Abstract
A 3.2-kbp PstI fragment of DNA encoding formamidase from the methylotrophic bacterium methylophilus methylotrophus which had previously been cloned (pNW3) [Wyborn, N.R., Scherr, D.J. and Jones, C.W. (1994) Microbiology 140, 191-195], was subcloned as a 2.3 kbp HindIII fragment (pNW323). Nucleotide sequencing showed that the subclone contained two genes which encoded formamidase (fmdA) and a possible regulatory protein (fmdB). Predicted molecular masses for FmdA and FmdB were 44438 Da (compared with approximately 44,500 Da by electrospray mass spectrometry and 51,000 Da by SDS/PAGE of the purified enzyme) and 12,306 Da, respectively. The derived amino acid sequence of formamidase was supported by N-terminal amino acid sequencing of the enzyme and of proteolytic fragments prepared from it using V8 endoproteinase and was 57% similar to that of the acetamidase from Mycobacterium smegmatis. The structural similarities between these two enzymes, and their existence as a separate class of bacterial amidase, were confirmed by immunological investigations.
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Wyborn, N. R. (1996). Molecular characterisation of formamidase from Methylophilus methylotrophus. European Journal of Biochemistry, 240(2), 314–322. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1996.0314h.x
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