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1.
The photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodospirillum rubrum S1, when grown under anaerobic conditions, generated three different types of catalases. In this study, we purified and characterized the highest molecular weight catalase from the three catalases. The total specific catalase activity of the crude cell extracts was 88 U/mg. After the completion of the final purification step, the specific activity of the purified catalase was 1,256 U/mg. The purified catalase evidenced an estimated molecular mass of 318 kDa, consisting of four identical subunits, each of 79 kDa. The purified enzyme exhibited an apparent Km value of 30.4 mM and a Vmax of 2,564 U against hydrogen peroxide. The enzyme also exhibited a broad optimal pH (5.0-9.0), and remained stable over a broad temperature range (20 degrees C-60 degrees C). It maintained 90% activity against organic solvents (ethanol/chloroform) known hydroperoxidase inhibitors, and exhibited no detectable peroxidase activity. The catalase activity of the purified enzyme was reduced to 19% of full activity as the result of the administration of 10 mM 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole, a heme-containing catalase inhibitor. Sodium cyanide, sodium azide, and hydroxylamine, all of which are known heme protein inhibitors, inhibited catalase activity by 50% at concentrations of 11.5 microM, 0.52 microM, and 0.11 microM, respectively. In accordance with these findings, the enzyme was identified as a type of monofunctional catalase.  相似文献   

2.
Structural and biochemical characterization of aspartate 152 at the distal heme side of catalase-peroxidase (KatG) from Synechocystis PCC 6803 reveals an important functional role for this residue. In the wild-type protein, the side chain carboxyl group of Asp152 is 7.8 A apart from the heme iron and is hydrogen-bonded to two water molecules and a KatG-specific large loop. We have prepared the site-specific variants Asp152Asn, Asp152Ser, Asp152Trp, and Pro151Ala. Exchange of Asp152 exhibited dramatic consequences on the bifunctional activity of this unique peroxidase. The turnover number of catalase activity of Asp152Asn is 2.7%, Asp152Ser 5.7%, and Asp152Trp is 0.6% of wild-type activity. By contrast, the peroxidase activity of the Asp152 variants was 2-7 times higher than that of wild-type KatG or Pro151Ala. The KatG-specific pH profile of the catalase activity was completely different in these variants and exchange of Asp152 made it possible to follow the transition of the ferric enzyme to the redox intermediate compound I by hydrogen peroxide spectroscopically and to determine the corresponding bimolecular rate constant to be 7.5 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) (pH 7 and 15 degrees C). The reactivity of compound I toward aromatic one-electron donors was enhanced in the Asp152 variants compared with the wild-type protein, whereas the reactivity toward hydrogen peroxide was dramatically decreased. A mechanism for the hydrogen peroxide oxidation, which is different from monofunctional catalases and involves the distal residues Trp122 and Asp152, is proposed.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Purification and characterization of catalase-1 from Bacillus subtilis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The catalase activity produced in vegetative Bacillus subtilis, catalase-1, has been purified to homogeneity. The apparent native molecular weight was determined to be 395,000. Only one subunit type with a molecular weight of 65,000 was present, suggesting a hexamer structure for the enzyme. In other respects, catalase-1 was a typical catalase. Protoheme IX was identified as the heme component on the basis of the spectra of the enzyme and of the isolated hemochromogen. The ratio of protoheme/subunit was 1. The enzyme remained active over a broad pH range of 5-11 and was only slowly inactivated at 65 degrees C. It was inhibited by cyanide, azide, and various sulfhydryl compounds. The apparent Km for hydrogen peroxide was 40.1 mM. The amino acid composition was typical of other catalases in having relatively low amounts of tryptophan and cysteine.  相似文献   

5.
The morphogenetic transitions of the N. crassa asexual life cycle are responses to a hyperoxidant state in which probably singlet oxygen is generated. Induction of catalase activity and catalase oxidation by singlet oxygen are consequences of this recurrent hyperoxidant state. Here the biochemical properties and regulation of two large monofunctional catalases are reviewed, and a new catalase-peroxidase gene and activity is described. Catalase-3 is associated to growing and Catalase-1 to non-growing cells. Under stressful conditions one of these catalases is synthesized, depending on whether growth can be continued or a resistant cell has to be made. The catalase-peroxidase Catalase-2 was possibly derived from a bacterial enzyme. In contrast to the other catalases, Catalase-2 had catalase and peroxidase activity. Catalase-2 was expressed under conditions in which vacuolization of hyphae is observed. All three enzymes have a chlorin in its active site instead of ferroprotoheme IX and are resistant to molar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. These and all other catalases tested so far are oxidized by singlet oxygen, probably at the heme moiety. The catalase activity is virtually unaffected by oxidation, but the enzymes are probably degraded more rapidly than the unmodified ones.  相似文献   

6.
A novel thermo-alkali-stable catalase–peroxidase from Oceanobacillus oncorhynchi subsp. incaldaniensis subsp. nov., strain 20AG, was purified and characterized. The protein purified from the cells resulted in 110-fold purification with a specific activity of 35,000 U/mg. The enzyme consisted of four identical subunits of 72 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE and the total molecular mass measured by gel filtration was 280 kDa. The heme content was determined to be 1 heme per homodimer. The enzyme showed a Soret peak at 406 nm in the oxidized form and was easily reduced by dithionite. The enzyme showed an appreciable peroxidase activity in addition to high catalase activity. The behaviour of this heme-enzyme was typical of the class of prokaryotic catalase–peroxidases, which are sensitive to cyanide and insensitive to the eukaryotic catalase inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. The enzyme was active over a temperature range from 30 to 60°C and a pH range from 5 to 10, with an optimum pH about 9.0 and an optimum temperature of 40°C. The enzyme was stable in the pH range of 5.0 to 10.0 after 1 h of treatment at 40°C. The enzyme was stable for 24 h at 40°C with a half-life of 4 h 60°C. The enzyme had a K m of 24 mM for hydrogen peroxide. The amino terminal amino acid sequence of the catalase–peroxidase from strain 20AG was SEKRKMTTAFGA and it showed no homology with other catalases.  相似文献   

7.
从一株低度嗜盐、兼性嗜碱芽孢杆菌Bacillus sp.F26中纯化得到一种碱性过氧化氢酶,并对该酶进行了性质研究。纯化过程经硫酸铵沉淀、阴离子交换层析、凝胶过滤层析及疏水层析四步最终获得电泳纯的目标酶(纯化58.5倍)。该过氧化氢酶的分子量为140kD,由两个大小相同的亚基组成。天然酶分子在408nm处显示特征吸收峰(Soret band)。吡啶血色素光谱显示了酶分子以原卟啉Ⅸ(protoheme Ⅸ)作为辅基。计算获得酶的表观米氏常数为32.5mmol/L。该过氧化氢酶不受连二亚硫酸钠的还原作用影响,但被氰化物、叠氮化物和3.氨基.1,2,4-三唑(单功能过氧化氢酶的专一抑制剂)强烈抑制。以邻联茴香胺、邻苯二胺和二氨基联苯胺作为电子供体测定酶活时,该酶不显示过氧化物酶活性。同时,酶的N-端序列比对结果说明,该过氧化氢酶与单功能过氧化氢酶亚群有一定的相似性,而与双功能过氧化氢酶亚群及猛过氧化氢酶亚群均没有同源性。因此,本文将纯化的碱性过氧化氢酶定性为单功能过氧化氢酶。此外,该酶具有热敏感的特点,且酶活在pH5~9的范围内不受pH影响,此后,活性随着pH的升高而升高,并在pH 11处有明显的酶活高峰。20℃、pH 11条件下的酶活半衰期达49h。在pH 11的高碱条件下表现出最高活力和一定的稳定性,这在已报道的过氧化氢酶中还未见描述。同时,该酶也显示了良好的盐碱稳定性,0.5mol/L NaCl、pH 10.5条件下的酶活半衰期达90h。另一方面,本文所研究的过氧化氢酶是第一个来源于嗜碱微生物的同源二聚体单功能过氧化氢酶,也是第一个来源于天然碱湖的单功能过氧化氢酶,它能部分地反映出细胞抗氧化体系对相应环境的适应情况。  相似文献   

8.
Catalase-peroxidases have a predominant catalase activity but differ from monofunctional catalases in exhibiting a substantial peroxidase activity and in having different residues in the heme cavity. We present a kinetic study of the formation of the key intermediate compound I by probing the role of the conserved distal amino acid triad Arg-Trp-His of a recombinant catalase-peroxidase in its reaction with hydrogen peroxide, peroxoacetic acid, and m-chloroperbenzoic acid. Both the wild-type enzyme and six mutants (R119A, R119N, W122F, W122A, H123Q, H123E) have been investigated by steady-state and stopped-flow spectroscopy. The turnover number of catalase activity of R119A is 14.6%, R119N 0.5%, H123E 0.03%, and H123Q 0.02% of wild-type activity. Interestingly, W122F and W122A completely lost their catalase activity but retained their peroxidase activity. Bimolecular rate constants of compound I formation of the wild-type enzyme and the mutants have been determined. The Trp-122 mutants for the first time made it possible to follow the transition of the ferric enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide spectroscopically underlining the important role of Trp-122 in catalase activity. The results demonstrate that the role of the distal His-Arg pair in catalase-peroxidases is important in the heterolytic cleavage of hydrogen peroxide (i.e. compound I formation), whereas the distal tryptophan is essential for compound I reduction by hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

9.
Catalase from acatalasemic dog liver was purified to homogeneity and its properties were compared with those of normal dog liver catalase. The purified acatalasemic and normal dog liver catalases were found to have the same molecular weight (230,000 Da) and isoelectric point (pI: 6.0-6.2) and both enzymes contained four hematins per molecule. The catalytic activity of catalase from acatalasemic dog was normal. Furthermore, there was no difference between the acatalasemic and normal dog catalases in the binding affinity to NADPH (apparent Kd: 0.11-0.12 microM) and in the sensitivity to oxidative stress by hydrogen peroxide, the normal substrate of catalase. The acatalasemic dog enzyme was stable only in a narrow pH range (pH 6-9) although the normal enzyme was stable in a wide pH range (pH 4-10). Acatalasemic dog liver catalase also showed a slight low thermal stability at 37 degrees C and the heat-lability was remarkable at 45 degrees C, compared to the normal dog enzyme. These results indicated that the acatalasemic dog catalase is catalytically normal although it is associated with an unstable molecular structure.  相似文献   

10.
A catalase peroxidase (CP) from the newly isolated Bacillus SF was used to treat textile-bleaching effluents. The enzyme was stable at high pH values and temperatures, but was more sensitive to deactivation by hydrogen peroxide than monofunctional catalases. Based on the Michaelis-Menten kinetics of the CP, a model was developed to describe its deactivation characteristics. The enzyme was immobilised on various alumina-based carrier materials with different shapes and the specific activity increased with the porosity of the carrier. The shape of the carrier had an important influence on the release of oxygen formed during the catalase reaction from the packed-bed reactor and Novalox saddles were found to be the most suitable shape. Bleaching effluent was treated in a horizontal packed-bed reactor containing 10 kg of the immobilised CP at a textile-finishing company. The treated liquid (500 l) was reused within the company for dyeing fabrics with various dyes, resulting in acceptable colour differences of below Delta E*=1.0 for all dyes.  相似文献   

11.
Catalase-2, the catalase found in spores of Bacillus subtilis, has been purified to homogeneity from a nonsporulating strain. The apparent native molecular weight is 504,000. The enzyme appears to be composed of six identical protomers with a molecular weight of 81,000 each. The amino acid composition is similar to the composition of other catalases. Like most catalases, catalase-2 exhibits a broad pH optimum from pH 4 to pH 12 and is sensitive to cyanide, azide, thiol reagents, and amino triazole. The apparent Km for H2O2 is 78 mM. The enzyme exhibits extreme stability, losing activity only slowly at 93 degrees C and remaining active in 1% SDS-7 M urea. The green-colored enzyme exhibits a spectrum like heme d with a Soret absorption at 403 nm and a molar absorptivity consistent with one heme per subunit. The heme cannot be extracted with acetone-HCl or ether, suggesting that it is covalently bound to the protein.  相似文献   

12.
In the absence of exogenous electron donors monofunctional heme peroxidases can slowly degrade hydrogen peroxide following a mechanism different from monofunctional catalases. This pseudo-catalase cycle involves several redox intermediates including Compounds I, II and III, hydrogen peroxide reduction and oxidation reactions as well as release of both dioxygen and superoxide. The rate of decay of oxyferrous complex determines the rate-limiting step and the enzymes’ resistance to inactivation. Homologous bifunctional catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are unique in having both a peroxidase and high hydrogen dismutation activity without inhibition reactions. It is demonstrated that KatGs follow a similar reaction pathway as monofunctional peroxidases, but use a unique post-translational distal modification (Met+-Tyr-Trp adduct) in close vicinity to the heme as radical site that enhances turnover of oxyferrous heme and avoids release of superoxide. Similarities and differences between monofunctional peroxidases and bifunctional KatGs are discussed and mechanisms of pseudo-catalase activity are proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Catalase-1, one of four catalase activities of Neurospora crassa, is associated with non-growing cells and accumulates in asexual spores. It is a large, tetrameric, highly efficient, and durable enzyme that is active even at molar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. Catalase-1 is oxidized at the heme by singlet oxygen without significant effects on enzyme activity. Here we present the crystal structure of catalase-1 at 1.75A resolution. Compared to structures of other catalases of the large class, the main differences were found at the carboxy-terminal domain. The heme group is rotated 180 degrees around the alpha-gamma-meso carbon axis with respect to clade 3 small catalases. There is no co-ordination bond of the ferric ion at the heme distal side in catalase-1. The catalase-1 structure exhibited partial oxidation of heme b to heme d. Singlet oxygen, produced catalytically or by photosensitization, may hydroxylate C5 and C6 of pyrrole ring III with a subsequent formation of a gamma-spirolactone in C6. The modification site in catalases depends on the way dioxygen exits the protein: mainly through the central channel or the main channel in large and small catalases, respectively. The catalase-1 structure revealed an unusual covalent bond between a cysteine sulphur atom and the essential tyrosine residue of the proximal side of the active site. A peptide with the predicted theoretical mass of the two bound tryptic peptides was detected by mass spectrometry. A mechanism for the Cys-Tyr covalent bond formation is proposed. The tyrosine bound to the cysteine residue would be less prone to donate electrons to compound I to form compound II, explaining catalase-1 resistance to substrate inhibition and inactivation. An apparent constriction of the main channel at Ser198 lead us to propose a gate that opens the narrow part of the channel when there is sufficient hydrogen peroxide in the small cavity before the gate. This mechanism would explain the increase in catalytic velocity as the hydrogen peroxide concentration rises.  相似文献   

14.
Three genes encoding heme hydroperoxidases (katA, katB, and katC) have been identified in the soil bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti. The recombinant proteins were overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified in order to achieve a spectral and kinetic characterization. The three proteins contain heme b with high-spin Fe(III). KatB is an acidic bifunctional homodimeric catalase-peroxidase exhibiting both catalase (k(cat) = 2400 s(-1)) and peroxidase activity and having a high affinity for hydrogen peroxide (apparent K(M) = 1.6 mM). KatA and KatC are acidic monofunctional homotetrameric catalases. Although different in size (KatA is a small subunit catalase while KatC is a large subunit catalase) both enzymes exhibit the same heme type and a similar affinity for H(2)O(2) (apparent K(M) values of 160 and 150 mM). However, the turnover rate of KatA (k(cat) = 279000 s(-1)) exceeds that of KatC (k(cat) = 3100 s(-1)) significantly. The kinetic parameters are in good agreement with the physiological role of these heme proteins. KatB is the housekeeping hydroperoxidase exhibiting the highest affinity for hydrogen peroxide, while KatA has the lowest H(2)O(2) affinity but the highest k(cat)/K(M) value (1.75 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)), in agreement with the hydrogen peroxide inducibility of the encoding gene. Moreover, the lower catalytic efficiency of KatC (2.1 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)) appears to be enough for growing in the stationary phase and/or under heat or salt stress (conditions that are known to favor katC expression).  相似文献   

15.
Methanosarcina barkeri is a strictly anaerobic, cytochrome-containing, methane-forming archaeon. We report here that the microorganism contains a catalase, which was purified and characterized. The enzyme with an apparent molecular mass of 190 kDa was shown to be composed of four identical subunits of apparent molecular mass of 54 kDa. The heme-containing enzyme did not exhibit peroxidase activity, which indicates that it is a monofunctional catalase. This is substantiated by the primary structure, which is related to that of other monofunctional catalases rather than to that of bifunctional catalase-peroxidases. The enzyme showed an [S]0.5V for H2O2 of 25 mM and an apparent V max of 200,000 U/mg; it was inhibited by azide ([I]0.5V = 1 μM) and cyanide ([I]0.5V = 5 μM) and inactivated by 1,2,4-aminotriazole. The activity was almost independent of the pH (between pH 4 and 10) and the temperature (between 15 °C and 55 °C). Comparison of the primary structure of monofunctional catalases revealed that the enzyme from M. barkeri is most closely related to the monofunctional catalase of Dictyostelium discoideum. Received: 29 December 1998 / Accepted: 1 March 1999  相似文献   

16.
In this study, an approx. 2.5-kb gene fragment including the catalase gene from Rhodospirillum rubrum S1 was cloned and characterized. The determination of the complete nucleotide sequence revealed that the cloned DNA fragment was organized into three open reading frames, designated as ORF1, catalase, and ORF3 in that order. The catalase gene consisted of 1,455 nucleotides and 484 amino acids, including the initiation and stop codons, and was located 326 bp upstream in the opposite direction of ORF1. The catalase was overproduced in Escherichia coli UM255, a catalase-deficient mutant, and then purified for the biochemical characterization of the enzyme. The purified catalase had an estimated molecular mass of 189 kDa, consisting of four identical subunits of 61 kDa. The enzyme exhibited activity over a broad pH range from pH 5.0 to pH 11.0 and temperature range from 20 degrees C to 60 degrees C. The catalase activity was inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole, cyanide, azide, and hydroxylamine. The enzyme's K(m) value and V(max) of the catalase for H2O2 were 21.8 mM and 39,960 U/mg, respectively. Spectrophotometric analysis revealed that the ratio of A406 to A280 for the catalase was 0.97, indicating the presence of a ferric component. The absorption spectrum of catalase-4 exhibited a Soret band at 406 nm, which is typical of a heme-containing catalase. Treatment of the enzyme with dithionite did not alter the spectral shape and revealed no peroxidase activity. The combined results of the gene sequence and biochemical characterization proved that the catalase cloned from strain S1in this study was a typical monofunctional catalase, which differed from the other types of catalases found in strain S1.  相似文献   

17.
Catalase is a highly conserved heme-containing antioxidant enzyme known for its ability to degrade hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. In low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, the enzyme also exhibits peroxidase activity. We report that mammalian catalase also possesses oxidase activity. This activity, which is detected in purified catalases, cell lysates, and intact cells, requires oxygen and utilizes electron donor substrates in the absence of hydrogen peroxide or any added cofactors. Using purified bovine catalase and 10-acetyl-3,7-dihydroxyphenoxazine as the substrate, the oxidase activity was found to be temperature-dependent and displays a pH optimum of 7-9. The Km for the substrate is 2.4 x 10(-4) m, and Vmax is 4.7 x 10(-5) m/s. Endogenous substrates, including the tryptophan precursor indole, the neurotransmitter precursor beta-phenylethylamine, and a variety of peroxidase and laccase substrates, as well as carcinogenic benzidines, were found to be oxidized by catalase or to inhibit this activity. Several dietary plant micronutrients that inhibit carcinogenesis, including indole-3-carbinol, indole-3-carboxaldehyde, ferulic acid, vanillic acid, and epigallocatechin-3-gallate, were effective inhibitors of the activity of catalase oxidase. Difference spectroscopy revealed that catalase oxidase/substrate interactions involve the heme-iron; the resulting spectra show time-dependent decreases in the ferric heme of the enzyme with corresponding increases in the formation of an oxyferryl intermediate, potentially reflecting a compound II-like intermediate. These data suggest a mechanism of oxidase activity involving the formation of an oxygen-bound, substrate-facilitated reductive intermediate. Our results describe a novel function for catalase potentially important in metabolism of endogenous substrates and in the action of carcinogens and chemopreventative agents.  相似文献   

18.
Effluent from the caustic extraction stage of a bleach plant is highly colored due to the presence of dissolved products from lignin chlorination and oxidation. Color removal from the effluent by hydrogen peroxide at neutral pH was catalyzed by addition of horseradish peroxidase. The catalysis with peroxidase (20 mg/L) was observed over a wide range of peroxide concentrations (0.1mM-500mM), but the largest effect was between 1mM and 100mM. The pH optimum for catalysis was around 5.0, while the basal rate of noncatalyzed peroxide color removal simply increased with pH within the range tested (3-10). Peroxidase catalysis at pH 7.6 reached a maximum at 40 degrees C in 4 h assays with 10mM peroxide, and disappeared above 60 degrees C. Compared with mycelial color removal by Coriolus versicolor, the rate of color removal by peroxide plus peroxidase was initially faster (first 4 h), but the extent of color removal after 48 h was higher with the fungal treatment. Further addition of peroxidase to the enzyme-treated effluent did not produce additional catalysis. Thus, the peroxide/peroxidase system did not fully represent the metabolic route used by the fungus.  相似文献   

19.
A manganese-containing catalase has been characterized from Thermoleophilum album NM, a gram-negative aerobic bacterium obligate for thermophily and n-alkane substrates. The level of catalase in cells was increased about ninefold by growth in the presence of paraquat (2.5 microM), a superoxide-generating toxicant. Superoxide dismutase levels were unaffected by this compound. The enzyme was purified from cultures grown in the presence of paraquat to greater than 95% homogeneity and had an Mr of 141,000. The enzyme was composed of four subunits, and each had an Mr of 34,000. There were 1.4 +/- 0.4 atoms of manganese present per subunit. The catalase had a Km for hydrogen peroxide of 15 mM and a Vmax of 11 mM/mg. Peroxidase activity, as measured with p-phenylenediamine, copurified with the catalase. Inhibitors of heme-catalase were weak inhibitors of the T. album enzyme. The optimum pH for catalase activity was 8 to 9. The enzyme was stable from pH 6.5 to 11 and retained activity at assay temperatures from 25 to 80 degrees C. The catalase was stable for 24 h of incubation at 60 degrees C.  相似文献   

20.
In the present study, we investigated how cytochrome c catalyzed the nitration of tyrosine at various pHs. The cytochrome c-catalyzed nitration of tyrosine occurred in proportion to the concentration of hydrogen peroxide, nitrite or cytochrome c. The cytochromec-catalyzed nitration of tyrosine was inhibited by catalase, sodium azide, cystein, and uric acid. These results show that the cytochrome c-catalyzed nitrotyrosine formation was due to peroxidase activity. The rate constant between cytochrome c and hydrogen peroxide within the pH range of 3-8 was the largest at pH 6 (37 degrees C). The amount of nitrotyrosine formed was the greatest at pH 5. At pH 3, only cytochromec-independent nitration of tyrosine occurred in the presence of nitrite. At this pH, the UV as well as visible spectrum of cytochrome c was changed by nitrite, even in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, probably via the formation of a heme iron-nitric oxide complex. Due to this change, the peroxidase activity of cytochrome c was lost.  相似文献   

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