Cohesin-Dockerin Interaction in Cellulosome Assembly
A SINGLE HYDROXYL GROUP OF A DOCKERIN DOMAIN DISTINGUISHES BETWEEN NONRECOGNITION AND HIGH AFFINITY RECOGNITION*
- Adva Mechaly‡,
- Henri-Pierre Fierobe§,
- Anne Belaich§,
- Jean-Pierre Belaich§,¶,
- Raphael Lamed‖,
- Yuval Shoham** and
- Edward A. Bayer‡‡
- From the ‡Department of Biological Chemistry, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel, the §Bioénergétique et Ingéniérie des Protéines, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, IBSM-IFR1, Marseille 13402, France, the ¶Université de Provence, Marseille 13331, France, the ‖Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv 69978, Israel, and the **Department of Food Engineering and Biotechnology, and Institute of Catalysis Science and Technology, Technion–Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel
Abstract
The assembly of enzyme components into the cellulosome complex is dictated by the cohesin-dockerin interaction. In a recent article (Mechaly, A., Yaron, S., Lamed, R., Fierobe, H.-P., Belaich, A., Belaich, J.-P., Shoham, Y., and Bayer, E. A. (2000)Proteins 39, 170–177), we provided experimental evidence that four previously predicted dockerin residues play a decisive role in the specificity of this high affinity interaction, although additional residues were also implicated. In the present communication, we examine further the contributing factors for the recognition of a dockerin by a cohesin domain between the respective cellulosomal systems of Clostridium thermocellum and Clostridium cellulolyticum. In this context, the four confirmed residues were analyzed for their individual effect on selectivity. In addition, other dockerin residues were discerned that could conceivably contribute to the interaction, and the suspected residues were similarly modified by site-directed mutagenesis. The results indicate that mutation of a single residue from threonine to leucine at a given position of theC. thermocellum dockerin differentiates between its nonrecognition and high affinity recognition (K a∼ 109 m −1) by a cohesin fromC. cellulolyticum. This suggests that the presence or absence of a single decisive hydroxyl group is critical to the observed biorecognition. This study further implicates additional residues as secondary determinants in the specificity of interaction, because interconversion of selected residues reduced intraspecies self-recognition by at least three orders of magnitude. Nevertheless, as the latter mutageneses served to reduce but not annul the cohesin-dockerin interaction within this species, it follows that other subtle alterations play a comparatively minor role in the recognition between these two modules.
- OE PCR
- Overlap-extension polymerase chain reaction
- CBD
- cellulose-binding domain
- CelS-ct
- recombinant cellulosomal Family-48 cellulase fromC. thermocellum
- CelA-cc
- recombinant cellulosomal Family-5 cellulase from C. cellulolyticum
- Coh-ct
- recombinant probe from the C. thermocellum scaffoldin subunit that contains the cohesin-2 module and the CBD
- Coh-cc
- recombinant probe from theC. cellulolyticum scaffoldin subunit that contains the CBD and cohesin-1 module
- PAGE
- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
- bp
- base pair(s)
- Received October 10, 2000.
- Revision received January 4, 2000.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











