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1. Notenboom  V, Williams  SJ, Hoos  R, Withers  SG, Rose  DR,     ( 2000 )

Detailed structural analysis of glycosidase/inhibitor interactions: complexes of Cex from Cellulomonas fimi with xylobiose-derived aza-sugars.

Biochemistry 39 (38)
PMID : 10995222  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi0010625    
Abstract >>
Detailed insights into the mode of binding of a series of tight-binding aza-sugar glycosidase inhibitors of two fundamentally different classes are described through X-ray crystallographic studies of complexes with the retaining family 10 xylanase Cex from Cellulomonas fimi. Complexes with xylobiose-derived aza-sugar inhibitors of the substituted "amidine" class (xylobio-imidazole, K(i) = 150 nM; xylobio-lactam oxime, K(i) = 370 nM) reveal lateral interaction of the "glycosidic" nitrogen with the acid/base catalyst (Glu127) and hydrogen bonding of the sugar 2-hydroxyl with the catalytic nucleophile (Glu233), as expected. Tight binding of xylobio-isofagomine (K(i) = 130 nM) appears to be a consequence of strong interactions of the ring nitrogen with the catalytic nucleophile while, surprisingly, no direct protein contacts are made with the ring nitrogen of the xylobio-deoxynojirimycin analogue (K(i) = 5800 nM). Instead the nitrogen interacts with two ordered water molecules, thereby accounting for its relatively weaker binding, though it still binds some 1200-fold more tightly than does xylobiose, presumably as a consequence of electrostatic interactions at the active site. Dramatically weaker binding of these same inhibitors to the family 11 xylanase Bcx from Bacillus circulans (K(i) from 0.5 to 1.5 mM) is rationalized for the substituted amidines on the basis that this enzyme utilizes a syn protonation trajectory and likely hydrolyzes via a (2,5)B boat transition state. Weaker binding of the deoxynojirimycin and isofagomine analogues likely reflects the energetic penalty for distortion of these analogues to a (2,5)B conformation, possibly coupled with destabilizing interactions with Tyr69, a conserved, catalytically essential active site residue.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Endo-1,4-beta Xylanases
2. Stålbrand  H,     ( 1999 )

Mannan-degrading enzymes from Cellulomonas fimi.

Applied and environmental microbiology 65 (6)
PMID : 10347049  :   PMC  :   PMC91384    
Abstract >>
The genes man26a and man2A from Cellulomonas fimi encode mannanase 26A (Man26A) and beta-mannosidase 2A (Man2A), respectively. Mature Man26A is a secreted, modular protein of 951 amino acids, comprising a catalytic module in family 26 of glycosyl hydrolases, an S-layer homology module, and two modules of unknown function. Exposure of Man26A produced by Escherichia coli to C. fimi protease generates active fragments of the enzyme that correspond to polypeptides with mannanase activity produced by C. fimi during growth on mannans, indicating that it may be the only mannanase produced by the organism. A significant fraction of the Man26A produced by C. fimi remains cell associated. Man2A is an intracellular enzyme comprising a catalytic module in a subfamily of family 2 of the glycosyl hydrolases that at present contains only mammalian beta-mannosidases.
KeywordMeSH Terms
3. Mayer  C, Vocadlo  DJ, Mah  M, Rupitz  K, Stoll  D, Warren  RA, Withers  SG,     ( 2006 )

Characterization of a beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase and a beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase/beta-glucosidase from Cellulomonas fimi.

The FEBS journal 273 (13)
PMID : 16762038  :   DOI  :   10.1111/j.1742-4658.2006.05308.x    
Abstract >>
The gram-positive soil bacterium Cellulomonas fimi is shown to produce at least two intracellular beta-N-acetylglucosaminidases, a family 20 beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase (Hex20), and a novel family 3-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase/beta-glucosidase (Nag3), through screening of a genomic expression library, cloning of genes and analysis of their sequences. Nag3 exhibits broad substrate specificity for substituents at the C2 position of the glycone: kcat/Km values at 25 degrees C were 0.066 s(-1) x mM(-1) and 0.076 s(-1) x mM(-1) for 4'-nitrophenyl beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminide and 4'-nitrophenyl beta-D-glucoside, respectively. The first glycosidase with this broad specificity to be described, Nag3, suggests an interesting evolutionary link between beta-N-acetylglucosaminidases and beta-glucosidases of family 3. Reaction by a double-displacement mechanism was confirmed for Nag3 through the identification of a glycosyl-enzyme species trapped with the slow substrate 2',4'-dinitrophenyl 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-beta-D-glucopyranoside. Hex20 requires the acetamido group at C2 of the substrate, being unable to cleave beta-glucosides, since its mechanism involves an oxazolinium ion intermediate. However, it is broad in its specificity for the D-glucosyl/D-galactosyl configuration of the glycone: Km and kcat values were 53 microM and 482.3 s(-1) for 4'-nitrophenyl beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminide and 66 microM and 129.1 s(-1) for 4'-nitrophenyl beta-N-acetyl-D-galactosaminide.
KeywordMeSH Terms
4. Tull  D, Withers  SG, Gilkes  NR, Kilburn  DG, Warren  RA, Aebersold  R,     ( 1991 )

Glutamic acid 274 is the nucleophile in the active site of a "retaining" exoglucanase from Cellulomonas fimi.

The Journal of biological chemistry 266 (24)
PMID : 1678739  :  
Abstract >>
In addition to its known substrate activity with p-nitrophenyl beta-cellobioside, the exoglucanase from Cellulomonas fimi has been shown to utilize substituted phenyl beta-glucosides as substrates, of which the best is 2',4'-dinitrophenyl beta-D-glucopyranoside. The enzyme can be inactivated by treatment with 2',4'-dinitrophenyl 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-beta-D-glucopyranoside, by trapping of the covalent intermediate in catalysis, as has been shown for a beta-glucosidase (Withers, S.G., and Street, I.P. (1988) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 110, 8551-8553). The intermediate formed is stable but can undergo turnover in the presence of cellobiose, reactivating the enzyme by transglycosylation. Using a tritium-labeled inactivator it has been possible to isolate and sequence a radiolabeled peptide from this enzyme, and the active site nucleophile has been identified as glutamic acid residue 274. This glutamic acid residue and its sequentially proximal amino acids are absolutely conserved in the homologous family F of cellulases.
KeywordMeSH Terms
5. Owolabi  JB, Beguin  P, Kilburn  DG, Miller  RC, Warren  RA,     ( 1988 )

Expression in Escherichia coli of the Cellulomonas fimi Structural Gene for Endoglucanase B.

Applied and environmental microbiology 54 (2)
PMID : 16347564  :   PMC  :   PMC202483    
Abstract >>
Endoglucanase B (EB) of Cellulomonas fimi has an M(r) of 110,000 when it is produced in Escherichia coli. The level of expression of the cenB gene (encoding EB) was significantly increased by replacing its normal transcriptional and translational regulatory signals with those of the E. coli lac operon. EB was purified to homogeneity from the periplasmic fraction of E. coli in one step by affinity chromatography on microcrystalline cellulose (Avicel). Alignment of the NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequence with the partial nucleotide sequence of a fragment of C. fimi DNA showed that EB is preceded by a putative signal polypeptide of 33 amino acids. The signal peptide functions and is processed correctly in E. coli, even when its first 15 amino acids are replaced by the first 7 amino acids of beta-galactosidase. The intact EB polypeptide is not required for enzymatic activity. Active polypeptides with M(r)s of 95,000 and 82,000 also appear in E. coli, and a deletion mutant of cenB encodes an active polypeptide with an M(r) of 72,000.
KeywordMeSH Terms
6. Gao  B, Gupta  RS,     ( 2005 )

Conserved indels in protein sequences that are characteristic of the phylum Actinobacteria.

International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology 55 (Pt 6)
PMID : 16280504  :   DOI  :   10.1099/ijs.0.63785-0    
Abstract >>
Gram-positive bacteria with a high G+C content are currently recognized as a distinct phylum, Actinobacteria, on the basis of their branching in 16S rRNA trees. Except for an insert in the 23S rRNA, there are no unique biochemical or molecular characteristics known at present that can distinguish this group from all other bacteria. In this work, three conserved indels (i.e. inserts or deletions) are described in three widely distributed proteins that are distinctive characteristics of the Actinobacteria and are not found in any other groups of bacteria. The identified signatures are a 2 aa deletion in cytochrome-c oxidase subunit 1 (Cox1), a 4 aa insert in CTP synthetase and a 5 aa insert in glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS). Additionally, the actinobacterial specificity of the large insert in the 23S rRNA was also tested. Using primers designed for conserved regions flanking these signatures, fragments of most of these genes were amplified from 23 actinobacterial species, covering many different families and orders, for which no sequence information was previously available. All the 61 sequenced fragments, except two in GluRS, were found to contain the indicated signatures. The presence of these signatures in various species from 20 families within this phylum provides evidence that they are likely distinctive characteristics of the entire phylum, which were introduced in a common ancestor of this group. The absence of all four of these signatures in Symbiobacterium thermophilum suggests that this species, which is distantly related to other actinobacteria in 16S rRNA and CTP synthetase trees, may not be a part of the phylum Actinobacteria. The identified signatures provide novel molecular means for defining and circumscribing the phylum Actinobacteria. Functional studies on them should prove helpful in understanding novel biochemical and physiological characteristics of this group of bacteria.
KeywordMeSH Terms
7. Le Nours  J, Anderson  L, Stoll  D, Stålbrand  H, Lo Leggio  L,     ( 2005 )

The structure and characterization of a modular endo-beta-1,4-mannanase from Cellulomonas fimi.

Biochemistry 44 (38)
PMID : 16171384  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi050779v    
Abstract >>
The endo-beta-1,4-mannanase from the soil bacterium Cellulomonas fimi is a modular plant cell wall degrading enzyme involved in the hydrolysis of the backbone of mannan, one of the most abundant polysaccharides of the hemicellulosic network in the plant cell wall. The crystal structure of a recombinant truncated endo-beta-1,4-mannanase from C. fimi (CfMan26A-50K) was determined by X-ray crystallography to 2.25 A resolution using the molecular replacement technique. The overall structure of the enzyme consists of a core (beta/alpha)8-barrel catalytic module characteristic of clan GH-A, connected via a linker to an immunoglobulin-like module of unknown function. A complex with the oligosaccharide mannotriose to 2.9 A resolution has also been obtained. Both the native structure and the complex show a cacodylate ion bound at the -1 subsite, while subsites -2, -3, and -4 are occupied by mannotriose in the complex. Enzyme kinetic analysis and the analysis of hydrolysis products from manno-oligosaccharides and mannopentitol suggest five important active-site cleft subsites. CfMan26A-50K has a high affinity -3 subsite with Phe325 as an aromatic platform, which explains the mannose releasing property of the enzyme. Structural differences with the homologous Cellvibrio japonicus beta-1,4-mannanase (CjMan26A) at the -2 and -3 subsites may explain the poor performance of CfMan26A mutants as "glycosynthases".
KeywordMeSH Terms
Models, Molecular
8. Hekmat  O, Kim  YW, Williams  SJ, He  S, Withers  SG,     ( 2005 )

Active-site peptide "fingerprinting" of glycosidases in complex mixtures by mass spectrometry. Discovery of a novel retaining beta-1,4-glycanase in Cellulomonas fimi.

The Journal of biological chemistry 280 (42)
PMID : 16085650  :   DOI  :   10.1074/jbc.M508434200    
Abstract >>
New proteomics methods are required for targeting and identification of subsets of a proteome in an activity-based fashion. Here, we report the first gel-free, mass spectrometry-based strategy for mechanism-based profiling of retaining beta-endoglycosidases in complex proteomes. Using a biotinylated, cleavable 2-deoxy-2-fluoroxylobioside inactivator, we have isolated and identified the active-site peptides of target retaining beta-1,4-glycanases in systems of increasing complexity: pure enzymes, artificial proteomes, and the secreted proteome of the aerobic mesophilic soil bacterium Cellulomonas fimi. The active-site peptide of a new C. fimi beta-1,4-glycanase was identified in this manner, and the peptide sequence, which includes the catalytic nucleophile, is highly conserved among glycosidase family 10 members. The glycanase gene (GenBank accession number DQ146941) was cloned using inverse PCR techniques, and the protein was found to comprise a catalytic domain that shares approximately 70% sequence identity with those of xylanases from Streptomyces sp. and a family 2b carbohydrate-binding module. The new glycanase hydrolyzes natural and artificial xylo-configured substrates more efficiently than their cello-configured counterparts. It has a pH dependence very similar to that of known C. fimi retaining glycanases.
KeywordMeSH Terms
9. Hekmat  O, Lo Leggio  L, Rosengren  A, Kamarauskaite  J, Kolenova  K, Stålbrand  H,     ( 2010 )

Rational engineering of mannosyl binding in the distal glycone subsites of Cellulomonas fimi endo-beta-1,4-mannanase: mannosyl binding promoted at subsite -2 and demoted at subsite -3.

Biochemistry 49 (23)
PMID : 20426480  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi100097f    
Abstract >>
To date, rational redesign of glycosidase active-site clefts has been mainly limited to the removal of essential functionalities rather than their introduction. The glycoside hydrolase family 26 endo-beta-1,4-mannanase from the soil bacterium Cellulomonas fimi depolymerizes various abundant plant mannans. On the basis of differences in the structures and hydrolytic action patterns of this wild-type (but recombinantly expressed) enzyme and a homologous mannanase from Cellvibrio japonicus, two nonconserved amino acid residues at two distal glycone-binding subsites of the C. fimi enzyme were substituted, Ala323Arg at subsite -2 and Phe325Ala at subsite -3, to achieve inverted mannosyl affinities in the respective subsites, mimicking the Ce. japonicus enzyme that has an Arg providing mannosyl interactions at subsite -2. The X-ray crystal structure of the C. fimi doubly substituted mannanase was determined to 2.35 A resolution and shows that the introduced Arg323 is in a position suitable for hydrogen bonding to mannosyl at subsite -2. We report steady-state enzyme kinetics and hydrolysis-product analyses using anion-exchange chromatography and a novel rapid mass spectrometric profiling method of (18)O-labeled products obtained using H(2)(18)O as a solvent. The results obtained with oligosaccharide substrates show that although the catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) is wild-type-like for the engineered enzyme, it has an altered hydrolytic action pattern that stems from promotion of substrate binding at subsite -2 (due to the introduced Arg323) and demotion of it at subsite -3 (to which removal of Phe325 contributed). However, k(cat)/K(m) decreased approximately 1 order of magnitude with polymeric substrates, possibly caused by spatial repositioning of the substrate at subsite -3 and beyond for the engineered enzyme.
KeywordMeSH Terms
10. Meinke  A, Braun  C, Gilkes  NR, Kilburn  DG, Miller  RC, Warren  RA,     ( 1991 )

Unusual sequence organization in CenB, an inverting endoglucanase from Cellulomonas fimi.

Journal of bacteriology 173 (1)
PMID : 1987122  :   DOI  :   10.1128/jb.173.1.308-314.1991     PMC  :   PMC207188    
Abstract >>
The nucleotide sequence of the cenB gene was determined and used to deduce the amino acid sequence of endoglucanase B (CenB) of Cellulomonas fimi. CenB comprises 1,012 amino acids and has a molecular weight of 105,905. The polypeptide is divided by so-called linker sequences rich in proline and hydroxyamino acids into five domains: a catalytic domain of 607 amino acids at the N terminus, followed by three repeats of 98 amino acids each which are greater than 60% identical, and a C-terminal domain of 101 amino acids which is 50% identical to the cellulose-binding domains of C. fimi cellulases Cex and CenA. A deletion mutant of the cenB gene encodes a polypeptide lacking the C-terminal 333 amino acids of CenB. The truncated polypeptide is catalytically active and, like intact CenB, binds to cellulose, suggesting that CenB has a second cellulose-binding site. The sequence of amino acids 1 to 461 of CenB is 35% identical, with a further 15% similarity, to that of a cellulase from avocado, which places CenB in cellulase family E. CenB releases mostly cellobiose and cellotetraose from cellohexaose. Like CenA, CenB hydrolyzes the beta-1,4-glucosidic bond with inversion of the anomeric configuration. The pH optimum for CenB is 8.5, and that for CenA is 7.5.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes, Bacterial
11. Gilkes  NR, Claeyssens  M, Aebersold  R, Henrissat  B, Meinke  A, Morrison  HD, Kilburn  DG, Warren  RA, Miller  RC,     ( 1991 )

Structural and functional relationships in two families of beta-1,4-glycanases.

European journal of biochemistry 202 (2)
PMID : 1761039  :   DOI  :   10.1111/j.1432-1033.1991.tb16384.x    
Abstract >>
CenA and Cex are beta-1,4-glycanases produced by the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi. Both enzymes are composed of two domains and contain six Cys residues. Two disulfide bonds were assigned in both enzymes by peptide analysis of the isolated catalytic domains. A further disulfide bond was deduced in both cellulose-binding domains from the absence of free thiols under denaturing conditions. Corresponding Cys residues are conserved in eight of nine other known C. fimi-type cellulose-binding domains. CenA and Cex belong to families B and F, respectively, in the classification of beta-1,4-glucanases and beta-1,4-xylanases based on similarities in catalytic domain primary structure. Disulfide bonds in the CenA catalytic domain correspond to the two disulfide bonds in the catalytic domain of Trichoderma reesei cellobiohydrolase II (family B) which stabilize loops forming the active-site tunnel. Sequence alignment indicates the probable occurrence of disulfides at equivalent positions in the two other family B enzymes. Partial resequencing of the gene encoding Streptomyces KSM-9 beta-1,4-glucanase CasA (family B) revealed five errors in the original nucleotide sequence analysis. The corrected amino acid sequence contains an Asp residue corresponding to the proposed proton donor in hydrolysis catalysed by cellobiohydrolase II. Cys residues which form disulfide bonds in the Cex catalytic domain are conserved in XynZ of Clostridium thermocellum and Xyn of Cryptococcus albidus but not in the other eight known family F enzymes. Like other members of its family, Cex catalyses xylan hydrolysis. The catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) for hydrolysis of the heterosidic bond of p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xylobioside is 14,385 min-1.mM-1 at 25 degrees C; the corresponding kcat/Km for p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-cellobioside hydrolysis is 296 min-1.mM-1.
KeywordMeSH Terms
12. Gilkes  NR, Kilburn  DG, Miller  RC, Warren  RA,     ( 1989 )

Structural and functional analysis of a bacterial cellulase by proteolysis.

The Journal of biological chemistry 264 (30)
PMID : 2681184  :  
Abstract >>
CenA is an endo-beta 1,4-glucanase from the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi. It is a bifunctional enzyme comprising an amino-terminal cellulose-binding domain and a carboxyl-terminal catalytic domain joined by a short sequence of prolyl and threonyl residues (the Pro-Thr box). Additional structural and functional information was revealed by a detailed analysis of the products generated by proteolytic cleavage of a nonglycosylated form of CenA. An extracellular C. fimi protease attacked nonglycosylated CenA at the junctions between the Pro-Thr box and the two functional domains. A stable "core" peptide (p30), corresponding to the catalytic domain, remained after extensive proteolysis. p30 was resistant to further attack even in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol plus urea or dithiothreitol, but treatment in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate allowed complete fragmentation to small peptides. Stable peptides, identical, or closely related to p30, were generated by alpha-chymotrypsin or papain. These results indicated that the catalytic domain adopts a tightly folded conformation affording protection from proteolytic attack. In contrast, the cellulose-binding domain showed a relatively loose conformation. Progressive proteolytic truncation from the amino terminus was apparent during incubation with alpha-chymotrypsin or papain, or with C. fimi protease under reducing conditions. Affinity for cellulose was retained by products missing up to 64 amino-terminal amino acids. The remaining carboxyl-proximal region of the cellulose-binding domain with affinity (47 amino acids) contained sequences highly conserved in analogous domains from other bacterial endo-beta 1,4-glucanases. By analogy with other systems, the properties of the Pro-Thr box are consistent with an elongated conformation. The results of this investigation suggest that CenA has a tertiary structure which resembles that of certain fungal cellulases.
KeywordMeSH Terms
13.     ( 1996 )

Crystallographic observation of a covalent catalytic intermediate in a beta-glycosidase.

Nature structural biology 3 (2)
PMID : 8564541  :  
Abstract >>
The three-dimensional structure of a catalytically competent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate of a retaining beta-1,4-glycanase has been determined at a resolution of 1.8 A by X-ray diffraction. A fluorinated slow substrate forms an alpha-D-glycopyranosyl linkage to one of the two invariant carboxylates, Glu 233, as supported in solution by 19F-NMR studies. The resulting ester linkage is coplanar with the cyclic oxygen of the proximal saccharide and is inferred to form a strong hydrogen bond with the 2-hydroxyl of that saccharide unit in natural substrates. The active-site architecture of this covalent intermediate gives insights into both the classical double-displacement catalytic mechanism and the basis for the enzyme's specificity.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Endo-1,4-beta Xylanases
14.     ( 1996 )

A modular xylanase from mesophilic Cellulomonas fimi contains the same cellulose-binding and thermostabilizing domains as xylanases from thermophilic bacteria.

FEMS microbiology letters 139 (1)
PMID : 8647371  :   DOI  :   10.1111/j.1574-6968.1996.tb08175.x    
Abstract >>
The xynC gene from mesophilic Cellulomonas fimi encodes a large 125 kDa modular xylanase (XYLC), consisting of six distinct functional domains. In addition to a single Family 10 catalytic domain, XYLC contains a domain homologous with the nodulation protein, NodB, from nitrogen-fixing bacteria and thermostabilizing and cellulose-binding domains found previously only in xylanases from thermophilic bacteria.
KeywordMeSH Terms
15.     ( 1994 )

Evidence for a general role for high-affinity non-catalytic cellulose binding domains in microbial plant cell wall hydrolases.

Molecular microbiology 11 (2)
PMID : 8170399  :   DOI  :   10.1111/j.1365-2958.1994.tb00317.x    
Abstract >>
Cellulases expressed by Cellulomonas fimi consist of a catalytic domain and a discrete non-catalytic cellulose-binding domain (CBD). To establish whether CBDs are common features of plant cell-wall hydrolases from C. fimi, the molecular architecture of xylanase D (XYLD) from this bacterium was investigated. The gene encoding XYLD, designated xynD, consisted of an open reading frame of 1936 bp encoding a protein of M(r) 68,000. The deduced primary sequence of XYLD was confirmed by the size (64 kDa) and N-terminal sequence of the purified recombinant xylanase. Biochemical analysis of the purified enzyme revealed that XYLD is an endoacting xylanase which displays no detectable activity against polysaccharides other than xylan. The predicted primary structure of XYLD comprised an N-terminal signal peptide followed by a 190-residue domain that exhibited significant homology to Family-G xylanases. Truncated derivatives of xynD, encoding the N-terminal 193 amino acids of mature XYLD directed the synthesis of a functional xylanase, confirming that the 190-residue N-terminal sequence constitutes the catalytic domain. The remainder of the enzyme consisted of two approximately 90-residue domains, which exhibited extensive homology with each other, and limited sequence identity with CBDs from other polysaccharide hydrolases. Between the two putative CBDs is a 197-amino-acid sequence that exhibits substantial homology with Rhizobium NodB proteins. The four discrete domains in XYLD were separated by either threonine/proline-or novel glycine-rich linker regions. Although full-length XYLD adsorbed to cellulose, truncated derivatives of the enzyme lacking the C-terminal CBD hydrolysed xylan but did not bind to cellulose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes, Bacterial
16.     ( 1994 )

Stereochemical course of hydrolysis catalysed by Cellulomonas fimi CenE, a member of a new family of beta-1,4-glucanases.

Biochemical and biophysical research communications 199 (3)
PMID : 8147863  :   DOI  :   10.1006/bbrc.1994.1361    
Abstract >>
The gene for a previously identified, extracellular, 120 kDa cellulose-binding protein (Cbp120) was isolated from a Cellulomonas fimi genomic library and expressed in Escherichia coli. Qualitative analysis of CM-cellulose hydrolysis shows that Cbp120 is an endo-beta-1,4-glucanase. Cbp120, now renamed CenE, catalyzes hydrolysis of cellohexaose with inversion of anomeric carbon configuration, characteristic of a single displacement reaction. Partial sequencing of its gene shows that CenE has significant sequence similarity with the catalytic domains of five enzymes from cellulolytic bacteria. It is proposed that the six enzymes form a new family of beta-1,4-glucanases. CenE is the first enzyme from this family to be characterized stereochemically.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes, Bacterial
17.     ( 1993 )

Cellulose-binding polypeptides from Cellulomonas fimi: endoglucanase D (CenD), a family A beta-1,4-glucanase.

Journal of bacteriology 175 (7)
PMID : 8458833  :   DOI  :   10.1128/jb.175.7.1910-1918.1993     PMC  :   PMC204259    
Abstract >>
Five cellulose-binding polypeptides were detected in Cellulomonas fimi culture supernatants. Two of them are CenA and CenB, endo-beta-1,4-glucanases which have been characterized previously; the other three were previously uncharacterized polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 120, 95, and 75 kDa. The 75-kDa cellulose-binding protein was designated endoglucanase D (CenD). The cenD gene was cloned and sequenced. It encodes a polypeptide of 747 amino acids. Mature CenD is 708 amino acids long and has a predicted molecular mass of 74,982 Da. Analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence of CenD shows that the enzyme comprises four domains which are separated by short linker polypeptides: an N-terminal catalytic domain of 405 amino acids, two repeated sequences of 95 amino acids each, and a C-terminal domain of 105 amino acids which is > 50% identical to the sequences of cellulose-binding domains in Cex, CenA, and CenB from C. fimi. Amino acid sequence comparison placed the catalytic domain of CenD in family A, subtype 1, of beta-1,4-glycanases. The repeated sequences are more than 40% identical to the sequences of three repeats in CenB and are related to the repeats of fibronectin type III. CenD hydrolyzed the beta-1,4-glucosidic bond with retention of anomeric configuration. The activities of CenD towards various cellulosic substrates were quite different from those of CenA and CenB.
KeywordMeSH Terms
18.     ( 1994 )

The acid/base catalyst in the exoglucanase/xylanase from Cellulomonas fimi is glutamic acid 127: evidence from detailed kinetic studies of mutants.

Biochemistry 33 (20)
PMID : 7910761  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi00186a042    
Abstract >>
The exoglucanase/xylanase Cex from Cellulomonas fimi hydrolyzes beta-1,4-glycosidic bonds with net retention of anomeric configuration, releasing the disaccharides beta-cellobiose or beta-xylobiose. It uses a double-displacement mechanism involving a glycosyl-enzyme intermediate which is formed and hydrolyzed with general acid/base catalytic assistance. Glu127 was proposed as the acid/base catalyst on the basis of sequence alignments, and mutants at this position were constructed in which the glutamic acid is replaced by alanine or glycine. The following kinetic analysis provides firm support for the assignment of Glu127 as the acid/base catalyst and suggests a more general strategy for identification of this residue in other glycosidases. Substrates which do not require protonic assistance for initial bond cleavage exhibit kcat/Km values similar to those of wild-type enzyme, whereas substrates which do require assistance have kcat/Km values over 6000-fold smaller. Thus rate constants for glycosylation are affected to different degrees by this substitution, depending upon their need for acid catalysis. The deglycosylation rate constant is decreased 200-fold by such substitution, due to the removal of general base catalytic assistance. In the presence of sodium azide a new product, beta-cellobiosyl azide, is formed with these mutants whereas only cellobiose is formed with wild-type enzyme or the Glu127Asp mutant under similar conditions. Addition of azide results in very significant increases in kcat values, ranging from 8-fold for 4''-nitrophenyl cellobioside to over 200-fold for 2'',4''-dinitrophenyl cellobioside, whereas kcat/Km values for these substrates remain essentially constant. No effects on rate upon azide addition are seen with substrates containing aglycons of poor leaving group ability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
KeywordMeSH Terms
Mutation
19.     ( 1994 )

Crystal structure of the catalytic domain of the beta-1,4-glycanase cex from Cellulomonas fimi.

Biochemistry 33 (42)
PMID : 7918478  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi00208a003    
Abstract >>
beta-1,4-Glycanases, principally cellulases and xylanases, are responsible for the hydrolysis of plant biomass. The bifunctional beta-1,4-xylanase/glucanase Cex from the bacterium Cellulomonas fimi, one of a large family of cellulases/xylanases, depolymerizes oligosaccharides and releases a disaccharide unit from the substrate nonreducing end. Hydrolysis occurs with net retention of the anomeric configuration of the sugar through a double-displacement mechanism involving a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate. The active site nucleophile, Glu233, has been unambiguously identified by trapping of such an intermediate [Tull et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 15621-15625] and the acid/base catalyst, Glu127, by detailed kinetic analysis of mutants [MacLeod et al. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 6371-6376]. However, little is known about the enzyme's overall folding and its active site architecture. We report here the high-resolution crystal structure of the catalytic domain of Cex. The atomic structure refinement results in a model that includes 2400 protein atoms and 45 water molecules, with an R-factor of 0.217 for data extending to 1.8-A resolution. The protein forms an eight-parallel-stranded alpha/beta-barrel, which is a novel folding pattern for a microbial beta-glycanase. The active site, inferred from the location of Glu233, Glu127, and other conserved residues, is an open cleft on the carboxy-terminal end of the alpha/beta-barrel. An extensive hydrogen-bonding network stabilizes the ionization states of the key residues; in particular, the Asp235-His205-Glu233 hydrogen-bonding network may play a role in modulating the ionization state of Glu233 and in controlling local charge balance during the reaction.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Endo-1,4-beta Xylanases
20. Xu  GY, Ong  E, Gilkes  NR, Kilburn  DG, Muhandiram  DR, Harris-Brandts  M, Carver  JP, Kay  LE, Harvey  TS,     ( 1995 )

Solution structure of a cellulose-binding domain from Cellulomonas fimi by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

Biochemistry 34 (21)
PMID : 7766609  :  
Abstract >>
Multidimensional, multinuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy combined with dynamical simulated annealing has been used to determine the structure of a 110 amino acid cellulose-binding domain (CBD) from Cex, a beta-1,4-glycanase from the bacterium Cellulomonas fimi (CBDcex). An experimental data set comprising 1795 interproton NOE-derived restraints, 50 phi, 34 chi 1, and 106 hydrogen bond restraints was used to calculate 20 final structures. The calculated structures have an average root-mean-square (rms) deviation about the mean structure of 0.41 A for backbone atoms and 0.67 A for all heavy atoms when fitted over the secondary structural elements. Chromatography, ultracentrifugation, and 15N NMR relaxation experiments demonstrate that CBDcex is a dimer in solution. While attempts to measure NOEs across the dimer interface were unsuccessful, a computational strategy was employed to generate dimer structures consistent with the derived data set. The results from the dimer calculations indicate that, while the monomer topologies produced in the context of the dimer can be variable, the relative positioning of secondary structural elements and side chains present in the monomer are restored upon dimer formation. CBDcex forms an extensive beta-sheet structure with a beta-barrel fold. Titration with cellohexaose, [beta-D-glucopyranosyl-(1,4)]5-D-glucose, establishes that Trp 54 and 72 participate in cellulose binding. Analysis of the structure shows that these residues are adjacent in space and exposed to solvent. Together with other proximate hydrophilic residues, these residues form a carbohydrate-binding cleft, which appears to be a feature common to all CBDs of the same family.
KeywordMeSH Terms
21. Shen  H, Gilkes  NR, Kilburn  DG, Miller  RC, Warren  RA,     ( 1995 )

Cellobiohydrolase B, a second exo-cellobiohydrolase from the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi.

The Biochemical journal 311 (Pt 1) (N/A)
PMID : 7575482  :   DOI  :   10.1042/bj3110067     PMC  :   PMC1136120    
Abstract >>
The gene cbhB from the cellulolytic bacterium Cellulomonas fimi encodes a polypeptide of 1090 amino acids. Cellobiohydrolase B (CbhB) is 1037 amino acids long, with a calculated molecular mass of 109765 Da. The enzyme comprises five domains: an N-terminal catalytic domain of 643 amino acids, three fibronectin type III repeats of 97 amino acids each, and a C-terminal cellulose-binding domain of 104 amino acids. The catalytic domain belongs to family 48 of glycosyl hydrolases. CbhB has a very low activity on CM-cellulose. Viscometric analysis of CM-cellulose hydrolysis indicates that the enzyme is an exoglucanase. Cellobiose is the major product of hydrolysis of cellulose. In common with two other exoglycanases from C. fimi, CbhB has low but detectable endoglucanase activity. CbhB is the second exo-cellobiohydrolase found in C. fimi. Therefore, the cellulase system of C. fimi resembles those of fungi in comprising multiple endoglucanases and cellobiohydrolases.
KeywordMeSH Terms
22. O'Neill  G, Goh  SH, Warren  RA, Kilburn  DG, Miller  RC,     ( 1986 )

Structure of the gene encoding the exoglucanase of Cellulomonas fimi.

Gene 44 (2��3��)
PMID : 3096818  :   DOI  :   10.1016/0378-1119(86)90197-6    
Abstract >>
In Cellulomonas fimi the cex gene encodes an exoglucanase (Exg) involved in the degradation of cellulose. The gene now has been sequenced as part of a 2.58-kb fragment of C. fimi DNA. The cex coding region of 1452 bp (484 codons) was identified by comparison of the DNA sequence to the N-terminal amino acid (aa) sequence of the Exg purified from C. fimi. The Exg sequence is preceded by a putative signal peptide of 41 aa, a translational initiation codon, and a sequence resembling a ribosome-binding site five nucleotides (nt) before the initiation codon. The nt sequence immediately following the translational stop codon contains four inverted repeats, two of which overlap, and which can be arranged in stable secondary structures. The codon usage in C. fimi appears to be quite different from that of Escherichia coli. A dramatic (98.5%) bias occurs for G or C in the third position for the 35 codons utilized in the cex gene.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes
Genes, Bacterial
23. Wong  WK, Gerhard  B, Guo  ZM, Kilburn  DG, Warren  AJ, Miller  RC,     ( 1986 )

Characterization and structure of an endoglucanase gene cenA of Cellulomonas fimi.

Gene 44 (2��3��)
PMID : 3023193  :   DOI  :   10.1016/0378-1119(86)90196-4    
Abstract >>
Two BamHI fragments (0.8 and 5.2 kb) of Cellulomonas fimi containing an endoglucanase (Eng) gene (cenA) were individually cloned into the BamHI site of pBR322; they expressed carboxymethylcellulase activity in Escherichia coli. The nucleotide (nt) sequence of the cenA gene was determined by sequencing overlapping deletions. The cenA gene is 1350 bp long encoding a polypeptide of 449 amino acids (aa) and stop codon. The 0.8-kb BamHI component encodes the first 76 aa, whereas the 5.2-kb BamHI component encodes the rest of the Eng. The Eng lacking the N-terminal 76 aa retains its activity and antigenicity, and it forms an active fusion protein with the N-terminal portion of the TcR determinant. The C-terminal region of the Eng is crucial for activity and a deletion of as little as 12 aa from that end results in the loss of all Eng activity. The N-terminal 31 aa of the Eng constitute a leader peptide which appears to be functional in exporting the enzyme to the periplasm in E. coli.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes
Genes, Bacterial
24.     ( 1998 )

Insights into transition state stabilization of the beta-1,4-glycosidase Cex by covalent intermediate accumulation in active site mutants.

Nature structural biology 5 (9)
PMID : 9731776  :   DOI  :   10.1038/1852    
Abstract >>
The catalytic mechanism of 'retaining' beta-glycosidases has been the subject of considerable interest and debate for many years. The visualization of a covalent glycosyl enzyme intermediate by X-ray crystallography was first accomplished with a saccharide substrate substituted with fluorine at its 2-position. The structure implicated major roles for residue His 205 and for the 2-hydroxyl position of the proximal saccharide in binding and catalysis. Here we have studied the kinetic behavior of various His 205 mutants. One of these mutants, a double mutant H205N/E127A, has been used to stabilize a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate involving an unsubstituted sugar, permitting crystallographic analysis of the interactions between its 2-hydroxyl group and the enzyme.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Endo-1,4-beta Xylanases
25.     ( 1998 )

Exploring the cellulose/xylan specificity of the beta-1,4-glycanase cex from Cellulomonas fimi through crystallography and mutation.

Biochemistry 37 (14)
PMID : 9537990  :   DOI  :   10.1021/bi9729211    
Abstract >>
The retaining beta-1,4-glycanase Cex from Cellulomonas fimi, a family 10 glycosyl hydrolase, hydrolyzes xylan 40-fold more efficiently than cellulose. To gain insight into the nature of its preference for xylan, we determined the crystal structure of the Cex catalytic domain (Cex-cd) trapped as its covalent 2-deoxy-2-fluoroxylobiosyl-enzyme intermediate to 1.9 A resolution. Together with the crystal structure of unliganded Cex-cd [White, A., et al. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 12546-12552] and the previously determined crystal structure of the covalent 2-deoxy-2-fluorocellobiosyl-Cex-cd intermediate [White, A., et al. (1996) Nat. Struct. Biol. 3, 149-154], this structure provides a convincing rationale for the observed substrate specificity in Cex. Two active site residues, Gln87 and Trp281, are found to sterically hinder the binding of glucosides and must rearrange to accommodate these substrates. Such rearrangements are not necessary for the binding of xylobiosides. The importance of this observation was tested by examining the catalytic behavior of the enzyme with Gln87 mutated to Met. This mutation had no measurable effect on substrate affinity or turnover number relative to the wild type enzyme, indicating that the Met side chain could accommodate the glucoside moiety as effectively as the wild type Gln residue. Subsequent mutagenesis studies will address the role of entropic versus enthalpic contributions to binding by introducing side chains that might be more rigid in the unliganded enzyme.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Endo-1,4-beta Xylanases

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