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Dive into the research topics where Cecil W. Forsberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Cecil W. Forsberg.


Nature Biotechnology | 2001

Pigs expressing salivary phytase produce low-phosphorus manure

Serguei P. Golovan; Roy G. Meidinger; A. Ajakaiye; Michael Cottrill; Miles Z. Wiederkehr; David J. Barney; Claire Plante; John W. Pollard; Ming Z. Fan; M. Anthony Hayes; Jesper Laursen; J. Peter Hjorth; Roger R. Hacker; John P. Phillips; Cecil W. Forsberg

To address the problem of manure-based environmental pollution in the pork industry, we have developed the phytase transgenic pig. The saliva of these pigs contains the enzyme phytase, which allows the pigs to digest the phosphorus in phytate, the most abundant source of phosphorus in the pig diet. Without this enzyme, phytate phosphorus passes undigested into manure to become the single most important manure pollutant of pork production. We show here that salivary phytase provides essentially complete digestion of dietary phytate phosphorus, relieves the requirement for inorganic phosphate supplements, and reduces fecal phosphorus output by up to 75%. These pigs offer a unique biological approach to the management of phosphorus nutrition and environmental pollution in the pork industry.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2000

Crystal structures of Escherichia coli phytase and its complex with phytate.

Daniel Lim; Serguei P. Golovan; Cecil W. Forsberg; Zongchao Jia

Phytases catalyze the hydrolysis of phytate and are able to improve the nutritional quality of phytate-rich diets. Escherichia coli phytase, a member of the histidine acid phosphatase family has the highest specific activity of all phytases characterized. The crystal structure of E. coli phytase has been determined by a two-wavelength anomalous diffraction method using the exceptionally strong anomalous scattering of tungsten. Despite a lack of sequence similarity, the structure closely resembles the overall fold of other histidine acid phosphatases. The structure of E. coli phytase in complex with phytate, the preferred substrate, reveals the binding mode and substrate recognition. The binding is also accompanied by conformational changes which suggest that substrate binding enhances catalysis by increasing the acidity of the general acid.


Canadian Journal of Microbiology | 1999

Characterization and overproduction of the Escherichia coli appA encoded bifunctional enzyme that exhibits both phytase and acid phosphatase activities

Serguei P. Golovan; Guirong Wang; Jun Zhang; Cecil W. Forsberg

The appA gene that was previously shown to code for an acid phosphatase instead codes for a bifunctional enzyme exhibiting both acid phosphatase and phytase activities. The purified enzyme with a molecular mass of 44,708 Da was further separated by chromatofocusing into two isoforms of identical size with isoelectric points of 6.5 and 6.3. The isoforms had identical pH optima of 4.5 and were stable at pH values from 2 to 10. The temperature optimum for both phytase isoforms was 60 degrees C. When heated at different pH values the enzyme showed the greatest thermal resistance at pH 3. The pH 6.5 isoform exhibited K(m) and Vmax values of 0.79 mM and 3165 U.mg-1 of protein for phytase activity and 5.5 mM and 712 U.mg-1 of protein for acid phosphatase, respectively. The pH 6.3 isoform exhibited slightly lower K(m) and Vmax values. The enzyme exhibited similar properties to the phytase purified by Greiner et al. (1993), except the specific activity of the enzyme was at least 3.5-fold less than that previously reported, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was different. The Bradford assay, which was used by Greiner et al. (1993) for determination of enzyme concentration was, in our hands, underestimating protein concentration by a factor of 14. Phytase production using the T7 polymerase expression system was enhanced by selection of a mutant able to grow in a chemically defined medium with lactose as the carbon source and inducer. Using this strain in fed-batch fermentation, phytase production was increased to over 600 U.mL-1. The properties of the phytase including the low pH optimum, protease resistance, and high activity, demonstrates that the enzyme is a good candidate for industrial production as a feed enzyme.


Nature Biotechnology | 2001

Transgenic mice expressing bacterial phytase as a model for phosphorus pollution control

Serguei P. Golovan; M. Anthony Hayes; John P. Phillips; Cecil W. Forsberg

We have developed transgenic mouse models to determine whether endogenous expression of phytase transgenes in the digestive tract of monogastric animals can increase the bioavailability of dietary phytate, a major but indigestible form of dietary phosphorus. We constructed phytase transgenes composed of the appA phytase gene from Escherichia coli regulated for expression in salivary glands by the rat R15 proline-rich protein promoter or by the mouse parotid secretory protein promoter. Transgenic phytase is highly expressed in the parotid salivary glands and secreted in saliva as an enzymatically active 55 kDa glycosylated protein. Expression of salivary phytase reduces fecal phosphorus by 11%. These results suggest that the introduction of salivary phytase transgenes into monogastric farm animals offers a promising biological approach to relieving the requirement for dietary phosphate supplements and to reducing phosphorus pollution from animal agriculture.


Physiological Aspects of Digestion and Metabolism in Ruminants#R##N#Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposium on Ruminant Physiology | 1991

Microbial Ecology and Physiology of Feed Degradation within the Rumen

K.-J. Cheng; Cecil W. Forsberg; H. Minato; J.W. Costerton

Publisher Summary In the rumen, the nutrient substrates provided for microbial growth have a profound effect on the development of complex integrated communities of microorganisms. As scientists are beginning to understand these complicated and multifunctional systems, they are beginning to manipulate the rates of digestion of various feeds. The direct manipulation of the microbial component of the rumen ecosystem is difficult because the nutrient substrates dictate most ecological changes. Natural microbial populations are well adapted to their environment and are inherently very stable. Rumen populations react quickly to changes in nutrient substrates and the best immediate improvements in ruminant feed efficiency may emerge from concerted efforts to manipulate forages and cereal grains by plant breeding and/or chemical processing. Manipulation of feed materials is likely to control the rate of digestion in ruminants. The long-term control of this process will proceed from genetic engineering based on the emerging understanding of the molecular mechanisms of bacterial adhesion and specific enzyme activities.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Outer Membrane Proteins of Fibrobacter succinogenes with Potential Roles in Adhesion to Cellulose and in Cellulose Digestion

Hyun-Sik Jun; Meng Qi; Joshua Gong; Emmanuel E. Egbosimba; Cecil W. Forsberg

Comparative analysis of binding of intact glucose-grown Fibrobacter succinogenes strain S85 cells and adhesion-defective mutants AD1 and AD4 to crystalline and acid-swollen (amorphous) cellulose showed that strain S85 bound efficiently to both forms of cellulose while mutant Ad1 bound to acid-swollen cellulose, but not to crystalline cellulose, and mutant Ad4 did not bind to either. One- and two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) of outer membrane cellulose binding proteins and of outer membranes, respectively, of strain S85 and adhesion-defective mutant strains in conjunction with mass spectrometry analysis of tryptic peptides was used to identify proteins with roles in adhesion to and digestion of cellulose. Examination of the binding to cellulose of detergent-solubilized outer membrane proteins from S85 and mutant strains revealed six proteins in S85 that bound to crystalline cellulose that were absent from the mutants and five proteins in Ad1 that bound to acid-swollen cellulose that were absent from Ad4. Twenty-five proteins from the outer membrane fraction of cellulose-grown F. succinogenes were identified by 2-DE, and 16 of these were up-regulated by growth on cellulose compared to results with growth on glucose. A protein identified as a Cl-stimulated cellobiosidase was repressed in S85 cells growing on glucose and further repressed in the mutants, while a cellulose-binding protein identified as pilin was unchanged in S85 grown on glucose but was not produced by the mutants. The candidate differential cellulose binding proteins of S85 and the mutants and the proteins induced by growth of S85 on cellulose provide the basis for dissecting essential components of the cellulase system of F. succinogenes.


Proteomics | 2009

Application of iTRAQ to catalogue the skeletal muscle proteome in pigs and assessment of effects of gender and diet dephytinization.

Hatam A. Hakimov; Sandra Walters; T.C. Wright; Roy G. Meidinger; Chris P. Verschoor; Moshe A. Gadish; David K. Y. Chiu; Martina V. Strömvik; Cecil W. Forsberg; Serguei Golovan

In this study iTRAQ was used to produce a highly confident catalogue of 542 proteins identified in porcine muscle (false positive<5%). To our knowledge this is the largest reported set of skeletal muscle proteins in livestock. Comparison with human muscle proteome demonstrated a low level of false positives with 83% of the proteins common to both proteomes. In addition, for the first time we assess variations in the muscle proteome caused by sexually dimorphic gene expression and diet dephytinization. Preliminary analysis identified 19 skeletal muscle proteins differentially expressed between male and female pigs (≥1.2‐fold, p<0.05), but only one of them, GDP‐dissociation inhibitor 1, was significant (p<0.05) after false discovery rate correction. Diet dephytinization affected expression of 20 proteins (p<0.05). This study would contribute to an evaluation of the suitability of the pig as a model to study human gender‐related differences in gene expression. Transgenic pigs used in this study might also serve as a useful model to understand changes in human physiology resulting from diet dephytinization.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Novel Molecular Features of the Fibrolytic Intestinal Bacterium Fibrobacter intestinalis Not Shared with Fibrobacter succinogenes as Determined by Suppressive Subtractive Hybridization

Meng Qi; Karen E. Nelson; Sean C. Daugherty; William C. Nelson; Ioana R. Hance; Mark Morrison; Cecil W. Forsberg

Suppressive subtractive hybridization was conducted to identify unique genes coding for plant cell wall hydrolytic enzymes and other properties of the gastrointestinal bacterium Fibrobacter intestinalis DR7 not shared by Fibrobacter succinogenes S85. Subtractive clones from F. intestinalis were sequenced and assembled to form 712 nonredundant contigs with an average length of 525 bp. Of these, 55 sequences were unique to F. intestinalis. The remaining contigs contained 764 genes with BLASTX similarities to other proteins; of these, 80% had the highest similarities to proteins in F. succinogenes, including 30 that coded for carbohydrate active enzymes. The expression of 17 of these genes was verified by Northern dot blot analysis. Of genes not exhibiting BLASTX similarity to F. succinogenes, 30 encoded putative transposases, 6 encoded restriction modification genes, and 45% had highest similarities to proteins in other species of gastrointestinal bacteria, a finding suggestive of either horizontal gene transfer to F. intestinalis or gene loss from F. succinogenes. Analysis of contigs containing segments of two or more adjacent genes revealed that only 35% exhibited BLASTX similarity and were in the same orientation as those of F. succinogenes, indicating extensive chromosomal rearrangement. The expression of eight transposases, and three restriction-modification genes was confirmed by Northern dot blot analysis. These data clearly document the maintenance of carbohydrate active enzymes in F. intestinalis necessitated by the preponderance of polysaccharide substrates available in the ruminal environment. It also documents substantive changes in the genome from that of F. succinogenes, which may be related to the introduction of the array of transposase and restriction-modification genes.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

Cel9D, an Atypical 1,4-β-d-Glucan Glucohydrolase from Fibrobacter succinogenes: Characteristics, Catalytic Residues, and Synergistic Interactions with Other Cellulases

Meng Qi; Hyun-Sik Jun; Cecil W. Forsberg

The increasing demands of renewable energy have led to the critical emphasis on novel enzymes to enhance cellulose biodegradation for biomass conversion. To identify new cellulases in the ruminal bacterium Fibrobacter succinogenes, a cell extract of cellulose-grown cells was separated by ion-exchange chromatography and cellulases were located by zymogram analysis and identified by peptide mass fingerprinting. An atypical family 9 glycoside hydrolase (GH9), Cel9D, with less than 20% identity to typical GH9 cellulases, was identified. Purified recombinant Cel9D enhanced the production of reducing sugar from acid swollen cellulose (ASC) and Avicel by 1.5- to 4-fold when mixed separately with each of four other glucanases, although it had low activity on these substrates. Cel9D degraded ASC and cellodextrins with a degree of polymerization higher than 2 to glucose with no apparent endoglucanase activity, and its activity was restricted to beta-1-->4-linked glucose residues. It catalyzed the hydrolysis of cellulose by an inverting mode of reaction, releasing glucose from the nonreducing end. Unlike many GH9 cellulases, calcium ions were not required for its function. Cel9D had increased kcat/Km values for cello-oligosaccharides with higher degrees of polymerization. The kcat/Km value for cellohexaose was 2,300 times higher than that on cellobiose. This result indicates that Cel9D is a 1,4-beta-D-glucan glucohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.74) in the GH9 family. Site-directed mutagenesis of Cel9D identified Asp166 and Glu612 as the candidate catalytic residues, while Ser168, which is not present in typical GH9 cellulases, has a crucial structural role. This enzyme has an important role in crystalline cellulose digestion by releasing glucose from accessible cello-oligosaccharides.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Characterization and synergistic interactions of Fibrobacter succinogenes glycoside hydrolases

Meng Qi; Hyun-Sik Jun; Cecil W. Forsberg

ABSTRACT The objectives of this study were to characterize Fibrobacter succinogenes glycoside hydrolases from different glycoside hydrolase families and to study their synergistic interactions. The gene encoding a major endoglucanase (endoglucanase 1) of F. succinogenes S85 was identified as cel9B from the genome sequence by reference to internal amino acid sequences of the purified native enzyme. Cel9B and two other glucanases from different families, Cel5H and Cel8B, were cloned and overexpressed, and the proteins were purified and characterized. These proteins in conjunction with two predominant cellulases, Cel10A, a chloride-stimulated cellobiosidase, and Cel51A, formerly known as endoglucanase 2 (or CelF), were assayed in various combinations to assess their synergistic interactions using ball-milled cellulose. The degree of synergism ranged from 0.6 to 3.7. The two predominant endoglucanases produced by F. succinogenes, Cel9B and Cel51A, were shown to have a synergistic effect of up to 1.67. Cel10A showed little synergy in combination with Cel9B and Cel51A. Mixtures containing all the enzymes gave a higher degree of synergism than those containing two or three enzymes, which reflected the complementarity in their modes of action as well as substrate specificities.

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Meng Qi

University of Guelph

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