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1.
A gene coding for a xylanase activity of alkalophilic Aeromonas sp. no. 212 (ATCC 31085) was cloned in Escherichia coli HB101 with pBR322. Plasmid pAX1 was isolated from transformants producing xylanase, and the xylanase gene was located in a 6.0 kb Hind III fragment. The pAX1-encoded xylanase activity in E. coli HB101 was about 80 times higher than that of xylanase L in alkalophilic Aeromonas sp. no. 212. About 40% of the enzyme activity was observed in the periplasmic space of E. coli HB101. The pAX1-encoded xylanase had the same enzymic properties as those of xylanase L produced by alkalophilic Aeromonas sp. no. 212, but its molecular weight was lower (135 000 vs 145 000, as estimated by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis).  相似文献   

2.
A gene coding for xylanase activity, xynA, from the anaerobic ruminal bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens 49 was cloned into Escherichia coli JM83 by using plasmid pUC19. The gene was located on a 2.3-kilobase (kb) DNA insert composed of two adjacent EcoRI fragments of 1.65 and 0.65 kb. Expression of xylanase activity required parts of both EcoRI segments. In E. coli, the cloned xylanase enzyme was not secreted and remained cell associated. The enzyme exhibited no arabinosidase, cellulase, alpha-glucosidase, or xylosidase activity. The isoelectric point of the cloned protein was approximately 9.8, and optimal xylanase activity was obtained at pH 5.4. The nucleotide sequence of the 1,535-base-pair EcoRV-EcoRI segment from the B. fibrisolvens chromosome that included the xynA gene was determined. An open reading frame was found that encoded a 411-amino-acid-residue polypeptide of 46,664 daltons. A putative ribosome-binding site, promoter, and leader sequence were identified. Comparison of the XynA protein sequence with that of the XynA protein from alkalophilic Bacillus sp. strain C-125 revealed considerable homology, with 37% identical residues or conservative changes. The presence of the cloned xylanase gene in other strains of Butyrivibrio was examined by Southern hybridization. The cloned xylanase gene hybridized strongly to chromosomal sequences in only two of five closely related strains.  相似文献   

3.
链霉菌zxy19木聚糖酶酶学性质及酶基因克隆   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
王吟  杨艳燕  肖静  徐俊 《微生物学通报》2008,35(11):1681-1685
采用平板筛选法,从红树林放线菌中筛选到一株有较强木聚糖酶活的菌株zxy19,其16SrDNA序列与Streptomyces sampsonii的同源性仅为96%.该菌株木聚糖酶活为852.41 IU/mL,酶反应最适pH值为7,最适反应温度为60℃.用针对木聚糖酶基因保守结构域的一对简并引物扩增到该酶基因部分序列,进而通过反向PCR扩增到了完整的酶基因,对该基因序列分析结果表明此木聚糖酶基因属于糖基水解酶家族11的成员,酶蛋白氨基酸序列与已报道序列同源性最高为79%(Streptomyces lividans xylanase B).构建了该酶重组表达质粒pET-28a-xyl 696,经过IPTG诱导实现了该酶蛋白在大肠杆菌BL21(DE3)中的异源表达,且通过镍柱纯化后的表达产物具有生物学活性.  相似文献   

4.
The xylanase gene from the ruminal bacterium Bacteroides ruminicola 23 is highly expressed in colonic Bacteroides species when carried on plasmid pVAL-RX. In order to stabilize xylanase expression in the absence of antibiotic selection, the xylanase gene was introduced into the chromosome of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron 5482 by using suicide vector pVAL-7. Xylanase activity in the resulting strain, B. thetaiotaomicron BTX, was about 30% of that observed in B. thetaiotaomicron 5482 containing the xylanase gene on pVAL-RX. The data obtained from continuous culture experiments using antibiotic-free medium showed that expression of xylanase activity in strain BTX was extremely stable, with no demonstrated loss of the inserted xylanase gene over 60 generations, with dilution rates from 0.42 to 0.03 h-1. In contrast, the plasmid-borne xylanase gene was almost completely lost by 60 generations in the absence of antibiotic selection. Incubation of strain BTX with oatspelt xylan resulted in the degradation of more than 40% of the xylan to soluble xylooligomers. The stability of xylanase expression in B. thetaiotaomicron BTX suggests that this microorganism might be suitable for introduction into the rumen and increased xylan degradation.  相似文献   

5.
The xylanase gene of Streptomyces flavogriseus was cloned in pUC8 plasmid and expressed in Escherichia coli lysogenic for lambda cI857. lambda-Induced lysis of E. coli at 42 degrees C allowed efficient release of cloned enzyme activity in extracellular environment. The xylanase gene was located in the 0.8-kb HindIII fragment and coded for 18,000 Mr xylanase.  相似文献   

6.
A genomic library of the Dictyoglomus sp. strain Rt46B.1 was constructed in the phage vector lambda ZapII and screened for xylanase activity. A plaque expressing xylanase activity, designated B6-77, was isolated and shown to contain a genomic insert of 5.3 kb. Subcloning revealed that the xylanase activity was restricted to a internal 1,507-bp PstI-HindIII fragment which was subsequently sequenced and shown to contain a single complete open reading frame coding for a single-domain xylanase, XynA, with a putative length of 352 amino acids. Homology comparisons show that XynA is related to the family F group of xylanases. The temperature and pH optima of the recombinant enzyme were determined to be 85 degrees C and pH 6.5, respectively. However, the enzyme was active across a broad pH range, with over 50% activity between pH 5.5 and 9.5. XynA was shown to be a true endo-acting xylanase, being capable of hydrolyzing xylan to xylotriose and xylobiose, but it could not hydrolyze xylobiose to monomeric xylose. XynA was also shown to hydrolyze xylan present in Pinus radiata kraft pulp, indicating that it may be of use as an aid in pulp bleaching. The equivalent xylanase gene was also isolated from the related bacterium Dictyoglomus thermophilum, and DNA sequencing showed these genes to be identical, which, together with the 16S small-subunit rRNA gene sequencing data, indicates that Rt46B.1 and D. thermophilum are very closely related.  相似文献   

7.
A genomic library of Bacillus lyticus was constructed in lambda GEM 11 vector and screened for the xylanase gene using Congo red plate assay. A 16-kb fragment containing the xylanase gene was obtained which was further subcloned using Mbo I partial digestion in an E. coli pUC 19 vector. A 1.3-kb sub-fragment was obtained which coded for a xylanase gene of Mr 23,650 Da. This fragment was sequenced and the homology was checked with known xylanases. The maximum homology was 97%, which was obtained with an endo xylanase gene from Bacillus species at the DNA level, while the translated sequence showed only one amino acid change from alanine to serine at position number 102. Expression was checked in E. coli, using the native promoter, and an extracellular activity of 5.25 U/mL was obtained. Cloning of the gene was done in Bacillus subtilis using a shuttle vector pHB 201, which resulted in increasing the basal level xylanase activity from 14.02 to 22.01 U/mL.  相似文献   

8.
A gene coding for xylanase activity in the ruminal bacterial strain 23, the type strain of Bacteroides ruminicola, was cloned into Escherichia coli JM83 by using plasmid pUC18. AB. ruminicola 23 genomic library was prepared in E. coli by using BamHI-digested DNA, and transformants were screened for xylanase activity on the basis of clearing areas around colonies grown on Remazol brilliant blue R-xylan plates. Six clones were identified as being xylanase positive, and all six contained the same 5.7-kilobase genomic insert. The gene was reduced to a 2.7-kilobase DNA fragment. Xylanase activity produced by the E. coli clone was found to be greater than that produced by the original B. ruminicola strain. Southern hybridization analysis of genomic DNA from the related B. ruminicola strains, D31d and H15a, by using the strain 23 xylanase gene demonstrated one hybridizing band in each DNA.  相似文献   

9.
Thermomonospora fusca chromosomal DNA was partially digested with EcoRI to obtain 4- to 14-kilobase fragments, which were used to construct a library of recombinant phage by ligation with EcoRI arms of lambda gtWES. lambda B. A recombinant phage coding for xylanase activity which contained a 14-kilobase insert was identified. The xylanase gene was localized to a 2.1-kilobase SalI fragment of the EcoRI insert by subcloning onto pBR322 and derivatives of pBR322 that can also replicate in Streptomyces lividans. The xylanase activity produced by S. lividans transformants was 10- to 20-fold higher than that produced by Escherichia coli transformants but only one-fourth the level produced by induced T. fusca. A 30-kilodalton peptide with activity against both Remazol brilliant blue xylan and xylan was produced in S. lividans transformants that carried the 2.1-kilobase SalI fragment of T. fusca DNA and was not produced by control transformants. T. fusca cultures were found to contain a xylanase of a similar size that was induced by growth on xylan or Solka Floc. Antiserum directed against supernatant proteins isolated from a Solka Floc-grown T. fusca culture inhibited the xylanase activity of S. lividans transformants. The cloned T. fusca xylanase gene was expressed at about the same level in S. lividans grown in minimal medium containing either glucose, cellobiose, or xylan. The xylanase bound to and hydrolyzed insoluble xylan. The cloned xylanase appeared to be the same as the major protein in xylan-induced T. fusca culture supernatants, which also contained at least three additional minor proteins with xylanase activity and having apparent molecular masses of 43, 23, and 20 kilodaltons.  相似文献   

10.
A complete genomic library of Chainia was constructed in coliphage lambda vector gt10 and was screened for the xylanase gene using an 18-mer mixed oligonucleotide probe corresponding to a six-amino acid sequence of low molecular mass Chainia xylanase. Inserts from 11 putative clones, showing hybridization with the oligonucleotide probe at medium stringency, were subcloned in pUC8 and screened for xylanase gene expression using anti-xylanase antibodies. The restriction map of the insert (1.4 kb) from one of the four immunopositive clones (PVX8) showing detectable xylanase activity was constructed. The xylanase activity of PVX8 was not induced by IPTG or xylan. Reorientation of the insert by directional cloning into pUC9 had no effect on the xylanase activity suggesting that an indigenous promoter from Chainia is responsible for the xylanase activity.  相似文献   

11.
The nucleotide sequence of the xynZ gene, encoding the extracellular xylanase Z of Clostridium thermocellum, was determined. The putative xynZ gene was 2,511 base pairs long and encoded a polypeptide of 837 amino acids. A region of 60 amino acids containing a duplicated segment of 24 amino acids was found between residues 429 and 488 of xylanase Z. This region was strongly similar to the conserved domain found at the carboxy-terminal ends of C. thermocellum endoglucanases A, B, and D. Deletions removing up to 508 codons from the 5' end of the gene did not affect the activity of the encoded polypeptide, showing that the active site was located in the C-terminal half of the protein and that the conserved region was not involved in catalysis. Expression of xylanase activity in Escherichia coli was increased up to 220-fold by fusing fragments containing the 3' end of the gene with the start of lacZ present in pUC19. An internal translational initiation site which was efficiently recognized in E. coli was tentatively identified 470 codons downstream from the actual start codon.  相似文献   

12.
A gene coding for xylanase synthesis in Bacteroides succinogenes was isolated by cloning, with Escherichia coli HB101 as the host. After partial digestion of B. succinogenes DNA with Sau3A, fragments were ligated into the BamHI site of pBR322 and transformed into E. coli HB101. Of 14,000 colonies screened, 4 produced clear halos on Remazol brilliant blue-xylan agar. Plasmids from two stable clones recovered exhibited identical restriction enzyme patterns, with the same 9.4-kilobase-pair (kbp) insert. The plasmid was designated pBX1. After subcloning of restriction enzyme fragments, a 3-kbp fragment was found to code for xylanase activity in either orientation when inserted into pUC18 and pUC19. The original clone possessed approximately 10-fold higher xylanase activity than did clones harboring the 3-kbp insert in pUC18, pUC19, or pBR322. The enzyme was partially secreted into the periplasmic space of E. coli. The periplasmic enzyme of the BX1 clone had 2% of the activity on carboxymethyl cellulose and less than 0.2% of the activity on p-nitrophenyl xyloside and a range of other substrates that it exhibited on xylan. The xylanase gene was not subject to catabolite repression by glucose or induction by either xylan or xylose. The xylanase activity migrated as a single broad band on nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels. The Km of the pBX1-encoded enzyme was 0.22% (wt/vol) of xylan, which was similar to that for the xylanase activity in an extracellular enzyme preparation from B. succinogenes. Based on these data it appears that the xylanase gene expressed in E. coli is fully functional and codes for an enzyme with properties similar to the B. succinogenes enzyme(s).  相似文献   

13.
The xylanase gene from the ruminal bacterium Bacteroides ruminicola 23 is highly expressed in colonic Bacteroides species when carried on plasmid pVAL-RX. In order to stabilize xylanase expression in the absence of antibiotic selection, the xylanase gene was introduced into the chromosome of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron 5482 by using suicide vector pVAL-7. Xylanase activity in the resulting strain, B. thetaiotaomicron BTX, was about 30% of that observed in B. thetaiotaomicron 5482 containing the xylanase gene on pVAL-RX. The data obtained from continuous culture experiments using antibiotic-free medium showed that expression of xylanase activity in strain BTX was extremely stable, with no demonstrated loss of the inserted xylanase gene over 60 generations, with dilution rates from 0.42 to 0.03 h-1. In contrast, the plasmid-borne xylanase gene was almost completely lost by 60 generations in the absence of antibiotic selection. Incubation of strain BTX with oatspelt xylan resulted in the degradation of more than 40% of the xylan to soluble xylooligomers. The stability of xylanase expression in B. thetaiotaomicron BTX suggests that this microorganism might be suitable for introduction into the rumen and increased xylan degradation.  相似文献   

14.
Bacillus subtilis strain B10 was isolated for degumming of ramie blast fibers, and a fragment of 642-bp was amplified from chromosomal DNA by using primers directed against the sequence of Bacillus subtilis xylanase gene given in GenBank. The positive clones were screened on the selected LB agar plates supplemented with xylan by Congo-red staining method. The recombinant plasmid from one positive clone was used for further analysis and DNA sequencing. The gene sequence is different from the reported xylanase gene sequence in sites of two base pairs. The recombinant plasmid was expressed in Escherichia coli, and xylanase activity was measured. The xylanase distribution in extracellular, intracellular and periplasmic fractions were about 22.4%, 28.0% and 49.6%, respectively. The xylanase had optimal activity at pH 6.0 and 50 degrees C.  相似文献   

15.
The DNA sequence for the xylanase gene fromPrevotella (Bacteroides) ruminicola 23 was determined. The xylanase gene encoded for a protein with a molecular weight of 65,740. An apparent leader sequence of 22 amino acids was observed. The promoter region for expression of the xylanase gene inBacteroides species was identified with a promoterless chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. A region of high amino acid homology was found with the proposed catalytic domain of endoglucanases from several organisms, includingButyrivibrio fibrisolvens, Ruminococcus flavefaciens, andClostridium thermocellum. The cloned xylanase was found to exhibit endoglucanase activity against carboxymethyl cellulose. Analysis of the codon usage for the xylanase gene found a bias towards G and C in the third position in 16 of 18 amino acids with degenerate codons.  相似文献   

16.
In culture, the filamentous fungus Cochliobolus carbonum, a pathogen of maize, makes three cationic xylanases, XYL1, which encodes the major endoxylanase (Xyl1), was earlier cloned and shown by gene disruption to encode the first and second peaks of xylanase activity (P. C. Apel, D. G. Panaccione, F. R. Holden, and J. D. Walton, Mol. Plant-Microbe Interact. 6:467-473, 1993). Two additional xylanase genes, XYL2 and XYL3, have now been cloned from C. carbonum. XYL2 and XYL3 are predicted to encode 22-kDa family G xylanases similar to Xyl1. Xyl2 and Xyl3 are 60% and 42% identical, respectively, to Xyl1, and Xyl2 and Xyl3 are 39% identical. XYL1 and XYL2 but not XYL3 mRNAs are present in C. carbonum grown in culture, and XYL1 and XYL3 but not XYL2 mRNAs are present in infected plants. Transformation-mediated gene disruption was used to construct strains mutated in XYL1, XYL2, and XYL3. Xyl1 accounts for most of the total xylanase activity in culture, and disruption of XYL2 or XYL3 does not result in the further loss of any xylanase activity. In particular, the third peak of cationic xylanase activity is still present in a xyl1 xyl2 xyl3 triple mutant, and therefore this xylanase must be encoded by yet a fourth xylanase gene. A minor protein of 22 kDa that can be detected immunologically in the xyl1 mutant disappears in the xyl2 mutant and is therefore proposed to be the product of XYL2. The single xylanase mutants were crossed with each other to obtain multiple xylanase disruptions within the same strain. Strains disrupted in combinations of two and in all three xylanases were obtained. The triple mutant grows at the same rate as the wild type on xylan and on maize cell walls. The triple mutant is still fully pathogenic on maize with regard to lesion size, morphology, and rate of lesion development.  相似文献   

17.
A cloned xylanase gene from the ruminal bacterium Bacteroides ruminicola 23 was transferred by conjugation into the colonic species Bacteroides fragilis and Bacteroides uniformis by using the Escherichia coli-Bacteroides shuttle vector pVAL-1. The cloned gene was expressed in both species, and xylanase specific activity in crude extracts was found to be at least 1400-fold greater than that found in the B. ruminicola strain. Analysis of crude extract proteins from the recombinant B. fragilis by SDS-PAGE demonstrated a new 60,000 molecular weight protein. The xylanase activity expressed in both E. coli and B. fragilis was capable of degrading xylan to xylooligosaccharides in vitro. This is the first demonstration that colonic Bacteroides species can express a gene from a ruminal Bacteroides species.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The gene encoding xylanase activity in the ruminal bacteriumBacteroides ruminicola D31d was cloned and expressed inEscherichia coli with the plasmid vector pUC18. The gene was isolated on a 4.7-kilobase pair partialPstI genomic DNA fragment. The xylanase activity expressed inE. coli was cell associated and could degrade both oatspelt xylan and Remazol Brilliant Blue-xylan. The xylanase did not have detectable activity against carboxymethylcellulose. Utilization of an endogenous promoter byE. coli was indicated by expression of xylanase activity after subcloning of the insert into pBR322 in opposite orientations. TheB. ruminicola D31d xylanase gene was compared by Southern hybridization analyses with xylanase genes cloned fromB. ruminocola 23 andB. ovatus V975, a human intestinal isolate. The D31d xylanase gene did not cross-hybridize with either of the other two genes. In addition, the 23 xylanase gene did not cross-hybridize with the other two genes according to the same technique. These results indicate that the three cloned genes do not share a high degree of genetic similarity, despite the similar enzymatic activities. This is the first study to compare cloned genes from ruminal and colonicBacteroides species.The mention of firm names or trade products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture over other firms or similar products not mentioned.  相似文献   

20.
Pollen coat contains ingredients that interact with the stigma surface during sexual reproduction. In maize (Zea mays L.) pollen coat, the predominant protein is a 35-kDa endoxylanase, whose mRNA is located in the tapetum cells enclosing the maturing pollen in the anthers. This 2.0-kb mRNA was found to have an open reading frame of 1,635 nucleotides encoding a 60-kDa pre-xylanase. In developing anthers, the pre-xylanase protein appeared prior to the 35-kDa xylanase protein and enzyme activity and then peaked and declined, whereas the 35-kDa xylanase protein and activity continued to increase until anther maturation. An acid protease in the anther extract converted the inactive pre-xylanase to the active 35-kDa xylanase in vitro. The protease activity was inhibited by inhibitors of serine proteases but unaffected by inhibitors of cysteine, aspartic, or metallic proteases. Sequence analysis revealed that the 60-kDa pre-xylanase was converted to the 35-kDa xylanase with the removal of 198 and 48 residues from the N and C termini, respectively. During in vitro and in vivo conversions, no intermediates of 60-35 kDa were observed, and the 35-kDa xylanase was highly stable. The pre-xylanase was localized in the tapetum-containing anther wall, whereas the 35-kDa xylanase was found in the pollen coat. The significance of having a large non-active pre-xylanase and the mode of transfer of the xylanase to the pollen coat are discussed. A gene encoding the barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) tapetum xylanase was cloned; this gene and the gene encoding the seed aleurone-layer xylanase had strict tissue-specific expressions.  相似文献   

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