Isolation of two β‐xylosidase genes of Bacillus pumilus and comparison of their gene products

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Abstract

The chromosomal DNA fragments of Bacillus pumilus IPO, a potent xylan‐hydrolyzing bacterium, were ligated to a vector plasmid, pBR322, and used to transform Escherichia coli C600 cells. Two hybrid plasmids, pOXD28 and pOXN29, were found to enable the transformants to produce β‐xylosidase. The former was found to contain a 2.6‐MDa BglII fragment and the latter, a 7.7‐MDa PstI fragment, both coding β‐xylosidase, but xylanase is coded only on the latter hybrid plasmid. The DNAs inserted in both plasmids originated from the B. pumilus chromosome, but from different regions, as shown by Southern hybridization and the analysis of restriction fragments. β‐Xylosidases I and II, coded on pOXN29 and pOXD28 respectively, were purified to homogeneous preparations and compared. Both were dimer enzymes consisting of 65000–70000‐Da subunits. Specific activity and the Km value of β‐xylosidase I to p‐nitrophenyl β‐D‐xyloside as substrate were respectively 100 and 1/40 times those of β‐xylosidase II. The mobilities of β‐xylosidases I and II on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were also different. β‐Xylosidase I, the gene of which is located near the xylanase gene on pOXN29, can convert xylooligosaccharides to xylose, but β‐xylosidase II had little activity on xylobiose. These results suggest that β‐xylosidase I is the main enzyme for xylan hydrolysis in B. pumilus Copyright © 1984, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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PANBANGRED, W., KAWAGUCHI, O., TOMITA, T., SHINMYO, A., & OKADA, H. (1984). Isolation of two β‐xylosidase genes of Bacillus pumilus and comparison of their gene products. European Journal of Biochemistry, 138(2), 267–273. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1984.tb07911.x

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