Published in

Elsevier, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 21(280), p. 20181-20184, 2005

DOI: 10.1074/jbc.c500142200

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains Possess Functional Cellulases

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The genomes of various Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains encode proteins that do not appear to play a role in the growth or survival of the bacterium in its mammalian host, including some implicated in plant cell wall breakdown. Here we show that M. tuberculosis H37Rv does indeed possess a functional cellulase. The x-ray crystal structure of this enzyme, in ligand complex forms, from 1.9 to 1.1A resolution, reveals a highly conserved substrate-binding cleft, which affords similar, and unusual, distortion of the substrate at the catalytic center. The endoglucanase activity, together with the existence of a putative membrane-associated crystalline polysaccharide-binding protein, may reflect the ancestral soil origin of the Mycobacterium or hint at a previously unconsidered environmental niche.