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The Roles of the Various Cellulose Biosynthesis Operons in <i>Komagataeibacter hansenii</i> ATCC 23769

Martin Bimmer, Markus Mientus, Andreas Klingl, Armin Ehrenreich, Wolfgang Liebl

2022Applied and Environmental Microbiology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Acetic acid bacteria form a massive biofilm called "mother of vinegar," which is built of cellulose fibers. Bacterial cellulose is an appealing biomaterial with manifold applications in biomedicine and biotechnology. Because most cellulose-producing acetic acid bacteria express several cellulose synthase operons, a deeper understanding of their contribution to the synthesis of modified forms of cellulose fibers within a natural biofilm is of special interest. For the first time, we were able to identify the contribution of each of the three cellulose synthases to cellulose formation in Komagataeibacter hansenii ATCC 23769 after a chromosomal clean deletion. Moreover, we were able to depict their roles in spatial composition of the biofilm. These findings might be applicable in the future for naturally modified biomaterials with novel properties.

Topics & Concepts

BiosynthesisCelluloseOperonBiochemistryChemistryMicrobiologyBiologyGeneEscherichia coliAdvanced Cellulose Research StudiesEnzyme Production and CharacterizationBiofuel production and bioconversion