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1.
Microbial nitrilases are biocatalysts of interest and the enzyme produced using various inducers exhibits altered substrate specificity, which is of great interest in bioprocess development. The aim of the present study is to investigate the nitrilase-producing Alcaligenes faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) for its ability to transform various nitriles in the presence of different inducers after optimization of various parameters for maximum enzyme production and activity. The production of A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) nitrilase was optimum with glucose (1.0%), acrylonitrile (0.1%) at pH 7.0. The nitrilase activity of A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) was optimum at 35 °C, pH 8.0 and the enzyme was stable up to 6 h at 50 °C. The nitrilase enzyme produced using different inducers was investigated for substrate specificity. The enzyme hydrolyzed aliphatic, heterocyclic and aromatic nitriles with different substitutions. Acrylonitrile was the most preferred substrate (~40 U) as well as inducer. Benzonitrile was hydrolyzed with almost twofold higher relative activity than acrylonitrile when it was used as an inducer. The versatile nitrilase-producing A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) exhibits efficient conversion of both aliphatic and aromatic nitriles. The aromatic nitriles, which show not much or no affinity towards nitrilase from A. faecalis, are hydrolyzed effectively with this nitrilase-producing organism. Studies are in progress to exploit this organism for synthesis of industrially important compounds.  相似文献   

2.

Objective

To investigate the biodegradation of nitriles via the nitrilase-mediated pathway.

Results

A novel nitrilase, BGC4, was identified from proteobacteria Paraburkholderia graminis CD41M and its potential for use in biodegradation of toxic nitriles in industrial effluents was studied. BGC4 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), the recombinant protein was purified and its enzymatic properties analysed. Maximum activity of BGC4 nitrilase was at 30 °C and pH 7.6. BGC4 has a broad substrate activity towards aliphatic, heterocyclic, and aromatic nitriles, as well as arylacetonitriles. Iminodiacetonitrile, an aliphatic nitrile, was the optimal substrate but comparable activities were also observed with phenylacetonitrile and indole-3-acetonitrile. BGC4-expressing cells degraded industrial nitriles, such as acrylonitrile, adiponitrile, benzonitrile, mandelonitrile, and 3-cyanopyridine, showing good tolerance and conversion rates.

Conclusion

BGC4 nitrilase has wide-spectrum substrate specificity and is suitable for efficient biodegradation of toxic nitriles.
  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli strains expressing different nitrilases transformed nitriles or KCN. Six nitrilases (from Aspergillus niger (2), A. oryzae, Neurospora crassa, Arthroderma benhamiae, and Nectria haematococca) were arylacetonitrilases, two enzymes (from A. niger and Penicillium chrysogenum) were cyanide hydratases and the others (from P. chrysogenum, P. marneffei, Gibberella moniliformis, Meyerozyma guilliermondi, Rhodococcus rhodochrous, and R. ruber) preferred (hetero)aromatic nitriles as substrates. Promising nitrilases for the transformation of industrially important substrates were found: the nitrilase from R. ruber for 3-cyanopyridine, 4-cyanopyridine and bromoxynil, the nitrilases from N. crassa and A. niger for (R,S)-mandelonitrile, and the cyanide hydratase from A. niger for KCN and 2-cyanopyridine.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, several nitrilase genes from phylogenetically distinct organisms were expressed and purified in E. coli in order to study their ability to mediate the biotransformation of nitriles. We identified three nitrilases: Acidovorax facilis nitrilase (AcN); Alcaligenes fecalis nitrilase (AkN); and Rhodococcus rhodochrous nitrilase (RkN), which catalyzed iminodiacetonitrile (IDAN) to iminodiacetic acid (IDA). AcN demonstrated 8.8-fold higher activity for IDAN degradation as compared to AkN and RkN. Based on homology modeling and previously described ‘hot spot’ mutations, several AcN mutants were screened for improved activity. One mutant M3 (F168V/L201N/S192F) was identified, which demonstrates a 41% enhancement in the conversion as well as a 2.4-fold higher catalytic efficiency towards IDAN as compared to wild-type AcN.  相似文献   

5.
Two genes encoding nitrilases with different properties have been found in an Alcaligenes denitrificans C-32 strain with high nitrilase activity that is currently used as a biocatalyst for commercial ammonium acrylate production. Both genes were expressed in E. coli, and the properties of the recombinant nitrilases were studied. One of these genes, which is designated as nitC1, controlled the formation of nitrilase that preferred aliphatic nitriles (acrylonitrile and butyronitrile) as best substrates. The nucleotide sequence of the gene nitC1 was almost (99%) identical to the gene sequence of an aliphatic nitrilase from Acidovorax facilis 72W (DQ4444267). In turn, nitC2 had a high level of homology (85%) with the arylacetonitrilase gene from Alcaligenes faecalis JM3 (D13419). Benzyl cyanide was shown to be the best substrate for nitC2-encoded nitrilase. In light of the results of DNA homology and differences in substrate specificity, the NitC2 and NitC1 nitrilases from Alcaligenes denitrificans C-32 were allocated to the groups of aliphatic nitrilases and arylacetonitrilases, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Wang  Liuzhu  Jiang  Shuiqin  Sun  Yangyang  Yang  Zeyu  Chen  Zhi  Wang  Hualei  Wei  Dongzhi 《Biotechnology letters》2021,43(8):1617-1624
Objectives

Catalytic promiscuity, or the ability to catalyze a secondary reaction, provides new opportunities for industrial biocatalysis by expanding the range of biocatalytic reactions. Some nitrilases converting nitriles to amides, referred to as the secondary activity, show great potential for amides production. And our goal was exploiting the amide-forming potential of nitrilases.

Results

In this study, we characterized and altered the secondary activity of nitrilase from Acidovorax facilis 72 W (Nit72W) towards different substrates. We increased the secondary activity of Nit72W towards 2-cyanopyridine by 196-fold and created activity toward benzonitrile and p-nitrophenylacetonitrile by modifying the active pocket. Surprisingly, the best mutant, W188M, completely converted 250 mM 2-cyanopyridine to more than 98% 2-picolinamide in 12 h with a specific activity of 90 U/mg and showed potential for industrial applications.

Conclusions

Nit72W was modified to increase its secondary activity for the amides production, especially 2-picolinamide.

  相似文献   

8.
《Process Biochemistry》2014,49(4):655-659
An efficient biocatalytic process for the production of nicotinic acid (niacin) from 3-cyanopyridine was developed using cells of recombinant Escherichia coli JM109 harboring the nitrilase gene from Alcaligenes faecalis MTCC 126. The freely suspended cells of the biocatalyst were found to withstand higher concentrations of the substrate and the product without any signs of substrate inhibition. Immobilization of the cells further enhanced their substrate tolerance, stability and reusability in repetitive cycles of nicotinic acid production. Under optimized conditions (37 °C, 100 mM Tris buffer, pH 7.5) for the immobilized cells, the recombinant biocatalyst achieved a 100% conversion of 1 M 3-cyanopyridine to nicotinic acid within 5 h at a cell mass concentration (fresh weight) of 500 mg/mL. The high substrate/product tolerance and stability of the immobilized whole cell biocatalyst confers its potential industrial use.  相似文献   

9.
The conversion of aliphatic nitriles by the arylacetonitrilase from Pseudomonas fluorescens EBC191 (NitA) was analyzed. The nitrilase hydrolysed a wide range of aliphatic mono- and dinitriles and showed a preference for unsaturated aliphatic substrates containing 5–6 carbon atoms. In addition, increased reaction rates were also found for aliphatic nitriles carrying electron withdrawing substituents (e.g. chloro- or hydroxy-groups) close to the nitrile group. Aliphatic dinitriles were attacked only at one of the nitrile groups and with most of the tested dinitriles the monocarboxylates were detected as major products. In contrast, fumarodinitrile was converted to the monocarboxylate and the monocarboxamide in a ratio of about 65:35. Significantly different relative amounts of the two products were observed with two nitrilase variants with altered reaction specifities. NitA converted some aliphatic substrates with higher rates than 2-phenylpropionitrile, which is one of the standard substrates for arylacetonitrilases. This indicated that the traditional classification of nitrilases as “arylacetonitrilases”, “aromatic” or “aliphatic” nitrilases might require some corrections. This was also suggested by the construction of some variants of NitA which were modified in an amino acid residue which was previously suggested to be essential for the conversion of aliphatic substrates by a homologous nitrilase.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrilases, enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of organic cyanides, are ubiquitous in the plant kingdom. The typical plant nitrilase is a nitrilase 4 homolog which is involved in the cyanide detoxification pathway. In this pathway, nitrilase 4 converts β-cyanoalanine, the intermediate product of cyanide detoxification, into asparagine, aspartic acid and ammonia. In the Brassicaceae, a new family of nitrilases has evolved, the nitrilase 1 homologs. These enzymes are not able to use β-cyanoalanine as a substrate. Instead, they display rather broad substrate specificities and are able to hydrolyze nitriles that result from the decomposition of glucosinolates, the typical secondary metabolites of the Brassicaceae. Here we summarize and discuss data indicating that nitrilase 1 homologs have evolved to function in glucosinolate catabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrilases have long been considered as an attractive alternative to chemical catalyst in carboxylic acids biosynthesis due to their green characteristics and the catalytic potential in nitrile hydrolysis. A novel nitrilase from Pseudomonas putida CGMCC3830 was purified to homogeneity. pI value was estimated to be 5.2 through two-dimensional electrophoresis. The amino acid sequence of NH2 terminus was determined. Nitrilase gene was cloned through CODEHOP PCR, Degenerate PCR and TAIL-PCR. The open reading frame consisted of 1113 bp encoding a protein of 370 amino acids. The predicted amino acid sequence showed the highest identity (61.6%) to nitrilase from Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1. The enzyme was highly specific toward aromatic nitriles such as 3-cyanopyridine, 4-cyanopyridine, and 2-chloro-4-cyanopyridine. It was classified as aromatic nitrilase. The nitrilase activity could reach up to 71.8 U/mg with 3-cyanopyridine as substrate, which was a prominent level among identified cyanopyridine converting enzymes. The kinetic parameters Km and Vmax for 3-cyanopyridine were 27.9 mM and 84.0 U/mg, respectively. These data would warrant it as a novel and potential candidate for creating effective nitrilases in catalytic applications of carboxylic acids synthesis through further protein engineering.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Nitrilases attract increasing attention due to their utility in the mild hydrolysis of nitriles. According to activity and gene screening, filamentous fungi are a rich source of nitrilases distinct in evolution from their widely examined bacterial counterparts. However, fungal nitrilases have been less explored than the bacterial ones. Nitrilases are typically heterogeneous in their quaternary structures, forming short spirals and extended filaments, these features making their structural studies difficult.

Results

A nitrilase gene was amplified by PCR from the cDNA library of Aspergillus niger K10. The PCR product was ligated into expression vectors pET-30(+) and pRSET B to construct plasmids pOK101 and pOK102, respectively. The recombinant nitrilase (Nit-ANigRec) expressed in Escherichia coli BL21-Gold(DE3)(pOK101/pTf16) was purified with an about 2-fold increase in specific activity and 35% yield. The apparent subunit size was 42.7 kDa, which is approx. 4 kDa higher than that of the enzyme isolated from the native organism (Nit-ANigWT), indicating post-translational cleavage in the enzyme's native environment. Mass spectrometry analysis showed that a C-terminal peptide (Val327 - Asn356) was present in Nit-ANigRec but missing in Nit-ANigWT and Asp298-Val313 peptide was shortened to Asp298-Arg310 in Nit-ANigWT. The latter enzyme was thus truncated by 46 amino acids. Enzymes Nit-ANigRec and Nit-ANigWT differed in substrate specificity, acid/amide ratio, reaction optima and stability. Refolded recombinant enzyme stored for one month at 4°C was fractionated by gel filtration, and fractions were examined by electron microscopy. The late fractions were further analyzed by analytical centrifugation and dynamic light scattering, and shown to consist of a rather homogeneous protein species composed of 12-16 subunits. This hypothesis was consistent with electron microscopy and our modelling of the multimeric nitrilase, which supports an arrangement of dimers into helical segments as a plausible structural solution.

Conclusions

The nitrilase from Aspergillus niger K10 is highly homologous (≥86%) with proteins deduced from gene sequencing in Aspergillus and Penicillium genera. As the first of these proteins, it was shown to exhibit nitrilase activity towards organic nitriles. The comparison of the Nit-ANigRec and Nit-ANigWT suggested that the catalytic properties of nitrilases may be changed due to missing posttranslational cleavage of the former enzyme. Nit-ANigRec exhibits a lower tendency to form filaments and, moreover, the sample homogeneity can be further improved by in vitro protein refolding. The homogeneous protein species consisting of short spirals is expected to be more suitable for structural studies.  相似文献   

13.
Biotechnological potential of nitrilases are prompting significant interest in finding the novel microbes capable of hydrolyzing nitriles. In this view, we have screened about 450 bacterial strains for nitrilase production using bioconversion of iminodiacetonitrile (IDAN) to iminodiacetic acid (IDA) through hydrolysis and obtained six nitrilase-producing isolates. Among these six isolates, IICT-akl252 was promising which was identified as Lysinibacillus boronitolerans. This is the first report on L. boronitolerans for nitrilase activity. Optimization of various medium and reaction parameters for maximizing the nitrilase production using whole cells in shake flask was carried out for L. boronitolerans IICT-akl252. Sucrose (2 %) as a carbon source attained better nitrilase yield while IDAN appeared to be the preferable inducer (0.2 %). The maximum IDA formation was achieved with 100 mM IDAN and 150 mg/ml cells at 30 °C and pH 6.5. After optimization of the culture and reaction conditions, the activity of nitrilase was increased by 2.3-fold from 27.2 to 64.5 U. The enzyme was stable up to 1 h at 50 °C. The enzyme was able to hydrolyze aliphatic, aromatic and heterocyclic nitrile substrates.  相似文献   

14.
A nitrilase that converts racemic mandelonitrile to R-(—)-mandelic acid was purified to apparent homogeneity from a cell extract of Alcaligenes faecalis ATCC 8750. The molecular weight of this enzyme was estimated to be 32,000±2,000 from SDS-PAGE and that of the native enzyme 460,000±30,000 from HPLC gel filtration. The enzyme preferentially hydrolyzed substituted aliphatic nitriles, in particular benzyl cyanide and its p-substituted compounds, but hydrolyzed aromatic nitriles only with difficulty. The amino-terminal amino acids were sequenced and their sequences compared with those of other nitrilases. The purified enzyme had a pH optimum of 7.5 and an optimum temperature range of 40 to 45°C. The enzyme was inhibited by various thiol reagents. It hydrolyzed racemic mandelonitrile, producing optically pure R-(—)-mandelic acid and ammonia without the concomitant production of mandelamide, evidence that this nitrilase is highly enantioselective for R-mandelonitrile.  相似文献   

15.

Objectives

To identify a novel nitrilase with S-selectivity toward mandelonitrile that can produce (S)-mandelic acid in one step.

Results

A novel nitrilase PpL19 from Pseudomonas psychrotolerans L19 was discovered by genome mining. It showed S-selectivity with an enantiomeric excess of 52.7 % when used to hydrolyse (R, S)-mandelonitrile. No byproduct was observed. PpL19 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) and formed inclusion bodies that were active toward mandelonitrile and stable across a broad range of temperature and pH. In addition, PpL19 hydrolysed nitriles with diverse structures; arylacetonitriles were the optimal substrates. Homology modelling and docking studies of both enantiomers of mandelonitrile in the active site of nitrilase PpL19 shed light on the enantioselectivity.

Conclusions

A novel nitrilase PpL19 from P. psychrotolerans L19 was mined and distinguished from other nitrilases as it was expressed as an active inclusion body and showed S-selectivity toward mandelonitrile.
  相似文献   

16.
In recent years, many biocatalytic processes have been developed for the production of chemicals and pharmaceuticals. In this context, enzyme immobilization methods have attracted attention for their advantages, such as continuous production and increased stability. Here, enzyme immobilization methods and a collection of nitrilases from biodiversity for the conversion of 3-cyanopyridine to nicotinic acid were screened. Substrate conversion over 10 conversion cycles was monitored to optimize the process. The best immobilization conditions were found with cross-linking using glutaraldehyde to modify the PMMA beads. This method showed good activity over 10 cycles in a batch reactor at 30 and 40°C. Finally, production with a new thermostable nitrilase was examined in a continuous packed bed reactor, showing very high stability of the biocatalytic process at a flow rate of 0.12 ml min–1 and a temperature of 50°C. The complete conversion of 3-cyanopyridine was obtained over 30 days of operation. Future steps will concern reactor scale-up to increase the production rate with reasonable pressure drops.  相似文献   

17.

A novel aliphatic nitrilase, REH16, was found in Ralstonia eutropha H16 and overexpressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), and its enzymatic properties were studied. The temperature and pH optima were 37 °C and 6.6, respectively, and the best thermostability of the nitrilase was observed at 25 °C, which preserved 95% of activity after 120 h of incubation. REH16 has a broad hydrolytic activity toward aliphatic and heterocyclic nitriles and showed high tolerance of 3-cyanopyridine; this enzyme could hydrolyze as high as 100 mM 3-cyanopyridine completely. To improve the 3-cyanopyridine conversion efficiency in an aqueous reaction system, water-miscible organic solvents were tested, and ethanol (10% v/v) was chosen as the optimal co-solvent. Finally, under optimized conditions, using the fed-batch reaction mode, total of 1050 mM 3-cyanopyridine was hydrolyzed completely in 20.8 h with eight substrate feedings, yielding 129.2 g/L production of nicotinic acid and thus showing a potential for industrial application.

  相似文献   

18.
In this study, nitriles were used as sole sources of nitrogen in the enrichments to isolate nitrile-converting microorganisms. A novel fungus named ZJB-09150 possessing nitrile-converting enzymes was obtained with 3-cyanopyridine as sole source of nitrogen, which was identified by morphology, biology and 18S rDNA gene sequence as Fusarium proliferatum. It was found that F. proliferatum had ability to convert nitriles to corresponding acids or amides and showed wide substrate specificity to aliphatic nitriles, aromatic nitriles and ortho-substituted heterocyclic nitriles. The nitrile converting enzymes including nitrilase and nitrile hydratase in ZJB-09150 were induced by ε-caprolactam. Nitrilase obtained in this study showed high activity toward 3-cyanopyridine. It was active within pH 3.0–12.0 and temperature ranging from 25 to 65 °C with optimal at pH 9.0 and temperature 50–55 °C. The enzyme was thermostable and its half-life was 12.5 and 6 h at 45 and 55 °C, respectively. Under optimized reaction conditions, 60 mM 3-cyanopyridine was converted to nicotinic acid in 15 min, which indicated ZJB-09150 has potentials of application in large scale production of nicotinic acid.  相似文献   

19.
The operational stabilities of nitrilases from Aspergillus niger K10 and Fusarium solani O1 were examined with 4-cyanopyridine as the substrate in continuous-stirred membrane reactors (CSMRs). The former enzyme was fairly stable at 30 °C with a deactivation constant (k d) and enzyme half-life of 0.014 h−1 and 50 h, respectively, but the latter exhibited an even higher stability characterized by k d = 0.008 h−1 and half-life of 87 h at 40 °C. Another advantage of this enzyme was its high chemoselectivity, i.e., selective transformation of nitriles into carboxylic acids, while the amide formed a high ratio of A. niger K10 nitrilase product. High conversion rates (>90%) were maintained for about 52 h using the nitrilase from F. solani O1 immobilized in cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs). The purity of isonicotinic acid was increased from 98% to >99.9% by using two CSMRs connected in series, the first one containing the F. solani O1 nitrilase and the second the amidase from Rhodococcus erythropolis A4 (both enzymes as CLEAs), the amidase hydrolyzing the by-product isonicotinamide.  相似文献   

20.
Nitrile groups are catabolized to the corresponding acid and ammonia through one-step reaction involving a nitrilase. Here, we report the use of bioinformatic and biochemical tools to identify and characterize the nitrilase (NitPf5) from Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf-5. The nitPf5 gene was identified via sequence analysis of the whole genome of P. fluorescens Pf-5 and subsequently cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. DNA sequence analysis revealed an open-reading frame of 921 bp, capable of encoding a polypeptide of 307 amino acids residues with a calculated isoelectric point of pH 5.4. The enzyme had an optimal pH and temperature of 7.0°C and 45°C, respectively, with a specific activity of 1.7 and 1.9 μmol min−1 mg protein−1 for succinonitrile and fumaronitrile, respectively. The molecular weight of the nitrilase as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration chromatography was 33,000 and 138,000 Da, respectively, suggesting that the enzyme is homotetrameric. Among various nitriles, dinitriles were the preferred substrate of NitPf5 with a K m = 17.9 mM and k cat/K m = 0.5 mM−1 s−1 for succinonitrile. Homology modeling and docking studies of dinitrile and mononitrile substrate into the active site of NitPf5 shed light on the substrate specificity of NitPf5. Although nitrilases have been characterized from several other sources, P. fluorescens Pf-5 nitrilase NitPf5 is distinguished from other nitrilases by its high specific activity toward dinitriles, which make P. fluorescens NitPf5 useful for industrial applications, including enzymatic synthesis of various cyanocarboxylic acids.  相似文献   

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