes involved in the extracellular degradation of the polysaccharide, the import of degradation products, and their intracellular degradation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7531976PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01357-20DOI Listing

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