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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 09 1995, 3304-3310, Vol 61, No. 9
D Geelen, M van Montagu and M Holsters
Azorhizobium caulinodans ORS571, a symbiont of the tropical leguminous
plant Sesbania rostrata, showed low, constitutive levels of endoglucanase
(Egl) activity. A clone carrying the gene responsible for this phenotype
was isolated via introduction of a genomic library into the wild-type
strain and screening for transconjugants with enhanced Egl activity. By
subcloning and expression in Escherichia coli, the Egl phenotype was
allocated to a 3-kb EcoRI-BamHI fragment. However, sequence analysis showed
the egl gene to be much larger, consisting of an open reading frame of
1,836 amino acids. Within the deduced polypeptide, three kinds of putative
domains were identified: a catalytic domain, two cellulose-binding domains,
and an eightfold reiterated motif. The catalytic domain belongs to the
family A of cellulases. A C-terminal stretch of 100 amino acids was similar
to family II cellulose-binding domains. A second copy of this domain
occurred near the middle of the polypeptide, flanked by reiterated motifs.
ORS571 mutants carrying a Tn5 insertion in the egl gene had lost the Egl
activity. These mutants as well as Egl-overproducing strains showed a
normal nodulation behavior, indistinguishable from wild-type nodulation on
Sesbania rostrata under laboratory conditions.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Cloning of an Azorhizobium caulinodans endoglucanase gene and analysis of its role in symbiosis
Laboratorium voor Genetica, Universiteit Gent, Belgium.
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