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. 1999 Mar;51(3):348-57.
doi: 10.1007/s002530051401.

Nucleotide sequences of two contiguous and highly homologous xylanase genes xynA and xynB and characterization of XynA from Clostridium thermocellum

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Nucleotide sequences of two contiguous and highly homologous xylanase genes xynA and xynB and characterization of XynA from Clostridium thermocellum

H Hayashi et al. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 1999 Mar.

Abstract

A 5.7-kbp region of the Clostridium thermocellum F1 DNA was sequenced and found to contain two contiguous and highly homologous xylanase genes, xynA and xynB. The xynA gene encoding the xylanase XynA consists of 2049 bp and encodes a protein of 683 amino acids with a molecular mass of 74,511 Da, and the xynB gene encoding the xylanase XynB consists of 1371 bp and encodes a protein of 457 amino acids with a molecular mass of 49,883 Da. XynA is a modular enzyme composed of a typical N-terminal signal peptide and four domains in the following order: a family-II xylanase domain, a family-VI cellulose-binding domain, a dockerin domain, and a NodB domain. XynB exhibited extremely high overall sequence homology with XynA (identity 96.9%), while lacking the NodB domain present in the latter. These facts suggested that the xynA and xynB genes originated from a common ancestral gene through gene duplication. XynA was purified from a recombinant Escherichia coli strain and characterized. The purified enzyme was highly active toward xylan; the specific activity on oat-spelt xylan was 689 units/mg protein. Immunological and zymogram analyses suggested that XynA and XynB are components of the C. thermocellum F1 cellulosome.

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