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Identification of a putative cellulase gene in the giant freshwater prawn,Macrobrachium rosenbergii (De Man, 1879)
Authors:Shen‐Shaun Ong  Subha Bhassu  Qi Bin Kwong  Peter Mather  Khanom Simarani  Rofina Yasmin Othman
Institution:1. Animal Genetics and Genome Evolutionary Laboratory, Aquatic Molecular Biology & Biotech Group and Centre for Research in Biotechnology for Agriculture (CEBAR), Institute of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;2. Faculty of Science and Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Abstract:Nutrition plays an important role in the development of all organisms and in particular that of farmed aquatic species where costs associated with feed can often exceed 60% of total production costs. Crustacean species in addition, have the added metabolic requirement for regular moulting to allow normal growth and this requires large amounts of energy in the form of sugars (glucose). The current study explored the capacity of the giant freshwater prawn to produce endogenous cellulose‐degrading enzymes capable of extracting nutrients (simple sugars) from plant sources in formulated feeds used in the prawn aquaculture industry. We identified a putative cellulase cDNA fragment in the target organism of 1576 base pairs in length of non‐microbial origin that after protein modelling exhibited a TM‐score of 0.916 with a described cellulase reported from another crustacean species. The functional role of cellulase enzymes is to hydrolyse cellulose to glucose and the fragment identified in GFP was highly expressed in the hepatopancreas, the site of primary food digestion and absorption in crustaceans. Hepatopancreatic tissue from Macrobrachium rosenbergii also showed active digestion of cellulose to glucose following an endoglucanase assay. Cellulase gene(s) are present in the genomes of many invertebrate taxa and play an active role in the conversion of cellulose to available energy. Identification and characterization of endogenous cellulase gene(s) in giant freshwater prawn can assist development of the culture industry because the findings confirm that potentially greater levels of low‐cost plant‐material could be included in artificial formulated diets in the future without necessarily compromising individual growth performance. Ultimately, this development may contribute to more efficient, cost‐effective production systems for freshwater prawn culture stocks that meet the animal's basic nutritional requirements and that also support good individual growth rates.
Keywords:cellulase  cellulose  endoglucanase     Macrobrachium     cellulose digestion
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