首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The thermophilic fungus Malbranchea pulchella var. sulfurea produced good amounts of extracellular trehalase activity when grown for long periods on starch, maltose or glucose as the main carbon source. Studies with young cultures suggested that the main role of the extracellular acid trehalase is utilizing trehalose as a carbon source. The specific activity of the purified enzyme in the presence of manganese (680 U/mg protein) was comparable to that of other thermophilic fungi enzymes, but many times higher than the values reported for trehalases from other microbial sources. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was estimated to be 104 kDa by gel filtration and 52 kDa by SDS-PAGE, suggesting that the enzyme was composed by two subunits. The carbohydrate content of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 19 % and the pi was 3.5. The optimum pH and temperature were 5.0–5.5 and 55° C, respectively. The purified enzyme was stimulated by manganese and inhibited by calcium ions, and insensitive to ATP and ADP, and 1 mM silver ions. The apparent KM values for trehalose hydrolysis by the purified enzyme in the absence and presence of manganese chloride were 2.70±0.29 and 2.58±0.13 mM, respectively. Manganese ions affected only the apparent Vmax, increasing the catalytic efficiency value by 9.2-fold. The results reported herein indicate that Malbranchea pulchella produces a trehalase with mixed biochemical properties, different from the conventional acid and neutral enzymes and also from trehalases from other thermophilic fungi.  相似文献   

2.
Two different trehalose-hydrolysing activities, known as acid or non-regulatory trehalases, and neutral or regulatory trehalases, have been recognised in a number of fungal species. The true role of these apparently redundant hydrolases remained obscure for many years. However, recent evidence suggests that neutral trehalases would be specialised in the mobilisation of cytosolic trehalose, while acid trehalases would only hydrolyse extracellular trehalose. Results obtained with Mucor rouxii, a Zygomycete initially thought to posses only neutral trehalase activity, reinforced this hypothesis. M. rouxii grows efficiently in trehalose as the sole carbon source. Trehalose-grown or carbon-starved cells exhibit a high trehalase activity of optimum pH 4.5, bound to the external surface of the cell wall, in contrast with the neutral (pH 6.5) trehalase, which occurs in the cytosol. Other differences between the neutral and the acid trehalases are the temperature optimum (35°C and 45°C, respectively) and thermal stability (half-life of 2.5 min and 12 min at 45°C, respectively). The neutral trehalase, but not the acid trehalase, is activated in vitro by cAMP-dependent phosphorylation, stimulated by Ca2+, and inhibited by EDTA. It shows maximal activity at germination and decreases as growth proceeds. In contrast the activity of the acid trehalase is totally repressed in glucose-grown cultures and increases upon exhaustion of the carbon source, and is strongly induced by extracellular trehalose.  相似文献   

3.
Summary A soluble trehalase was purified more than 200-fold from the male accessory gland of the American cockroach,Periplaneta americana, by CM-cellulose, hydrophobic chromatography, and Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. The final preparation was homogeneous as judged by polyacryl-amide gel electrophoresis in the absence and presence of SDS, isoelectric focusing, and immuno-diffusion tests. The purified enzyme was maximally active at pH 5.2, and showed high specificity for trehalose with aK m of 0.98 mM. The isoelectric point was 4.7. The molecular weight of the enzyme (75,000) was determined by molecular sieve chromatography and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition was determined and compared with those of trehalases purified from other sources. The trehalase could be stained for carbohydrate with the periodic acid-Schiff's reagent following SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that it was a glycoprotein. Another soluble trehalase and two types of fat body trehalases could be highly purified by the method described. A comparison of the properties of trehalases from the accessory gland and the fat body showed some resemblance.  相似文献   

4.
BackgroundTrehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide highly conserved throughout evolution. In yeasts, trehalose hydrolysis is confined to the enzyme trehalase, an α-glucosidase specific for trehalose as sole substrate. Two kinds of trehalase activity exist in yeasts: neutral and acid enzymes.Scope of the reviewThis review makes a comparative survey of the main biochemical and genetic parameters, regulatory systems, tridimensional structure and catalytic mechanism of the two yeast trehalases.Major conclusionsThe yeast neutral and acid trehalases display sharp differences in biochemical features (optimum pH, Mr or amino acid sequence) physiological roles, subcellular location (cytosol vs vacuoles or cell wall) and regulatory control (phosphorylation vs catabolite repression). However, their identical specificity for trehalose is based on the presence of an (α/α)6 toroid folding structure in the active centre and a catalytic mechanism of anomeric inversion.General significanceThis review expands our knowledge of the homology, functional features and catalytic mechanisms of α-glucosidases in yeasts. It provides a further analysis of the correlation between structures and predicted biological roles of macromolecules.  相似文献   

5.
Surface sterilised stelar tissues from onion roots exhibiting typical pink root symptoms were plated on water agar and incubated under cool white fluorescent light (CWFL) for 12 h day-1 at 20°C. After 4–5 days, the plates were examined with the 10? objective of a compound microscope and tissues producing conidia of Fusarium spp. were discarded. Sub-cultures of isolates suspected to be Pyrenochaeta terrestris, grown from Fusarium-negative tissues, were transferred to chloroamphenicol-amended (500 ppm) corn-meal (CCMA) agar plates and incubated at 24°C under CWFL for a further 10–14 days. Cultures with setose pycnidia were identified as P. terrestris. Plates were again scanned for conidia of Fusarium spp., and cultures negative for Fusarium spp., but not producing pycnidia, were suspected to be P. terrestris. These were compared with known isolates on CCMA. On this medium growth of P. terrestris was slow, producing appressed, pinkish colonies which were circular with a smooth margin. All isolates of P. terrestris isolated by the procedure caused pink root of onion when tested, whereas none of the Fusarium spp. isolated produced the disease. However, a mixed inoculums of P. terrestris and Fusariurn solani produced typical pink root symptoms.  相似文献   

6.
Five toxigenic isolates of Fusarium species were tested for the production of zearalenone, moniliformin and trichothecenes (deoxynivalenol, 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol, T-2, HT-2 and neosolaniol) when grown on solid sugar beet slices in the laboratory for thirty days. The isolates were also grown on a solid rice medium for comparison. High zearalenone and trichothecene-producing isolates originally obtained from corn and corn-based feedstuff were compared with isolates obtained from sugar beets. One moniliformin-producing isolate from wheat was included in the study. With the exception of moniliformin, all toxins were produced on both substrates; however, the rice medium yielded the greater concentrations except for HT-2 which was produced on sugar beets in equal or greater concentrations. Zearalenone production on rice reached 729–1943 gmg/g whereas on sugar beet it reached 72–193 gmg/g. The moniliformin-producing isolate grew well on both substrates; however, moniliformin was produced only on the rice substrate. This study demonstrates for the first time that Fusarium species can produce both zearalenone and the trichothecenes on a sugar beet substrate.  相似文献   

7.
Ayurvedic medicine, which uses decoctions made of medicinal plants, is used to cure diseases in many Asian countries including Sri Lanka. Although proper storage facilities for medicinal plants are unavailable in Sri Lanka, neither the potential for growth of toxigenic fungi nor their ability to produce mycotoxins in stored medicinal plants has been investigated. We isolated three Fusarium species, F. culmorum, F. acuminatum and F. graminearum from the medicinal plant Tribulus terrestris. Culture extracts of the 3 Fusarium spp. were cytotoxic to mammalian cell lines BHK-21 and HEP-2. Three toxic metabolites produced by Fusarium spp; T-2 toxin, zearalenone, and diacetoxyscirpenol were also cytotoxic to the same mammalian cell lines. The 3 Fusarium spp. grown on rice media produced zearalenone. Plant material destined for medicinal use should be stored under suitable conditions to prevent growth of naturally occurring toxigenic fungi prior to its use.  相似文献   

8.
Fusarium is one of the important phytopathogenic genera of microfungi causing serious losses on cucurbit plants in Kermanshah province, the largest area of cucurbits plantation in Iran. Therefore, the objectives in this study were to isolate and identify disease-causing Fusarium spp. from infected cucurbit plants, to ascertain their pathogenicity, and to determine their phylogenetic relationships. A total of 100 Fusarium isolates were obtained from diseased cucurbit plants collected from fields in different geographic regions in Kermanshah province, Iran. According to morphological characters, all isolates were identified as Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium proliferatum, Fusarium equiseti, Fusarium semitectum and Fusarium solani. All isolates of the five Fusarium spp. were evaluated for their pathogenicity on healthy cucumber (Cucumis sativus) and honeydew melon (Cucumis melo) seedlings in the glasshouse. F. oxysporum caused damping-off in 20–35 days on both cucurbit seedlings tested. Typical stem rot symptoms were observed within 15 days after inoculation with F. solani on both seedlings. Based on the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis, the five Fusarium species were divided into two major groups. In particular, isolates belonging to the F. solani species complex (FSSC) were separated into two RFLP types. Grouping among Fusarium strains derived from restriction analysis was in agreement with criteria used in morphological classification. Therefore, the PCR-ITS-RFLP method provides a simple and rapid procedure for the differentiation of Fusarium strains at species level. This is the first report on identification and pathogenicity of major plant pathogenic Fusarium spp. causing root and stem rot on cucurbits in Iran.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Effects of temperature and seedling age on survival of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) seedlings grown on sand-wheat wholemeal cultures of different isolates ofFusarium spp. (9 isolates),Pythium spp. (9 isolates), andChaetomium spp. (1 isolate) are reported. Some isolates were virulent over the whole range of temperatures tested (7.5–27.5°C). The virulence of others depended on temperature. Most isolates were less virulent at intermediate temperatures (12.5–22.5°C) than at higher or lower temperatures. At 25°C ryegrass seedlings were susceptible to fungal attack for only a limited period after germination commenced. This period differed for different fungi, but for most isolates tested, seedlings were resistant after 2–3 days.  相似文献   

10.
The activation of neutral trehalase (Ntp1) by metabolic and physical stresses in Schizosaccharomyces pombe is dependent on protein kinases Pka1 or Sck1. Mutant ntp1 alleles altered for potentially phosphorylatable serine residues within the regulatory domain of the enzyme were integrated under the control of the native promoter in an ntp1-deleted background. The trehalase variants were expressed to a level similar to that of wild type trehalase from control cells. Wild type trehalase protein accumulated and became activated upon stress while a single change in the evolutionary conserved perfect consensus site for Pka1-dependent phosphorylation (Ser71), as well as point mutations in two other putative phosphorylation sites (Ser6, Ser51), produced inactive trehalases unresponsive to stress. Trehalose content in the trehalase mutated strains increased upon salt stress to a level comparable to that shown by an ntp1-deleted mutant. When exposed to heat shock, trehalose hyperaccumulated in the ntp1-null strain lacking trehalase protein and this phenotype was shown by some (Ser71), but not all, strains with serine mutated trehalases. The mutant trehalases retained the ability to form complexes with trehalose-6-phosphate synthase. These data support a role of potentially phosphorylated specific sites for the activation of S. pombe neutral trehalase and for the heat shock-induced accumulation of trehalose.  相似文献   

11.
Nine isolates of Botryosphaeria spp. were screened for lipases when cultivated on eight different plant seed oils and glycerol, and all produced lipases. Botryosphaeria ribis EC-01 produced highest lipase titres on soybean oil and glycerol, while eight isolates of Botryosphaeria rhodina produced significantly lower enzyme titres. B. ribis EC-01 produced lipase when grown on different fatty acids, surfactants, carbohydrates and triacylglycerols, with highest enzyme titres produced on Triton X-100-emulsified stearic (316.7 U/mL), palmitic (283.5 U/mL) and oleic (247.4 U/mg) acids, and soybean oil (105.6 U/mL), as well as castor oil (191.2 U/mg); an enhancement of 9-fold over soybean oil-grown cultures. Glycerol was also a good substrate for lipase production. The crude lipase extract was optimally active at pH 8.0 and 55 °C, stable between 30 and 55 °C and pH 1–10, and tolerant to 50% (v/v) glycerol, methanol and ethanol. The crude lipase showed affinity for substrates of short, average and long-chain fatty acids (different esters of p-nitrophenol and triacylglycerols). Zymograms developed with 4-methylumbelliferyl-butyrate showed two bands of lipolytic activity at 45 and 15 kDa. This is the first report on the production of lipases by B. ribis grown on these different carbon sources.  相似文献   

12.
We cloned the Kluyveromyces lactis KlNTH1 gene, which encodes neutral trehalase. It showed 65.2% and 68.5% identity at nucleotide and amino acid sequence level, respectively, with the Saccharomyces cerevisiae NTH1 gene. Multiple alignment of the predicted trehalase protein sequences from yeasts, bacteria, insects, and mammals revealed two major domains of conservation. Only the yeast trehalases displayed in an N-terminal extension two consensus sites for cAMP-dependent protein phosphorylation and a putative Ca2+-binding sequence. Gene disruption of the KlNTH1 gene abolished neutral trehalase activity and clearly revealed a trehalase activity with an acid pH optimum. It also resulted in a high constitutive trehalose level. Expression of the KlNTH1 gene in an S. cerevisiae nth1Δ mutant resulted in rapid activation of the heterologous trehalase upon addition of glucose to cells growing on a nonfermentable carbon source and upon addition of a nitrogen source to cells starved for nitrogen in a glucose-containing medium. In K. lactis, the same responses were observed except that rapid activation by glucose was observed only in early-exponential-phase cells. Inactivation of K. lactis neutral trehalase by alkaline phosphatase and activation by cAMP in cell extracts are consistent with control of the enzyme by cAMP-dependent protein phosphorylation. Received: 19 March 1996 / Accepted: 15 October 1996  相似文献   

13.
The contamination of cereals with mycotoxins produced by species ofFusarium is an important risk to human and animal health. The toxigenic profile is different depending on theFusarium species considered and, in some species, differences can also be observed at intraspecific level. Information about the distribution and variability of the mycotoxigenicFusarium species allow prediction of the toxins that may occur and to devise control strategies. In this work, the occurrence of mycotoxigenicFusarium species associated to cereals was analysed in a wide sample of durum wheat fields (Triticum durum Desf.) and maize from the South West of Spain (Andalucía).F. equiseti, F. graminearum andF. culmorum were the most frequentFusarium species detected in wheat fields followed byF. sambucinum andF. avenaceum, whereas in the case of maize,F. verticillioides andF. proliferatum were the onlyFusarium species present. The relationships of the Spanish isolates from theF. equiseti, F. avenaceum andF. sambucinum species were analysed by nucleotide sequence comparison of a partial region of the Elongation Factor 1 alpha (EF-1α) with other sequences available in data bases. The results indicated thatF. avenaceum andF. equiseti showed high variability and that the SpanishF. equiseti isolates seemed to belong toF. equiseti type II. Presented at the EU-USA Bilateral Workshop on Toxigenic Fungi & Mycotoxins, New Orleans, USA, July 5–7, 2005 Financial support: MCYT (AGL2004/07549/C05/5). M. Jurado was supported by pre-doctoral fellowship by the MCYT  相似文献   

14.
In vitro antagonistic effects of rhizobacteria associated with Coffea arabica L. against some fungal coffee pathogens were studied. The aims were to screen indigenous coffee‐associated isolates for their inherent antagonistic potential against major coffee wilt diseases induced by Fusarium spp. Antagonistic effects, siderophore, HCN and lytic enzyme production were determined on standard solid media. Chemical methods were employed to categorize the major types of siderophores. From a total of 212 rhizobacterial isolates tested, over 10 % (all Pseudomonas and Bacillus spp.) exhibited remarkable inhibition against Fusarium spp. One isolate AUPB24 (P. chlororaphis) showed maximum inhibition of mycelial growth against all fungal pathogens tested, whereas other isolates were mostly inhibitory to F. stilboides and F. oxysporum. The isolate AUBB20 (B. subtilis) was most antagonistic to F. xylarioides. Of the rhizobacterial isolates tested, 67 % produced siderophores and 35 % produced HCN. Many strains (all Pseudomonas spp.) produced siderophores of the hydroxamate type and only a small proportion produced those of the catecholate type. Few antagonists showed chitinase activity. The production of siderophores and HCN by Pseudomonas spp., lipase and protease by all antagonists and β‐1,3‐glucanase by several Bacillus spp. could be considered the major mechanisms involved in the inhibition of fungal growth. The in vitro results provide the first evidence of an antagonistic effect of coffee‐associated rhizobacteria against the emerging fungal coffee pathogens F. stilboides and F. xylarioides and indicate the potential of both bacterial groups for biological control of coffee wilt diseases.  相似文献   

15.
The predominant fungi present in samples of reject and retail red kidney beans were Aspergillus glaucus, Penicillium spp. and Alternaria spp. Together with A. ochraceus, A. flavus, Fusarium spp., and Trichoderma, these isolates from the reject beans were screened for numerous mycotoxins by TLC. The most consistently produced mycotoxins were penicillic acid (from A. ochraceus and Penicillium spp.) and Alternaria toxins (tenuazonic acid and alternariol). A. glaucus strains were tested for cytotoxicity in three tissue culture cell lines with positive results.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of several long-term conventional and conservation tillage treatments on the incidence and the diversity ofFusarium spp. in soil was studied. Soil samples were randomly collected from naturally contaminated field trials and Fusarium species were isolated by using the dilution plate method. The identification of the species was done by direct microscopic observation onFusarium-specific media. The isolation frequency ofFusarium species and the total number of colony forming units was affected by the sampling year and the cultivated crop and showed significant differences between the tillage treatments. Moldboard plough-treatments resulted in a lower diversity of Fusarium species than the chisel plough and rotary tiller treatments. Besides the tillage system the tillage depth also appeared to affect theFusarium populations. The deeper the tillage the lower was the number of isolatedFusarium spp. TwentyFusarium species were identified over both years of investigation. In conservation tillage plots a higher diversity ofFusarium species was found than in the moldboard plough-based tillage plots. A correlation betweenFusarium species producing the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON) isolated from soil and the DON-content of grain could not be observed. However, these investigations indicate that conservation soil tillage results in conditions which increase the incidence ofFusarium species in soil.  相似文献   

17.
Yeasts and filamentous fungi are endowed with two different trehalose-hydrolysing activities, termed acid and neutral trehalases according to their optimal pH for enzymatic activity. A wealth of information already exists on fungal neutral trehalases, while data on localization, regulation and function of fungal acid trehalases have remained elusive. The gene encoding the latter enzyme has now been isolated from two yeast species and two filamentous fungi, and sequences encoding putative acid trehalase can be retrieved from available public sequences. Despite weak similarities between amino acids sequences, this type of trehalase potentially harbours either a transmembrane segment or a signal peptide at the N-terminal sequence, as deduced from domain prediction algorithms. This feature, together with the demonstration that acid trehalase from yeasts and filamentous fungi is localized at the cell surface, is consistent with its main role in the utilisation of exogenous trehalose as a carbon source. The growth on this disaccharide is in fact pretty effective in most fungi except in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This yeast species actually exhibits a "Kluyver effect" on trehalose. Moreover, an oscillatory behaviour reminiscent of what is observed in aerobic glucose-limited continuous cultures at low dilution rate is also observed in batch growth on trehalose. Finally, the S. cerevisiae acid trehalase may also participate in the catabolism of endogenous trehalose by a mechanism that likely requires the export of the disaccharide, its extracellular hydrolysis, and the subsequent uptake of the glucose released. Based on these recent findings, we suggest to rename "acid" and "neutral" trehalases as "extracellular" and "cytosolic" trehalases, which is more adequate to describe their localization and function in the fungal cell.  相似文献   

18.
Liquid cultures of 200 Fusarium isolates selected to represent the most common species found in autumn pasture (70 isolates) and in grain (130 isolates) grown in New Zealand were analysed for trichothecenes and related compounds. Production of butenolide, cyclonerodiol derivatives and culmorins was also measured. The principal trichothecenes produced were derivatives of either nivalenol (NIV), deoxynivalenol (DON) or scirpentriol (Sctol), in order of frequency. The principal trichothecene producing species were F. crookwellense, F. culmorum and F. graminearum. Isolates of the first two species were predominantly NIV-chemotypes with one or two isolates respectively as Sctol-chemotypes. F. graminearum showed equal quantities of NIV- and DON-chemotypes, with the DON-chemotypes producing primarily 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol (15-ADON).  相似文献   

19.
Eight Fusarium spp. were isolated from greenhouse-grown jimsonweed (Datura stramonium L.) in Mississippi in 1990. Four isolates of Fusarium moniliforme were obtained and when grown on autoclaved rice, produced 115 to 3,200 mg/kg fumonisin B1, (FB1). Other fumonisin-related compounds, such as FB2, FB3 and FB4 were also produced at levels of 240, 210 and 160 mg/kg, respectively. F. semitectum (1 isolates) was negative for production of fumonisin and other phyto-toxins. F. oxysporutn (1 isolate) produced only 3.5 g/kg moniliformin. This is the first report of production of fumonisins by F. moniliforme isolated from weeds such as jimsonweed.  相似文献   

20.
A total of 57 samples of feedstuffs commonly used for animal nutrition in Colombia (corn, soybean, sorghum, cottonseed meal, sunflower seed meal, wheat middlings and rice) were analyzed for Fusarium contamination. Fusarium fungi were identified at species level by means of conventional methods and the ability to produce fumonisins of the most prevailing species was determined. A total of 41 of the feedstuffs analyzed (71.9%) were found to contain Fusarium spp. Most contaminated substrates were corn (100%), cottonseed meal (100%), sorghum (80%), and soybean (80%). Wheat middlings and rice showed lower levels of contamination (40% and 20%, respectively), while no Fusarium spp. could be isolated from sunflower seed meal. The most prevalent species of Fusarium isolated were F. verticilliodes (70.8%), F.␣proliferatum (25.0%), and F. subglutinans (4.2%). All of them correspond to section Liseola.Production of fumonisins on corn by the isolated Fusarium was screened through liquid chromatography. Almost all strains of F. verticilliodes (97.1%) produced FB1 (5.6–25,846.4 mg/kg) and FB2 (3.4–7507.5 mg/kg). Similarly, almost all strains of F.␣proliferatum (91.7%) produced fumonisins but at lower levels than F.␣verticilliodes (FB1 from 6.9 to 3885.0 mg/kg, and FB2 from 34.3 to 373.8 mg/kg), while F. subglutinans did not produce these toxins. This is the first study in Colombia describing toxigenic Fusarium isolates from␣animal feedstuffs.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号