Functional screening yields a new beta-1,4-endoglucanase gene from Heterodera glycines that may be the product of recent gene duplication.

Clones with secreted cellulolytic activity were identified when a cDNA library constructed from poly A(+) RNA of preparasitic second-stage juveniles of Heterodera glycines, the soybean cyst nematode, was expressed in the Escherichia coli SOLR strain and overlaid with a carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) substrate. Twenty CMC-degrading clones were analyzed, and all were either identical or strongly similar to a beta-1,4-endoglucanase gene (HG-eng-2), previously isolated from H. glycines. A subgroup of identical "HG-eng-2-like" clones had considerable differences in the 5' untranslated region compared with HG-eng-2 and were designated HG-eng-3. One H. glycines genomic clone contained HG-eng-2 and HG-eng-3 full-length genes, separated by a distance of approximately 8 kb, and a second genomic clone contained two copies of HG-eng-2, separated by approximately 6.5 kb, suggesting the presence of endoglucanase gene clusters in H. glycines. The HG-eng-2 and HG-eng-3 genes were in opposite transcriptional orientation, with considerable nucleotide differences in their 5' flanking regions. The highly conserved nucleotide sequence in the introns and exons and their close proximity within the genome suggest that HG-eng-2 and HG-eng-3 are the products of recent gene duplication and inversion.

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