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A new collagenase enzyme of the marine sponge pathogen Pseudoalteromonas agarivorans NW4327 is uniquely linked with a TonB dependent receptor.

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The primary pathogen of the Great Barrier Reef sponge Rhopaloeides odorabile, recently identified as a novel strain (NW4327) of Pseudoalteromonas agarivorans, produced collagenase which degraded R. odorabile skeletal fibers. We… Click to show full abstract

The primary pathogen of the Great Barrier Reef sponge Rhopaloeides odorabile, recently identified as a novel strain (NW4327) of Pseudoalteromonas agarivorans, produced collagenase which degraded R. odorabile skeletal fibers. We now report the collagenase of P. agarivorans as a metalloprotease which required Ca2+ and Zn2+ as cofactors. The collagenase was a TonB dependent receptor (TBDR) having a carboxypeptidase regulatory like domain (CRLD) in the N-terminal along with an outer membrane (OM) channel superfamily domain. The genes for TBDR sub-components and collagenase formed one unified entity in the genome of P. agarivorans NW4327. This association of a collagenase with a TBDR distinguished it from all known functional collagenases till date and for the first time, established the enzymatic capability of TBDRs. Predicted TBDR model demonstrated only 15% identity with ferripyoverdin receptor and the CRLD displayed merely 24% identity with carboxypeptidase catalytic chain. Presence of signal peptide, lack of transmembrane helices, absence of N-terminal in the cytoplasmic side, extracellular localization and recovery from the culture supernatant implicated that the TBDR was secreted. Stronger binding of the collagenase with marine sponge type IV collagen than type I collagen, revealed through molecular docking, indicated higher specificity of the enzyme towards type IV collagen.

Keywords: tonb dependent; dependent receptor; sponge; collagenase; pseudoalteromonas agarivorans

Journal Title: International journal of biological macromolecules
Year Published: 2018

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