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Title: Cloning and sequencing of a high-alkaline pectate lyase gene from an alkaliphilic Bacillus isolate. Author: Hatada Y, Higaki N, Saito K, Ogawa A, Sawada K, Ozawa T, Hakamada Y, Kobayashi T, Ito S. Journal: Biosci Biotechnol Biochem; 1999 Jun; 63(6):998-1005. PubMed ID: 10427684. Abstract: Alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. strain KSM-P103 was found to exoproduce a high-alkaline pectate lyase (pectate transeliminase, EC 4.2.2.2). The gene for this enzyme from the alkaliphile was cloned and sequenced for the first time. The structural gene contained a 1,038-bp open reading frame encoding 345 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence of the mature enzyme (302 amino acids, 33,312 Da), designated Pel-103, showed very low similarity to those of known pectate lyases with 28-36% identity: the loop regions were very short and the amino acid usage in the parallel beta-helix core structure was considerably different. Moreover, physicochemical and catalytic properties of Pel-103 were different from those of other enzymes reported so far. Pel-103 was a very basic protein with an isoelectric point close to pH 10.5 and had optimal activity at 60-65 degrees C and at pH as high as 10.5. However, Pel-103 appeared to have a similar core and active site topology to the enzymes of known structure from Erwinia chrysanthemi and Bacillus subtilis. Expression of the gene for Pel-103 in B. subtilis resulted in high pectate lyase activity in the culture broth, concomitant with the appearance of a main protein band on an SDS gel at 33 kDa.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]