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1.
Horseradish peroxidase catalysed the oxidative decarboxylation of vanillic acid to methoxy-p-hydroquinone and subsequent oxidation of the hydroquinone to methoxy-p-benzoquinone. Peroxidase also catalysed the oxidation of vanillyl alcohol to vanillin and vanillic acid; however, neither vanillyl alcohol nor vanillin appeared to give rise to methoxyhydroquinone directly. Correspondingly, peroxidase catalysed the oxidative decarboxylation of syringic acid to 2,6-dimethoxy-p-hydroquinone and subsequent oxidation of the hydroquinone to 2,6-dimethoxy-p-benzoquinone.  相似文献   

2.
Biocatalytic Synthesis of Vanillin   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The conversions of vanillic acid and O-benzylvanillic acid to vanillin were examined by using whole cells and enzyme preparations of Nocardia sp. strain NRRL 5646. With growing cultures, vanillic acid was decarboxylated (69% yield) to guaiacol and reduced (11% yield) to vanillyl alcohol. In resting Nocardia cells in buffer, 4-O-benzylvanillic acid was converted to the corresponding alcohol product without decarboxylation. Purified Nocardia carboxylic acid reductase, an ATP and NADPH-dependent enzyme, quantitatively reduced vanillic acid to vanillin. Structures of metabolites were established by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectral analyses.  相似文献   

3.
Biocatalytic synthesis of vanillin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The conversions of vanillic acid and O-benzylvanillic acid to vanillin were examined by using whole cells and enzyme preparations of Nocardia sp. strain NRRL 5646. With growing cultures, vanillic acid was decarboxylated (69% yield) to guaiacol and reduced (11% yield) to vanillyl alcohol. In resting Nocardia cells in buffer, 4-O-benzylvanillic acid was converted to the corresponding alcohol product without decarboxylation. Purified Nocardia carboxylic acid reductase, an ATP and NADPH-dependent enzyme, quantitatively reduced vanillic acid to vanillin. Structures of metabolites were established by (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectral analyses.  相似文献   

4.
Isoeugenol is a starting material for both the synthetic and biotechnological production of vanillin and vanillic acid. Nocardia iowensis DSM 45197 (formerly Nocardia species NRRL 5646) resting cells catalyze the conversion of isoeugenol to vanillic acid, vanillin, vanillyl alcohol and guaiacol. The present study used a variety of chemical, microbial and enzymatic approaches to probe the pathways used by N. iowensis in the oxidation of isoeugenol to these products. Of three possible pathways considered, initial side-chain olefin epoxidation, epoxide hydrolysis to a vicinal diol, and diol cleavage to vanillin and subsequently further oxidation to vanillic acid appears as the most likely route. Isoeugenol was not oxidized to ferulic acid, a well-known microbial transformation precursor for vanillin and vanillic acid. 18O-Labeled oxygen (one atom) and water (two oxygen atoms) were incorporated into vanillic acid during the whole-cell biotransformation reaction with isoeugenol indicating the likely involvement of oxygenase and hydrolase systems in the bioconversion reaction. Vanillin was converted to singly labeled vanillic acid in the presence of H218O suggesting the presence of an aldehyde oxidase. Cell extracts achieved the conversion of isoeugenol to vanillic acid and vanillin without cofactors. Partial fractionation of two enzyme activities supported the presence of isoeugenol monooxygenase and vanillin oxidase activities in N. iowensis.  相似文献   

5.
Vanillic acid metabolism was studied in wild-type Sporotrichum pulverulentum and three different mutants. Vanillic acid was found to be oxidatively decarboxylated to methoxyhydroquinone (MHQ) and simultaneously reduced to vanillin and vanillyl alcohol to different degrees depending upon the cultivation conditions. The reducing pathway cannot be utilized unless the fungus has access to an easily metabolized carbon source such as glucose or cellobiose, while decarboxylation takes place in cultures with only vanillic acid present. Polymerization reactions also occurred in the culture solutions. Some evidence for reoxidation of vanillin and vanillyl alcohol was obtained in vivo, and in vitro experiments using horseradish peroxidase.Using vanillic acids labelled in the carboxyl, methoxyl and the aromatic ring it was shown that decarboxylation occures before ring-cleavage, which in turn takes place earlier than the release of 14CO2 from O14CH3-vanillate. The 14CO2 evolution from the methoxyl group is repressed by 1% cellobiose as compared to 0.25% cellobiose, but is stimulated by 26 mM nitrogen (as asparagine plus NH4NO3) compared to 2.6 mM nitrogen. Since S. pulverulentum appears to require three hydroxyl groups attached to the benzene ring before ring-cleavage can occur, preparation for ring-cleavage is apparently achieved by hydroxylation rather than by demethylation.A scheme for metabolism of vanillic acid by S. pulverulentum based upon these results is proposed.Non-Standard Abbreviations WT wild type Sporotrichum pulverulentum - MHQ methoxyhydroquinone - MQ methoxyquinone - NKM Norkrans medium - DMS dimethylsuccinate - DHP dehydropolymer of coniferyl alcohol  相似文献   

6.
Oxidation of isoeugenol by Nocardia iowensis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Isoeugenol is a starting material for both the synthetic and biotechnological production of vanillin and vanillic acid. Nocardia iowensis DSM 45197 (formerly Nocardia species NRRL 5646) resting cells catalyze the conversion of isoeugenol to vanillic acid, vanillin, vanillyl alcohol and guaiacol. The present study used a variety of chemical, microbial and enzymatic approaches to probe the pathways used by N. iowensis in the oxidation of isoeugenol to these products. Of three possible pathways considered, initial side-chain olefin epoxidation, epoxide hydrolysis to a vicinal diol, and diol cleavage to vanillin and subsequently further oxidation to vanillic acid appears as the most likely route. Isoeugenol was not oxidized to ferulic acid, a well-known microbial transformation precursor for vanillin and vanillic acid. 18O-Labeled oxygen (one atom) and water (two oxygen atoms) were incorporated into vanillic acid during the whole-cell biotransformation reaction with isoeugenol indicating the likely involvement of oxygenase and hydrolase systems in the bioconversion reaction. Vanillin was converted to singly labeled vanillic acid in the presence of H218O suggesting the presence of an aldehyde oxidase. Cell extracts achieved the conversion of isoeugenol to vanillic acid and vanillin without cofactors. Partial fractionation of two enzyme activities supported the presence of isoeugenol monooxygenase and vanillin oxidase activities in N. iowensis.  相似文献   

7.
We investigated the conversion of ferulic acid to 4-vinylguaiacol (4-VG), vanillin, vanillyl alcohol, and vanillic acid by five Enterobacter strains. These high-value chemicals are usually synthesized by chemical methods but biological synthesis adds market value. Ferulic acid, a relatively inexpensive component of agricultural crops, is plentiful in corn hulls, cereal bran, and sugar-beet pulp. Two Enterobacter strains, E. soli, and E. aerogenes, accumulated 550–600?ppm amounts of 4-VG when grown in media containing 1,000?ppm ferulic acid; no accumulations were observed with the other strains. Decreasing the amount of ferulic acid present in the media increased the conversion efficiency. When ferulic acid was supplied in 500, 250, or 125?ppm amounts E. aerogenes converted ~72?% of the ferulic acid present to 4-VG while E. soli converted ~100?% of the ferulic acid to 4-VG when supplied with 250 or 125?ppm amounts of ferulic acid. Also, lowering the pH improved the conversion efficiency. At pH 5.0 E. aerogenes converted ~84?% and E. soli converted ~100?% of 1,000?ppm ferulic acid to 4-VG. Only small, 1–5?ppm, accumulations of vanillin, vanillyl alcohol, and vanillic acid were observed. E. soli has a putative phenolic acid decarboxylase (PAD) that is 168 amino acids long and is similar to PADs in other enterobacteriales; this protein is likely involved in the bioconversion of ferulic acid to 4-VG. E. soli or E. aerogenes might be useful as a means of biotransforming ferulic acid to 4-VG.  相似文献   

8.
A two-step bioconversion process of ferulic acid to vanillin was elaborated combining two filamentous fungi, Aspergillus niger and Pycnoporus cinnabarinus. In the first step, A. niger transformed ferulic acid to vanillic acid and in the second step vanillic acid was reduced to vanillin by P. cinnabarinus. Ferulic acid metabolism by A. niger occurred essentially via the propenoic chain degradation to lead to vanillic acid, which was subsequently decarboxylated to methoxyhydroquinone. In 3-day-old cultures of P. cinnabarinus supplied with vanillic-acid-enriched culture medium from A. niger as precursor source, vanillin was successfully produced. In order to improve the yields of the process, sequential additions of precursors were performed. Vanillic acid production by A. niger from ferulic acid reached 920 mg l−1 with a molar yield of 88% and vanillin production by P. cinnabarinus from vanillic acid attained 237 mg l −1 with a molar yield of 22%. However, the vanillic acid oxidative system producing methoxyhydroquinone was predominant in P. cinnabarinus cultures, which explained the relatively low level in vanillin.  相似文献   

9.
AIMS: The ability of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) to metabolize certain phenolic precursors to vanillin was investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) or HPLC was used to evaluate the biosynthesis of vanillin from simple phenolic precursors. LAB were not able to form vanillin from eugenol, isoeugenol or vanillic acid. However Oenococcus oeni or Lactobacillus sp. could convert ferulic acid to vanillin, but in low yield. Only Lactobacillus sp. or Pediococcus sp. strains were able to produce significant quantities of 4-vinylguaiacol from ferulic acid. Moreover, LAB reduced vanillin to the corresponding vanillyl alcohol. CONCLUSIONS: The transformation of phenolic compounds tested by LAB could not explain the concentrations of vanillin observed during LAB growth in contact with wood. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: Important details of the role of LAB in the conversion of phenolic compounds to vanillin have been elucidated. These findings contribute to the understanding of malolactic fermentation in the production of aroma compounds.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

Ferulic acid is an abundant cinnamic acid derivative found in the plant kingdom. It is a commercially available substrate utilized to produce flavor compounds such as 4-vinylguaiacol (4-VG), vanillin, and vanillic acid. The isolate Bacillus cereus SAS-3006 was screened and selected based on its ability to produce 4-VG upon ferulic acid biotransformation. It was identified based on morphological and physiochemical characteristics and its 16S ribosomal DNA sequence (GenBank accession number: KF699134). A maximum amount (79.4 mg/L) of 4-VG accumulation was observed on the 5th day of incubation when the culture was grown on 2.5 mM ferulic acid as sole carbon source. Further conversion of 4-VG to other intermediates such as vanillin, vanillic acid, protocatechuic acid, acetovanillone, and vanillyl alcohol was not observed. In-vitro conversion of ferulic acid to 4-VG was also studied with cell extracts of B. cereus SAS-3006. The present study provides the first evidence for production of 4-VG as the sole product using B. cereus SAS-3006.  相似文献   

11.
Streptomyces setonii strain 75Vi2 was grown at 45 degrees C in liquid media containing yeast extract and trans-cinnamic acid, p-coumaric acid, ferulic acid, or vanillin. Gas chromatography, thin-layer chromatography, and mass spectrometry showed that cinnamic acid was catabolized via benzaldehyde, benzoic acid, and catechol; p-coumaric acid was catabolized via p-hydroxybenzaldehyde, p-hydroxybenzoic acid, and protocatechuic acid; ferulic acid was catabolized via vanillin, vanillic acid, and protocatechuic acid. When vanillin was used as the initial growth substrate, it was catabolized via vanillic acid, guaiacol, and catechol. The inducible ring-cleavage dioxygenases catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase were detected with an oxygen electrode in cell-free extracts of cultures grown in media with aromatic growth substrates and yeast extract.  相似文献   

12.
Streptomyces sannanensis MTCC 6637 was examined for its potentiality to transform ferulic acid into its corresponding hydroxybenzoate-derivatives. Cultures of S. sannanensis when grown on minimal medium containing ferulic acid as sole carbon source, vanillic acid accumulation was observed in the medium as the major biotransformed product along with transient formation of vanillin. A maximum amount of 400 mg/l vanillic acid accumulation was observed, when cultures were grown on 5 mM ferulic acid at 28°C. This accumulation of vanillic acid was found to be stable in the culture media for a long period of time, thus facilitating its recovery. Purification of vanillic acid was achieved by gel filtration chromatography using Sephadex™ LH-20 matrix. Catabolic route of ferulic acid biotransformation by S. sannanensis has also been demonstrated. The metabolic inhibitor experiment [by supplementation of 3,4 methylenedioxy-cinnamic acid (MDCA), a metabolic inhibitor of phenylpropanoid enzyme 4-hydroxycinnamoyl-CoA ligase (4-CL) along with ferulic acid] suggested that biotransformation of ferulic acid into vanillic acid mainly proceeds via CoA-dependent route. In vitro conversions of ferulic acid to vanillin, vanillic acid and vanillin to vanillic acid were also demonstrated with cell extract of S. sannanensis. Further degradation of vanillic acid to other intermediates such as, protocatechuic acid and guaiacol was not observed, which was also confirmed in vitro with cell extract.  相似文献   

13.
A new strain Bacillus coagulans BK07 was isolated from decomposed wood-bark, based on its ability to grow on ferulic acid as a sole carbon source. This strain rapidly decarboxylated ferulic acid to 4-vinylguaiacol, which was immediately converted to vanillin and then oxidized to vanillic acid. Vanillic acid was further demethylated to protocatechuic acid. Above 95% substrate degradation was obtained within 7 h of growth on ferulic acid medium, which is the shortest period of time reported to date. The major degradation products, was isolated and identified by thin-layer chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were 4-vinylguaiacol, vanillin, vanillic acid and protocatechuic acid.  相似文献   

14.
Metabolism of veratric acid and other aromatic compounds has been studied in two strains of Pycnoporus cinnabarinus. In non-agitated cultures which contained cellulose as an additional carbon source, veratric acid was demeth(ox)ylated to vanillic acid which accumulated in the medium. Under these conditions, 14CO2 evolution from [4-O14CH3]-veratric acid preceded that from [3-O14CH3]-veratric acid in the case of both strains. 14CO2 evolution was markedly accelerated and increased when 100% oxygen was employed instead of air. Oxygen had not so strong effect on the decarboxylation of 14COOH-labelled vanillic and p-hydroxybenzoic acid but it did increase decarboxylation of 14COOH-labelled veratric acid, indicating the effect of oxygen on the preceding demeth(ox)ylation. There were indications, for example rapid demethylation of veratric acid in early stages of growth when apparent phenol oxidase (laccase) activity was zero, for an existence of a separate demethylase enzyme. However, the participation of phenol oxidases in demeth(ox)ylation cannot be ruled out. Degradation pattern of vanillic acid was basically similar in P. cinnabarinus compared to Sporotrichum pulverulentum (Phanerochaete chrysosporium). Also the effect of carbon source was similar: cellulose as a carbon source enhanced degradation of vanillic acid through methoxyhydroquinone whereas in glucose medium, vanillic acid was reduced to the respective aldehyde and alcohol.Non-standard abbreviations CBQ cellobiose: quinone oxidoreductase - MHQ methoxyhydroquinone  相似文献   

15.
In order to utilize phenolic compounds in unused biomass resources, the metabolic pathway of ferulic acid by way of a white-rot fungus, Schizophyllum commune, was investigated. Ferulic acid was immediately degraded, and the formation of 4-vinyl guaiacol was confirmed by GC-MS analysis. The metabolic test of ferulic acid and its degradation products indicated that S. commune converted ferulic acid into 4-vinyl guaiacol by decarboxylation. This was then oxidized to vanillin and vanillic acid. This result indicates that S. commune distinguished ferulic acid from lignins and metabolized it specifically.  相似文献   

16.
To harness eugenol as cheap substrate for the biotechnological production of aromatic compounds, the vanillyl alcohol oxidase gene (vaoA) from Penicillium simplicissimum CBS 170.90 was cloned in an expression vector suitable for Gram-positive bacteria and expressed in the vanillin-tolerant Gram-positive strain Amycolatopsis sp. HR167. Recombinant strains harboring hybrid plasmid pRLE6SKvaom exhibited a specific vanillyl alcohol oxidase activity of 1.1U/g protein. Moreover, this strain had gained the ability to grow on eugenol as sole carbon source. The intermediates coniferyl alcohol, coniferyl aldehyde, ferulic acid, guajacol, and vanillic acid were detected as excreted compounds during growth on eugenol, whereas vanillin could only be detected in trace amounts. Resting cells of Amycolatopsis sp. HR167 (pRLE6SKvaom) produced coniferyl alcohol from eugenol with a maximum conversion rate of about 2.3 mmol/h/l of culture, and a maximum coniferyl alcohol concentration of 4.7 g/1 was obtained after 16 h biotransformation without further optimization. Beside coniferyl alcohol, traces of coniferyl aldehyde and ferulic acid were also detected.  相似文献   

17.
Protoplasts of the basidiomycete, Fomitopsis palustris (formerly Tyromyces palustris), were utilized to study a function of the fungal plasma membrane. Fungal protoplasts exhibited metabolic activities as seen with intact mycelial cells. Furthermore, the uptake of certain compounds into the protoplast cells was quantitatively observed by using non-radioactive compounds. Vanillin was converted to vanillyl alcohol and vanillic acid as major products and to protocatechuic acid and 1,2,4-trihydroxybenzene as trace products by protoplasts prepared from F. palustris. Extracellular culture medium showed no activity responsible for the redox reactions of vanillin. Only vanillic acid was detected in the intracellular fraction of protoplasts. However, the addition of disulfiram, an aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor, caused an intracellular accumulation of vanillin, strongly suggesting that vanillin is taken up by the cell, followed by oxidation to vanillic acid. The addition of carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, which dissipates the pH gradient across the plasma membrane, inhibited the uptake of either vanillin or vanillic acid into the cell. Thus, the fungus seems to possess transporter devices for both vanillin and vanillic acid for their uptake. Since vanillyl alcohol was only observed extracellularly, the reduction of vanillin was thought to be catalyzed by a membrane system.  相似文献   

18.
A new strain Bacillus coagulans BK07 was isolated from decomposed wood-bark, based on its ability to grow on ferulic acid as a sole carbon source. This strain rapidly decarboxylated ferulic acid to 4-vinylguaiacol, which was immediately converted to vanillin and then oxidized to vanillic acid. Vanillic acid was further demethylated to protocatechuic acid. Above 95% substrate degradation was obtained within 7 h of growth on ferulic acid medium, which is the shortest period of time reported to date. The major degradation products, was isolated and identified by thin-layer chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography and 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were 4-vinylguaiacol, vanillin, vanillic acid and protocatechuic acid.  相似文献   

19.
The white-rot fungus Pycnoporous cinnabarinus (DMS-1184) was submerged cultured for 22 days under controlled conditions in a bioreactor. After 6, 9, and 15 days of culture the growth medium was supplemented with [5-2H]-labelled ferulic acid (I). The major phenolic compounds identified labelled were four lignans, the methyl esters of ferulic (I) and vanillic acid (VIII), (E)-coniferyl aldehyde (II), (E)-coniferyl alcohol (III), vanillic acid (VIII), vanillin (IX) and vanillyl alcohol (X). The detection of considerable amounts of labelled 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyacetophenone (VII) in the late growth phase suggested the increasing formation and decarboxylation of free 4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoylacetic acid (VI) and, thus, a beta-oxidation-like degradation of ferulic acid (I) or its methyl ester to vanillic acid (VIII). 4-Hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoylacetic acid methyl ester (VI) and 3-hydroxy-(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)-propanoic acid methyl ester (V) were synthesised and then identified as metabolites in the culture medium. The fungal degradation of the phenyl propenoic side chain of ferulic acid (I), a principal key step of lignin decomposition, appeared to proceed analogous to fatty acids.  相似文献   

20.
Microbial transformation of ferulic acid to acetovanillone was studied using growing cells of Rhizopus oryzae. Ferulic acid was added to the growing medium (0.5 g L?1) and incubated for 12 days. The progress of formation of metabolites was monitored by GC and GC-MS after extraction with ethyl acetate. The major metabolite was acetovanillone with minor metabolites formed, such as dihydroferulic acid, coniferyl alcohol and dihydroconiferyl alcohol. Traces of metabolites (≤1–3%), such as vanillin, vanillyl alcohol, vanillic acid and phenyl ethyl alcohol, were also produced. Formation of 4-vinyl guaiacol increased from day 1 (12.4%), reaching a maximum on day 4 (31.7%), and reducing to a minimum on day 12 (3.1%). The formation of acetovanillone increased only from day 2 onward, and reached a maximum (49.2%) on day 12. The optimum concentration of ferulic acid to be added into the medium was found to be only 0.5 g L?1, as any increase in concentration (0.75 and 1.0 g L?1) precipitated the precursor, resulting in no further degradation.  相似文献   

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