celB, a gene coding for a bifunctional cellulase from the extreme thermophile "Caldocellum saccharolyticum"
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 56 (10) , 3117-3124
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.56.10.3117-3124.1990
Abstract
"Caldocellum saccharolyticum" is an obligatory anaerobic thermophilic bacterium. A gene from this organism, designated celB, has been cloned in Escherichia coli as part of a bacteriophage lambda gene library. This gene produces a thermostable cellulase that shows both endoglucanase and exoglucanase activities on test substrates and is able to degrade crystalline cellulose to glucose. The sequence of celB has homology with both exo- and endoglucanases described by others. It appears to have a central domain without enzymatic activity which is joined to the enzymatic domains by runs of amino acids rich in proline and threonine (PT boxes). Deletion analysis shows that the exoglucanase activity is located in the amino-terminal domain of the enzyme and that endoglucanase activity is located in the carboxy-terminal domain. There are internal transcriptional and translational start sites within the gene. The intact gene has been cloned into a temperature-inducible expression vector, pJLA602, and overexpressed in E. coli. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that celB produced a protein with a molecular weight of 118,000 to 120,000. A number of smaller proteins with activity against carboxymethyl cellulose and 4-methyl umbelliferyl-beta-D-cellobioside were also produced. These are believed to be the result of alternative translational start sites and/or proteolytic degradation products of the translated gene product. ImagesThis publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Homologues of catalytic domains of Cellulomonas glucanases found in fungal and Bacillus glycosidasesFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1989
- Conserved reiterated domains in Clostridium thermocellum endoglucanases are not essential for catalytic activityGene, 1988
- Glycosylation of bacterial cellulases prevents proteolytic cleavage between functional domainsFEBS Letters, 1987
- Structure of the gene encoding the exoglucanase of Cellulomonas fimiGene, 1986
- Supercoil Sequencing: A Fast and Simple Method for Sequencing Plasmid DNADNA, 1985
- Rapid restriction mapping of DNA cloned in lambda phage vectorsGene, 1984
- Prediction of the Secondary Structure of Proteins from their Amino Acid SequencePublished by Wiley ,1979
- Analysis of the accuracy and implications of simple methods for predicting the secondary structure of globular proteinsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1978
- A colony bank containing synthetic CoI EI hybrid plasmids representative of the entire E. coli genomeCell, 1976
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970