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1.
An extracellular, 700,000-Mr multiprotein complex that catalyzed the hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose (Avicel) was isolated from cultures of Clostridium sp. strain C7, a mesophile from freshwater sediment. In addition to cellulose (Avicel, ball-milled filter paper), the multiprotein complex hydrolyzed carboxymethylcellulose, cellodextrins, xylan, and xylooligosaccharides. Hydrolysis of cellulose or cellotetraose by the complex yielded cellobiose as the main product. Cellopentaose or cellohexaose was hydrolyzed by the complex to cellotriose or cellotetraose, respectively, in addition to cellobiose. Xylobiose was the main product of xylan hydrolysis, and xylobiose and xylotriose were the major products of xylooligosaccharide hydrolysis. Activity (Avicelase) resulting in hydrolysis of crystalline cellulose required Ca2+ and a reducing agent. The multiprotein complex had temperature optima for Avicelase, carboxymethylcellulase, and xylanase activities at 45, 55, and 55 degrees C, respectively, and pH optima at 5.6 to 5.8, 5.5, and 6.55, respectively. Electron microscopy of the 700,000-Mr enzyme complex revealed particles relatively uniform in size (12 to 15 nm wide) and apparently composed of subunit structures. Elution of strain C7 concentrated culture fluid from Sephacryl S-300 columns yielded an A280 peak in the 130,000-Mr region. Pooled fractions from the 130,000-Mr peak had carboxymethylcellulase activity but lacked Avicelase activity. Except for the inability to hydrolyze cellulose, the 130,000-Mr preparation had a substrate specificity identical to that of the 700,000-Mr protein complex. A comparison by immunoblotting techniques of proteins in the 130,000- and 700,000-Mr preparations, indicated that the two enzyme preparations had cross-reacting antigenic determinants.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The specific properties have been examined of the 1,4-beta-glucanase component of Trichoderma koningii that participates in an early and effective stage of random breakdown of native cellulose to short fibres. The enzyme was purified and freed from associated components of the cellulase complex (particularly beta-glucosidase) that interfere with, and complicate interpretation of, the action of such enzymes. Purification increased the specific activity 25-fold over culture filtrates; the enzyme hydrolysed CM-cellulose faster than the purified beta-glucosidase from the same organism hydrolysed any of its substrates (cellobiose or cellodextrins). The specificity of the glucanase was directed towards soluble derivatives of cellulose, CM-cellulose and cellodextrins, and not to insoluble cellulose or alpha-linked polymers. The approximate Km was 2.5 mg of CM-cellulose . ml-1 at 37 degrees C at the optimum pH, 5.5, where enzymic activity was maximal with 6--7 mg of CM-cellulose . ml-1 and inhibited by higher concentrations. The temperature optimum was 60 degrees C. The glucanase attacked larger cellodextrins (cellohexaose to cellotetraose, in that order) much more readily than smaller dextrins (cellobiose and cellotriose) and released a mixture of products, glucose up to cellopentaose, which was quantitatively determined after chromatography on charcoal. Similar examination of hydrolysates of the reduced cellodextrins showed clearly the high specificity of the enzyme for the central bond of its natural substrates (the cellodextrins), whatever their chain length, and indicated the nature of the enzyme as an endoglucanase. Outer bonds shared a weaker, but similar, susceptibility to enzymic cleavage. Transferase activity was absent and no larger dextrins than the initial substrate were formed.  相似文献   

4.
An endoglucanase encoded by a gene of Clostridium josui was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The homogeneous enzyme, with a molecular weight of 39,000, revealed maximum endoglucanase activity at pH 7.2 to 7.5 and a temperature of 65 to 70 degrees C. The enzyme was stable at a temperature lower than 45 degrees C (the growth temperature of the bacterium) in the range of pH 4.5 to 9.0. The amino acid sequence of the enzyme at the N terminus was Val-Glu-Glu-Asp-Ser-Ser-His-Leu-Ile-Thr-Asn-Gln-Ala-Lys-Lys----. The enzyme hydrolyzed cellotetraose to cellobiose and then transferred cellobiose to the residual cellotetraose. The resulting cellohexaose was cleaved to cellotriose.  相似文献   

5.
An endoglucanase encoded by a gene of Clostridium josui was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The homogeneous enzyme, with a molecular weight of 39,000, revealed maximum endoglucanase activity at pH 7.2 to 7.5 and a temperature of 65 to 70 degrees C. The enzyme was stable at a temperature lower than 45 degrees C (the growth temperature of the bacterium) in the range of pH 4.5 to 9.0. The amino acid sequence of the enzyme at the N terminus was Val-Glu-Glu-Asp-Ser-Ser-His-Leu-Ile-Thr-Asn-Gln-Ala-Lys-Lys----. The enzyme hydrolyzed cellotetraose to cellobiose and then transferred cellobiose to the residual cellotetraose. The resulting cellohexaose was cleaved to cellotriose.  相似文献   

6.
Characterization in Thermotoga neapolitana of a catabolic gene cluster encoding two glycosyl hydrolases, 1,4-beta-D-glucan glucohydrolase (GghA) and cellobiose phosphorylase (CbpA), and the apparent absence of a cellobiohydrolase (Cbh) suggest a nonconventional pathway for glucan utilization in Thermotogales. GghA purified from T. neapolitana is a 52.5-kDa family 1 glycosyl hydrolase with optimal activity at pH 6.5 and 95 degrees C. GghA releases glucose from soluble glucooligomers, with a preference for longer oligomers: k(cat)/K(m) values are 155.2, 76.0, and 9.9 mM(-1) s(-1) for cellotetraose, cellotriose, and cellobiose, respectively. GghA has broad substrate specificity, with specific activities of 236 U/mg towards cellobiose and 251 U/mg towards lactose. With p-nitrophenyl-beta-glucoside as the substrate, GghA exhibits biphasic kinetic behavior, involving both substrate- and end product-directed activation. Its capacity for transglycosylation is a factor in this activation. Cloning of gghA revealed a contiguous upstream gene (cbpA) encoding a 93.5-kDa cellobiose phosphorylase. Recombinant CbpA has optimal activity at pH 5.0 and 85 degrees C. It has specific activity of 11.8 U/mg and a K(m) of 1.42 mM for cellobiose, but shows no activity towards other disaccharides or cellotriose. With its single substrate specificity and low K(m) for cellobiose (compared to GghA's K(m) of 28.6 mM), CbpA may be the primary enzyme for attacking cellobiose in Thermotoga spp. By phosphorolysis of cellobiose, CbpA releases one activated glucosyl molecule while conserving one ATP molecule per disaccharide. CbpA is the first hyperthermophilic cellobiose phosphorylase to be characterized.  相似文献   

7.
Addition of L-sorbose, a non-metabolizable non-inducing ketohexose, toTrichoderma reesei cultures growing on cellobiose or Avicel-cellulose lead to increased cellulase activities. Addition of sorbose resulted in a 6-fold increase in cellodextrins (cellotriose, cellotetraose, cellopentaose) concentration on day 3 in cellobiose cultures and 1.3-fold increase in cellodextrins concentrations on day 4 in Avicel cellulose cultures. This increase in intracellular cellodextrins concentration matched closely with the increase in endoglucanase activity at these time points. Treatment of the cell-free extracts with cellulase preparation led to disappearance of the cellodextrins and increase of glucose. These observations suggested a more direct involvement of cellodextrins in cellulase induction process. The cellulases produced in sorbose-supplemented cellobiose medium hydrolyzed microcrystalline cellulose as effectively as the ones produced on Avicel cellulose medium.  相似文献   

8.
An endo-1,4-beta-D-glucanase I (Avicelase I; EC 3.2.1.4) was purified to homogeneity from an extracellular celluloxylanosome of Bacillus circulans F-2. The purification in the presence of 6 M urea yielded homogeneous enzyme. The enzyme had a monomeric structure, its relative molecular mass being 75 kDa as determined by gel filtration and 82 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The pI was 5.4, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was ASNIGGWVGGNESGFEFG. The optimal pH was 4.5, and the enzyme was stable at pH 4 to 10. The enzyme has a temperature optimum of 50 degrees C, it was stable at 55 degrees C for 46 h, and it retains approximately 20% of its activity after 30 min at 80 degrees C. It showed high-level activity towards carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as well as p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-cellobioside, 4-methylumbelliferyl cellobioside, xylan, Avicel, filter paper, and some cello-oligosaccharides. Km values for birch xylan, CMC, and Avicel were 4.8, 7.2, and 87.0 mg/ml, respectively, while Vmax values were 256, 210, and 8.6 mumol x min-1 x mg-1, respectively. Cellotetraose was preferentially cleaved into cellobiose (G2) plus G2, and cellopentaose was cleaved into G2 plus cellotriose (G3), while cellohexaose was cleaved into cellotetraose plus G2 and to a lesser extent G3 plus G3. G3 was not cleaved at all. G2 was the main product of Avicel hydrolysis. Xylotetraose (X4) and xylobiose (X2) were mainly produced by the enzyme hydrolysis of xylan. G2 inhibited the activity of carboxymethyl cellulase and Avicelase, whereas Mg2+ stimulated it. The enzyme was completely inactivated by Hg2+, and it was inhibited by a thiol-blocking reagent. Hydrolysis of CMC took place, with a rapid decrease in viscosity but a slow liberation of reducing sugars. On the basis of these results, it appeared that the cellulase should be regarded as endo-type cellulase, although it hydrolyzed Avicel.  相似文献   

9.
《Insect Biochemistry》1986,16(6):929-932
The cellulase from the termite Nasutitermes walkeri consists of two enzymes. Each has broad specificity with predominantly one activity. One enzyme is an endo-gb-1,4-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.4) which predominantly cleaves cellulose randomly to glucose, cellobiose and cellotriose. It hydrolyses cellotetraose to cellobiose but will not hydrolyse cellobiose or cellotriose. The second enzyme component is a β-1,4-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21) as its major activity is to hydrolyse cellobiose, cellotriose and cellotetraose to glucose; it has some exoglucosidase activity as glucose is the only product produced from cellulose. Its cellobiase activity is inhibited by glucono-δ-lactone.  相似文献   

10.
Water-soluble cellodextrins were prepared from microcrystalline cellulose by using fuming hydrochloric acid and acetone precipitation. This cellodextrin preparation contained only trace amounts of glucose and cellobiose and was primarily composed of cellotetraose and cellopentaose. When various species of cellulolytic and noncellulolytic bacteria were cultured with cellodextrins, their growth rates and maximal optical densities were in most cases similar to those observed with cellobiose. Time course samplings and analyses of cellodextrins by high-pressure liquid chromatography indicated that longer-chain cellodextrins were hydrolyzed extracellularly to cellobiose and cellotriose. Cellodextrin utilization by noncellulolytic rumen bacteria and extracellular hydrolysis of cellodextrins increase the possibility that cross-feeding occurs in the rumen and help to explain the high numbers of noncellulolytic bacteria in ruminants fed fibrous diets.  相似文献   

11.
Water-soluble cellodextrins were prepared from microcrystalline cellulose by using fuming hydrochloric acid and acetone precipitation. This cellodextrin preparation contained only trace amounts of glucose and cellobiose and was primarily composed of cellotetraose and cellopentaose. When various species of cellulolytic and noncellulolytic bacteria were cultured with cellodextrins, their growth rates and maximal optical densities were in most cases similar to those observed with cellobiose. Time course samplings and analyses of cellodextrins by high-pressure liquid chromatography indicated that longer-chain cellodextrins were hydrolyzed extracellularly to cellobiose and cellotriose. Cellodextrin utilization by noncellulolytic rumen bacteria and extracellular hydrolysis of cellodextrins increase the possibility that cross-feeding occurs in the rumen and help to explain the high numbers of noncellulolytic bacteria in ruminants fed fibrous diets.  相似文献   

12.
Growth of the ruminal bacteria Fibrobacter succinogenes S85, Ruminococcus flavefaciens FD-1, and R. albus 7 followed Monod kinetics with respect to concentrations of individual pure cellodextrins (cellobiose, cellotriose, cellotetraose, cellopentaose, and cellohexaose). Under the conditions tested, R. flavefaciens FD-1 possesses the greatest capacity to compete for low concentrations of these cellodextrins.  相似文献   

13.
An extracellular enzyme preparation from shipworm bacterium cultures dramatically increased reducing sugar content of carboxymethylcellulose (CMC3), but did not solubilize sugar from particulate cellulose. The preparation degraded cellodextrins larger than cellotriose (G3). Only interior cellodextrin chain linkages were cleaved and the center-most bond of cellohexaose (G6) was preferentially cleaved. Activity maxima were observed at 60 degrees C and between pH 5.0 and 7.0. The activity was resistant to protease treatment and little loss of activity was observed after 14 d at 25 degrees C.  相似文献   

14.
Five endoglucanases (1,4-beta-D-glucan-glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.4) were isolated from Fusarium lini. Endo I and II were purified by preparative gel electrophoresis and Endo III, IV, and V were purified in a single-step procedure involving preparative flat-bed isoelectric focusing. All the endoglucanases were homogenous on disk gel electrophoresis and analytical isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gel. The pi values were between 6 and 6.6 for Endo III, IV, and V; for Endo I, the pi value was 8. The molecular weights of the enzymes were between 4 x 10(4) and 6.5 x 10(4). The K(m) values for endoglucanases using carboxymethyl cellulose (CM-cellulose) as the substrate were 2-12 mg/mL. The specificity of the enzymes was restricted to beta-1, 4-linkages. All the enzymes showed activity towards D-xylan. The endoglucanases had high viscosity reducing activity with CM-cellulose. Striking synergism was observed for the hydrolysis of CM-cellulose by endoglucanases. Endo II, IV, and V attacked cellopentaose and cellotetraose more readily than cellotriose. Endo II and V hydrolyzed cellotriose, cellotetraose, and cellopentaose, yielding a mixture of cellobiose with a trace amount of glucose; endo IV produced only cellobiose.  相似文献   

15.
1,4-beta-D-Glucan glucohydrolase (exo-1,4-beta-D-glucosidase) (EC 3.2.1.74) was isolated from growth supernatants of Torulopsis wickerhamii and was subjected to hydrodynamic, optical (CD), and kinetic analysis after purification to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, size exclusion chromatography, ion exchange chromatography, and isopycnic banding centrifugation in cesium chloride. The last step was found to separate the enzyme from strongly associating, high molecular weight polysaccharide. Enzyme homogeneity was established by isoelectric focusing, sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, and analytical high performance size exclusion chromatography using dual detection. The native exo-1,4-beta-D-glucosidase was found to be a dimer of 151,000 +/- 21,100 daltons by high performance size exclusion chromatography and 143,600 +/- 1,800 daltons by sedimentation equilibrium. The enzyme has a 12% linked carbohydrate content (mostly mannose) and no essential metal ions. Hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside was found to be optimal at pH 4.25 and 50 degrees C. The enzyme was found to produce beta-D-glucose from cellodextrins (indicating retention of anomeric configuration during hydrolysis) and demonstrated depolymerization from the non-reducing polymer terminus. The enzyme followed competitive type inhibition with p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside as substrate and demonstrated high values of Ki for D-glucose and D-cellobiose inhibition (190 and 230 mM, respectively). The exo-1,4-beta-D-glucosidase was found to hydrolyze cellotetraose more rapidly than D-cellobiose and aryl-beta-D-glycosides more rapidly than all other substrates. Low levels of activity were found for the polymeric substrates beta-glucan (yeast cell walls), Avicel, and Walseth cellulose. Although this enzyme demonstrates broad disaccharide substrate specificity, a characteristic common to beta-D-glucosidases from many sources, the ability to hydrolyze higher cellodextrins more rapidly than cellobiose renders this enzyme the first exo-1,4-beta-D-glucosidase purified from yeast.  相似文献   

16.
When glucose or cellobiose was provided as an energy source for Fibrobacter succinogenes, there was a transient accumulation (as much as 0.4 mM hexose equivalent) of cellobiose or cellotriose, respectively, in the growth medium. Nongrowing cell suspensions converted cellobiose to cellotriose and longer-chain cellodextrins, and in this case the total cellodextrin concentration was as much as 20 mM (hexose equivalent). Because cell extracts of glucose- or cellobiose-grown cells cleaved cellobioise and cellotriose by phosphate-dependent reactions and glucose 1-phosphate was an end product, it appeared that cellodextrins were being produced by a reversible phosphorylase reaction. This conclusion was supported by the observation that the ratio of cellodextrins to cellodextrins with one greater hexose [n/(n + 1)] was approximately 4, a value similar to the equilibrium constant (Keq) of cellobiose phosphorylase (J. K. Alexander, J. Bacteriol. 81:903-910, 1961). When F. succinogenes was grown in a cellobiose-limited chemostat, cellobiose and cellotriose could both be detected, and the ratio of cellotriose to cellobiose was approximately 1 to 4. On the basis of these results, cellodextrin production is an equilibrium (mass action) function and not just an artifact of energy-rich cultural conditions. Cellodextrins could not be detected in low-dilution-rate, cellulose-limited continuous cultures, but these cultures had a large number of nonadherent cells. Because the nonadherent cells had a large reserve of polysaccharide and were observed at all stages of cell division, it appeared that they were utilizing cellodextrins as an energy source for growth.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
A previously isolated cellodextrin glucohydrolase (beta-glucosidase) from Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 is characterized using beta-1,4-glucose oligomers with defined degrees of polymerization as soluble substrates. The enzyme splits off glucose units from the nonreducing chain ends of cellooligomers. Besides this hydrolytic activity there is also evidence for transfer activity depending on the concentration and degree of polymerization of substrates. Concentration-time-course data have been gathered for the degradation of cellobiose, cellotriose, cellotetraose, cellopentaose, and cellohexaose covering a wide range of enzyme and substrate concentrations. A Michaelis-Menten type kinetic model has been developed, which is able to satisfactorily describe the complex system of parallel and series reactions during the conversion of oligomers to glucose. The only kind of inhibition considered is competitive inhibition by the final product glucose. The model takes into account the formation of multiple enzyme-substrate complexes and is limited to those conditions, in which no transglucosylation products are observed. Cellodextrins with higher degrees of polymerization are found to be better substrates for this enzyme than is the dimer cellobiose.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of the hydrolyses of cellotriose and of cellotetraose by cellobiohydrolase were studied using a convenient integral technique. Reaction mechanisms and mathematical models were postulated to describe the reactions. The end-products of the reaction were found to be inhibitory toward hydrolysis in a competitive mode. Hydrolysis of cellotetraose produces cellobiose and hydrolysis of cellotriose produces cellobiose and glucose. Both sugars inhibit the enzyme with cellobiose being a stronger inhibitor.  相似文献   

19.
A beta-glucosidase (E.C. 3.2.1.21) was isolated from the culture filtrate of fungus Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 grown in continuous culture with biomass retention. The crude extracellular enzyme preparation was fractionated by a three-step purification procedure [chromatography on Fractogel HW-55 (S) and Bio-Gel A 0.5 plus final preparative isoelectric focusing] to yield three beta-glucosidases with isoelectric points at pH 8.4, 8.0, and 7.4. Only one enzyme (pi 8.4) met the stringent criterion of being homogeneous according to titration curve analysis. This enzyme was then characterized not to be a glycoprotein, although the native protein contained 35% carbohydrate (as glucose). It was found to have an apparent molar mass of 7 x 10(4) g/mol (SDS-PAGE), exhibited its optimum activity towards cellobiose at pH 4.5 and 70 degrees C (30 min test), and lost less than 3% activity at 50 degrees C over a period of 7 h. The K(M) values towards cellobiose and p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside were determined to be 0.5mM and 0.3mM, respectively. The enzyme hydrolyzed cellodextrins (cellotriose to cellooctaose) by sequentially splitting off glucose units from the nonreducing end of the oligomers. The extent of the observed transfer reactions varied with the initial substrate concentration. No enzyme activity towards microcrystalline cellulose or carboxymethylcellulose could be detected. The classification of the enzyme as beta-glucosidase or exo-beta-1,4-glucan glucohydrolase is discussed with respect to the exhibited hydrolytic activities.  相似文献   

20.
Zhang  Cong  Wang  Xifeng  Zhang  Weican  Zhao  Yue  Lu  Xuemei 《Applied microbiology and biotechnology》2017,101(5):1919-1926

Cytophaga hutchinsonii is a gram-negative bacterium that can efficiently degrade crystalline cellulose by a novel strategy without cell-free cellulases or cellulosomes. Genomic analysis implied that C. hutchinsonii had endoglucanases and β-glucosidases but no exoglucanases which could processively digest cellulose and produce cellobiose. In this study, BglA was functionally expressed in Escherichia coli and found to be a β-glucosidase with wide substrate specificity. It can hydrolyze pNPG, pNPC, cellobiose, and cellodextrins. Moreover, unlike most β-glucosidases whose activity greatly decreases with increasing length of the substrate chains, BglA has similar activity on cellobiose and larger cellodextrins. The K m values of BglA on cellobiose, cellotriose, and cellotetraose were calculated to be 4.8 × 10−2, 5.6 × 10−2, and 5.3 × 10−2 mol/l, respectively. These properties give BglA a great advantage to cooperate with endoglucanases in C. hutchinsonii in cellulose degradation. We proposed that C. hutchinsonii could utilize a simple cellulase system which consists of endoglucanases and β-glucosidases to completely digest amorphous cellulose into glucose. Moreover, BglA was also found to be highly tolerant to glucose as it retained 40 % activity when the concentration of glucose was 100 times higher than that of the substrate, showing potential application in the bioenergy industry.

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