Evidence for a general role for high‐affinity non‐catalytic cellulose binding domains in microbial plant ceil wall hydroiases

Abstract
Cellulases expressed by Cellulomonas fimi consist of a catalytic domain and a discrete non-catalytic cellulose-binding domain (CBD). To establish whether CBDs are common features of plant cell-wall hydroiases from C. fimi, the molecular architecture of xylanase D (XYLD) from this bacterium was investigated. The gene encoding XYLD, designated xynD, consisted of an open reading frame of 1936 bp encoding a protein of Mr 68000. The deduced primary sequence of XYLD was confirmed by the size (64kDa) and N-terminal sequence of the purified recombinant xylanase. Biochemical analysis of the purified enzyme revealed that XYLD is an endo-acting xylanase which displays no detectable activity against polysaccharides other than xylan. The predicted primary structure of XYLD comprised an /V-terminal signal peptide followed by a 190-residue domain that exhibited significant homology to Family-G xylanases. Truncated derivatives of xynD, encoding the W-terminal 193 amino acids of mature XYLD directed the synthesis of a functional xylanase, confirming that the 190-residue N-terminal sequence constitutes the catalytic domain. The remainder of the enzyme consisted of two approximately 90-residue domains, which exhibited extensive homology with each other, and limited sequence identity with CBDs from other polysaccharide hydrolases. Between the two putative CBDs is a 197-amino-acid sequence that exhibits substantial homology with Rhizobium NodB proteins. The four discrete domains in XYLD were separated by either threonine/prolineor novel glycine-rich linker regions. Although full-length XYLD adsorbed to cellulose, truncated derivatives of the enzyme lacking the C-terminal CBD hydrolysed xylan but did not bind to cellulose. Fusion of the C-terminal domain to glutathione-Stransferase generated hybrid proteins that bound to crystalline cellulose, but not to amorphous cellulose or xylan. The location of CBDs in a C. fimi xylanase indicates that domains of this type are not restricted to cellulases, but are widely distributed between hemicellutases also, and therefore play a pivotal role in the activity of the whole repertoire of plant cell-wall hydrolases. The role of the NodB homologue in XYLD is less certain.