xynB is one of at least four genes from the cellulolytic rumen anaerobe
Ruminococcus flavefaciens 17 that encode xylanase activity. The
xynB gene is predicted to encode a 781-amino acid product starting with a signal peptide, followed by an amino-terminal xylanase domain which is identical at 89% and 78% of residues, respectively, to the amino-terminal xylanase domains of the bifunctional XynD and XynA enzymes from the same organism. Two separate regions within the carboxy-terminal 537 amino acids of XynB also show close similarities with domain B of XynD. These regions show no significant homology with cellulose- or xylan-binding domains from other species, or with any other sequences, and their functions are unknown. In addition a 30 to 32-residue threonine-rich region is present in both XynD and XynB. Codon usage shows a consistent pattern of bias in the three xylanase genes from
R. flavefaciens that have been sequenced.
Key words Xylanase - Cellulolytic bacteria - Anaerobic bacteria - Ruminococcus - Sequence conservation
Communicated by J. F. Lengeler