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Engineering processive cellulase of Clostridium thermocellum to divulge the role of the carbohydrate‐binding module.

Authors :
Ahmad, Sajjad
Sajjad, Muhammad
Altayb, Hisham N.
Sarim Imam, Syed
Alshehri, Sultan
Ghoneim, Mohammed M
Shahid, Saher
Usman Mirza, Muhammad
Shahid Nadeem, Muhammad
Kazmi, Imran
Waheed Akhtar, Muhammad
Source :
Biotechnology & Applied Biochemistry; Feb2023, Vol. 70 Issue 1, p290-305, 16p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The processive cellulase (CelO) is an important modular enzyme of Clostridium thermocellum. To study the effect of the carbohydrate‐binding module (CBM3b) on the catalytic domain of CelO (GH5), four engineered derivatives of CelO were designed by truncation and terminal fusion of CBM3b. These are CBM at the N‐terminus, native form (CelO‐BC, 62 kDa); catalytic domain only (CelO‐C, 42 kDa); CBM at the C‐terminus (CelO‐CB, 54 kDa) and CBM attached at both termini (CelO‐BCB, 73 kDa). All constructs were cloned into pET22b (+) and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) star. The expression levels of CelO‐C, CelO‐CB, CelO‐BC, and CelO‐BCB were 35%, 35%, 30%, and 20%, respectively. The enzyme activities of CelO‐C, CelO‐CB, CelO‐BC, and CelO‐BCB against 1% regenerated amorphous cellulose (RAC) were 860, 758, 985, and 1208 units per μmole of the enzyme, respectively. The enzymes were partially purified from the lysate of E. coli cells by heat treatment followed by anion exchange FPLC purification. Against RAC, CelO‐C, CelO‐CB, CelO‐BC, and CelO‐BCB showed KM values of 32, 33, 45, and 43 mg⋅mL–1 and Vmax values of 3571, 3846, 3571, and 4545 U⋅min–1, respectively. CBM3b at the N‐terminus of GH5 linked through a P/T‐rich linker was found to enhance the catalytic activity and thermostability of the enzyme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08854513
Volume :
70
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Biotechnology & Applied Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161968647
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/bab.2352