Abstract

The Clostridium thermocellum cellulosome is a multicomponent cellulase complex. Its largest subunit, CipA, contains nine repeated domains (R's), each of which binds to a cellulosomal catalytic subunit, and a cellulose binding domain (CBD). We have previously reported that the activity of CelS, an exoglucanse subunit, is enhanced by the anchorage function of CipA. In this work, we examined the effect of anchorage on the activity of CelD, an endoglucanase subunit, using recombinant CelD (rCeiD) and the CipA functional domains, R3 (a repeat next to CBD) and CBD R3 , expressed in Escherichia coli, rCelD formed a stable complex with CBD R3 as analyzed by a gel-shift assay on a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gradient gel. Binding of rCelD to crystalline cellulose, as its activity toward both phosphoric acid-swollen and crystalline cellulose, was dependent on CBD R3 . These results indicate that the activity of an endoglucanase subunit of the cellulosome, as that of the exoglucanase subunit, is enhanced by the anchorage function of CipA. Such anchorage function of CipA may thus augment the potential endo-exo synergism in the cellulosome.

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