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Kinetic and structural optimization to catalysis at low temperatures in a psychrophilic cellulase from the Antarctic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis

Authors :
J. Lamotte
Geneviève Garsoux
Charles Gerday
Georges Feller
Source :
Biochemical Journal. 384:247-253
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Portland Press Ltd., 2004.

Abstract

The cold-adapted cellulase CelG has been purified from the culture supernatant of the Antarctic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis and the gene coding for this enzyme has been cloned, sequenced and expressed in Escherichia coli . This cellulase is composed of three structurally and functionally distinct regions: an N-terminal catalytic domain belonging to glycosidase family 5 and a C-terminal cellulose-binding domain belonging to carbohydrate-binding module family 5. The linker of 107 residues connecting both domains is one of the longest found in cellulases, and optimizes substrate accessibility to the catalytic domain by drastically increasing the surface of cellulose available to a bound enzyme molecule. The psychrophilic enzyme is closely related to the cellulase Cel5 from Erwinia chrysanthemi . Both k cat and k cat / K m values at 4 °C for the psychrophilic cellulase are similar to the values for Cel5 at 30–35 °C, suggesting temperature adaptation of the kinetic parameters. The thermodynamic parameters of activation of CelG suggest a heat-labile, relatively disordered active site with low substrate affinity, in agreement with the experimental data. The structure of CelG has been constructed by homology modelling with a molecule of cellotetraose docked into the active site. No structural alteration related to cold-activity can be found in the catalytic cleft, whereas several structural factors in the overall structure can explain the weak thermal stability, suggesting that the loss of stability provides the required active-site mobility at low temperatures.

Details

ISSN :
14708728 and 02646021
Volume :
384
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a00139c145aaf57d5333370d3f1d2c75
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1042/bj20040325