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The kappa-carrageenase of the marine bacterium Cytophaga drobachiensis. Structural and phylogenetic relationships within family-16 glycoside hydrolases.

Authors :
Barbeyron T
Gerard A
Potin P
Henrissat B
Kloareg B
Source :
Molecular biology and evolution [Mol Biol Evol] 1998 May; Vol. 15 (5), pp. 528-37.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

We report here cloning from the marine gliding bacterium Cytophaga drobachiensis of kappa-carrageenase, a glycoside hydrolase involved in the degradation of kappa-carrageenan. Structural features in the nucleotide sequence are pointed out, including the presence of an octameric omega sequence similar to the ribosome-binding sites of various eukaryotes and prokaryotes. The cgkA gene codes for a protein of 545 aa, with a signal peptide of 35 aa and a 229-aa-long posttranslationaly processed C-terminal domain. The enzyme displays the overall folding and catalytic domain characteristics of family 16 of glycoside hydrolases, which comprises other beta-1,4-alpha-1,3-D/L-galactan hydrolases, beta-1,3-D-glucan hydrolases (laminarinases), beta-1,4-1,3-D-glucan hydrolases (lichenases), and beta-1,4-D-xyloglucan endotransglycosylases. In order to address the origin and evolution of CgkA, a comprehensive phylogenetic tree of family 16 was built using parsimony analysis. Family-16 glycoside hydrolases cluster according to their substrate specificity, regardless of their phylogenetic distribution over eubacteria and eukaryotes. Such a topology suggests that the general homology between laminarinases, agarases, kappa-carrageenases, lichenases, and xyloglucan endotransglycosylases has arisen through gene duplication, likely from an ancestral protein with laminarinase activity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0737-4038
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular biology and evolution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9580981
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a025952