| Literature DB >> 25615967 |
Immacolata Venditto1, Arun Goyal2, Andrew Thompson3, Luis M A Ferreira1, Carlos M G A Fontes1, Shabir Najmudin1.
Abstract
Microbial degradation of the plant cell wall is a fundamental biological process with considerable industrial importance. Hydrolysis of recalcitrant polysaccharides is orchestrated by a large repertoire of carbohydrate-active enzymes that display a modular architecture in which a catalytic domain is connected via linker sequences to one or more noncatalytic carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). CBMs direct the appended catalytic modules to their target substrates, thus potentiating catalysis. The genome of the most abundant ruminal cellulolytic bacterium, Ruminococcus flavefaciens strain FD-1, provides an opportunity to discover novel cellulosomal proteins involved in plant cell-wall deconstruction. It encodes a modular protein comprising a glycoside hydrolase family 9 catalytic module (GH9) linked to two unclassified tandemly repeated CBMs (termed CBM-Rf6A and CBM-Rf6B) and a C-terminal dockerin. The novel CBM-Rf6A from this protein has been crystallized and data were processed for the native and a selenomethionine derivative to 1.75 and 1.5 Å resolution, respectively. The crystals belonged to orthorhombic and cubic space groups, respectively. The structure was solved by a single-wavelength anomalous dispersion experiment using the CCP4 program suite and SHELXC/D/E.Entities:
Keywords: Cel9A; Ruminococcus flavefaciens; carbohydrate-active enzymes; carbohydrate-binding module; glycoside hydrolase family 9
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25615967 PMCID: PMC4304746 DOI: 10.1107/S2053230X14025576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun ISSN: 2053-230X Impact factor: 1.056