TY - JOUR
T1 - Conversion of Thermobifida fusca free exoglucanases into cellulosomal components
T2 - Comparative impact on cellulose-degrading activity
AU - Caspi, Jonathan
AU - Irwin, Diana
AU - Lamed, Raphael
AU - Li, Yongchao
AU - Fierobe, Henri Pierre
AU - Wilson, David B.
AU - Bayer, Edward A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by a grant from the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF), Jerusalem, Israel, the Alternative Energy Research Initiative (Weizmann Institute) and by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant Nos. 422/05 and 159/07). EAB is the incumbent of The Maynard I. and Elaine Wishner Chair of Bio-organic Chemistry at the Weizmann Institute of Science.
PY - 2008/7/31
Y1 - 2008/7/31
N2 - Cellulosomes are multi-enzyme complexes produced by certain anaerobic bacteria that exhibit efficient degradation of plant cell wall polysaccharides. To understand their enhanced levels of hydrolysis, we are investigating the effects of converting a free-cellulase system into a cellulosomal one. To achieve this end, we are replacing the cellulose-binding module of the native cellulases, produced by the aerobic bacterium Thermobifida fusca, with a cellulosome-derived dockerin module of established specificity, to allow their incorporation into defined "designer cellulosomes". In this communication, we have attached divergent dockerins to the two exoglucanases produced by T. fusca exoglucanase, Cel6B and Cel48A. The resultant fusion proteins were shown to bind efficiently and specifically to their matching cohesins, and their activities on several different cellulose substrates were compared. The lack of a cellulose-binding module in Cel6B had a deleterious effect on its activity on crystalline substrates. In contrast, the dockerin-bearing family-48 exoglucanase showed increased levels of hydrolytic activity on carboxymethyl cellulose and on both crystalline substrates tested, compared to the wild-type enzyme. The marked difference in the response of the two exoglucanases to incorporation into a cellulosome, suggests that the family-48 cellulase is more appropriate than the family-6 enzyme as a designer cellulosome component.
AB - Cellulosomes are multi-enzyme complexes produced by certain anaerobic bacteria that exhibit efficient degradation of plant cell wall polysaccharides. To understand their enhanced levels of hydrolysis, we are investigating the effects of converting a free-cellulase system into a cellulosomal one. To achieve this end, we are replacing the cellulose-binding module of the native cellulases, produced by the aerobic bacterium Thermobifida fusca, with a cellulosome-derived dockerin module of established specificity, to allow their incorporation into defined "designer cellulosomes". In this communication, we have attached divergent dockerins to the two exoglucanases produced by T. fusca exoglucanase, Cel6B and Cel48A. The resultant fusion proteins were shown to bind efficiently and specifically to their matching cohesins, and their activities on several different cellulose substrates were compared. The lack of a cellulose-binding module in Cel6B had a deleterious effect on its activity on crystalline substrates. In contrast, the dockerin-bearing family-48 exoglucanase showed increased levels of hydrolytic activity on carboxymethyl cellulose and on both crystalline substrates tested, compared to the wild-type enzyme. The marked difference in the response of the two exoglucanases to incorporation into a cellulosome, suggests that the family-48 cellulase is more appropriate than the family-6 enzyme as a designer cellulosome component.
KW - Cellulose degradation
KW - Cohesin
KW - Designer cellulosomes
KW - Dockerin
KW - Processivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=47249125226&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2008.05.003
DO - 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2008.05.003
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C2 - 18582975
AN - SCOPUS:47249125226
SN - 0168-1656
VL - 135
SP - 351
EP - 357
JO - Journal of Biotechnology
JF - Journal of Biotechnology
IS - 4
ER -