Phosphatidylglycerol-specific phospholipase C from Amycolatopsis sp. NT115 strain: purification, characterization, and gene cloning.
Kiyoto KajiyamaDaisuke SugimoriPublished in: Bioscience, biotechnology, and biochemistry (2023)
Recently, phosphatidylglycerol (PG) focused on its important role in chloroplast photosynthesis, mitochondrial function of the sperm, an inhibitory effect on SARS-CoV-2 ability to infect naïve cells and reducing lung inflammation caused by COVID-19. To develop an enzymatic PG determination method as the high-throughput analysis of PG, a PG-specific phospholipase C (PG-PLC) was found in the culture supernatant of Amycolatopsis sp. NT115. PG-PLC (54 kDa by SDS-PAGE) achieved the maximal activity at pH 6.0 and 55°C and was inhibited by detergents, such as Briji35, Tween 80, and sodium cholate, but not by EDTA and metal ions, except for Zn2+. The open reading frame of the PG-PLC gene consisted of 1620 bp encoding 515-amino-acid residues containing the preceding 25-amino-acid residues (Tat signal peptide sequence). The putative amino-acid sequence of PG-PLC was highly similar to those of metallophosphoesterases; however, its substrate specificity was completely different from those of known PLCs.