Pseudoalteromonas carrageenovora 유래 Arylsulfatase의 cloning과 재조합 E. coli에서 과발현

  • Published : 2003.04.11

Abstract

A marine aerobic Gram-negative bacterium, Pseudoalteromonas carrageenovora, has been blown to hydrolyze carrageenans, the sulfated galactans of red algae, and to desulfate oligo kappa-carrageenans. Recently, the gene encoding arylsulfatase (aryl-sulfate sulfohydrolase, E.C.3.1.6.1) of A. carrageenovora was cloned and the nucleotide sequence was reported. Enzymatic hydrolysis of sulfate groups in agaropectin simplifies the process of agarose preparation. In order to overproduce the enzyme, the arylsulfatase gene (astA, 984 bp ORF) from P. carrageenovora genome was amplified by PCR and subcloned into the pET21a vector. When the constructed plasmid pAST-A1 was introduced into E, coli BL21(DE3), the transformant on LB plate containing IPTG showed the hydrolyzing activity for p-nitrophenyl sulfate. Most of arylsulfatase activity was found in the cell lysate, but at $50\;{\sim}\;5000\;{\mu}M$ IPTG concentration the activity was found both in the culture supernatant and the cell lysate. The molecular weight of the recombinant enzyme was estimated to be 34 kDa by SDS-PAGE.

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