Several alkalophilic
Bacillus spp. strains were selected for their capacity to produce alkaline cellulases. Culture supernatants of these strains showed
optimal cellulase activities between pH 8 and 9 and they were stable from pH 6 to pH 12. A cellulase gene (
celB1) from the alkalophilic
Bacillus sp. strain N186-1 was cloned in
Escherichia coli using polymerase chain reaction techniques. The cloned gene was present in a 2.539-bp
HindIII fragment and its nucleotide sequence was determined. The coding sequence showed an open-reading frame encoding 389 amino
acids. The amino acid sequence, deduced from the nucleotide sequence, permitted us to include it in family 5 (or A) of the
glycosyl hydrolases. The complete open-reading frame of
celB1 was cloned in the plasmid pET-11d and expressed in
E. coli BL21 (DE3), in which a protein of 39 kDa was obtained in the cytoplasm; however, no endoglucanase activity was detected.
A second construction in pET-12a allowed the production of a 39-kDa protein located in the periplasmic space of
E. coli that had endoglucanase activity. The protein produced has optimal activity at pH 7 and 50°C and it retains more than 70%
of its activity after incubation for 1 h at pH 12.
Received: 27 December 1995/Received revision: 14 March 1996/Accepted: 25 March 1996