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. 1992 May;6(9):1243-52.
doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.1992.tb01563.x.

The binding of Cellulomonas fimi endoglucanase C (CenC) to cellulose and Sephadex is mediated by the N-terminal repeats

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The binding of Cellulomonas fimi endoglucanase C (CenC) to cellulose and Sephadex is mediated by the N-terminal repeats

J B Coutinho et al. Mol Microbiol. 1992 May.

Abstract

Endoglucanase C (CenC) from Cellulomonas fimi binds to cellulose and to Sephadex. The enzyme has two contiguous 150-amino-acid repeats (N1 and N2) at its N-terminus and two unrelated contiguous 100-amino-acid repeats (C1 and C2) at its C-terminus. Polypeptides corresponding to N1, N1N2, C1, and C1C2 were produced by expression of appropriate cenC gene fragments in Escherichia coli. N1N2, but not N1 alone, binds to Sephadex; both polypeptides bind to Avicel, (a heterogeneous cellulose preparation containing both crystalline and non-crystalline components). Neither C1 nor C1C2 binds to Avicel or Sephadex. N1N2 and N1 bind to regenerated ('amorphous') cellulose but not to bacterial crystalline cellulose; the cellulose-binding domain of C. fimi exoglucanase Cex binds to both of these forms of cellulose. Amino acid sequence comparison reveals that N1 and N2 are distantly related to the cellulose-binding domains of Cex and C. fimi endoglucanases A and B.

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