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1.
When grown on xanthan as a carbon source, the bacterium Bacillus sp. strain GL1 produces extracellular xanthan lyase (75 kDa), catalyzing the first step of xanthan depolymerization (H. Nankai, W. Hashimoto, H. Miki, S. Kawai, and K. Murata, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 65:2520-2526, 1999). A gene for the lyase was cloned, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. The gene contained an open reading frame consisting of 2,793 bp coding for a polypeptide with a molecular weight of 99,308. The polypeptide had a signal peptide (2 kDa) consisting of 25 amino acid residues preceding the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme and exhibited significant homology with hyaluronidase of Streptomyces griseus (identity score, 37.7%). Escherichia coli transformed with the gene without the signal peptide sequence showed a xanthan lyase activity and produced intracellularly a large amount of the enzyme (400 mg/liter of culture) with a molecular mass of 97 kDa. During storage at 4 degrees C, the purified enzyme (97 kDa) from E. coli was converted to a low-molecular-mass (75-kDa) enzyme with properties closely similar to those of the enzyme (75 kDa) from Bacillus sp. strain GL1, specifically in optimum pH and temperature for activity, substrate specificity, and mode of action. Logarithmically growing cells of Bacillus sp. strain GL1 on the medium with xanthan were also found to secrete not only xanthan lyase (75 kDa) but also a 97-kDa protein with the same N-terminal amino acid sequence as that of xanthan lyase (75 kDa). These results suggest that, in Bacillus sp. strain GL1, xanthan lyase is first synthesized as a preproform (99 kDa), secreted as a precursor (97 kDa) by a signal peptide-dependent mechanism, and then processed into a mature form (75 kDa) through excision of a C-terminal protein fragment with a molecular mass of 22 kDa.  相似文献   

2.
When grown on xanthan as a carbon source, the bacterium Bacillus sp. strain GL1 produces extracellular xanthan lyase (75 kDa), catalyzing the first step of xanthan depolymerization (H. Nankai, W. Hashimoto, H. Miki, S. Kawai, and K. Murata, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 65:2520–2526, 1999). A gene for the lyase was cloned, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. The gene contained an open reading frame consisting of 2,793 bp coding for a polypeptide with a molecular weight of 99,308. The polypeptide had a signal peptide (2 kDa) consisting of 25 amino acid residues preceding the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme and exhibited significant homology with hyaluronidase of Streptomyces griseus (identity score, 37.7%). Escherichia coli transformed with the gene without the signal peptide sequence showed a xanthan lyase activity and produced intracellularly a large amount of the enzyme (400 mg/liter of culture) with a molecular mass of 97 kDa. During storage at 4°C, the purified enzyme (97 kDa) from E. coli was converted to a low-molecular-mass (75-kDa) enzyme with properties closely similar to those of the enzyme (75 kDa) from Bacillus sp. strain GL1, specifically in optimum pH and temperature for activity, substrate specificity, and mode of action. Logarithmically growing cells of Bacillus sp. strain GL1 on the medium with xanthan were also found to secrete not only xanthan lyase (75 kDa) but also a 97-kDa protein with the same N-terminal amino acid sequence as that of xanthan lyase (75 kDa). These results suggest that, in Bacillus sp. strain GL1, xanthan lyase is first synthesized as a preproform (99 kDa), secreted as a precursor (97 kDa) by a signal peptide-dependent mechanism, and then processed into a mature form (75 kDa) through excision of a C-terminal protein fragment with a molecular mass of 22 kDa.  相似文献   

3.
Purification and characterization of microbial gellan lyase.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Gellan lyase was purified from the culture fluid of soil samples incubated in a medium containing gellan as a sole carbon source. The enzyme was a monomer with a molecular mass of 140 kDa and was most active at pH 7.5 and 45 degrees C. The enzyme was highly specific to gellan and lowered the viscosity of the polymer.  相似文献   

4.
Ulvan is a sulfated polysaccharide found in the cell wall of the green algae Ulva. We first isolated several ulvan-utilizing Alteromonas sp. from the feces of small marine animals. The strain with the highest ulvan-degrading activity, KUL17, was analyzed further. We identified a 55-kDa ulvan-degrading protein secreted by this strain and cloned the gene encoding for it. The deduced amino acid sequence indicated that the enzyme belongs to polysaccharide lyase family 24 and thus the protein was named ulvan lyase. The predicted molecular mass of this enzyme is 110 kDa, which is different from that of the identified protein. By deletion analysis, the catalytic domain was proven to be located on the N-terminal half of the protein. KUL17 contains two ulvan lyases, one long and one short, but the secreted and cleaved long ulvan lyase was demonstrated to be the major enzyme for ulvan degradation.  相似文献   

5.
A pectate lyase (Pel; pectate transeliminase: EC4.2.2.2.), designated Pel-15H, was found in an alkaline culture of Bacillus sp. strain KSM-P15 and purified to homogeneity by sequential column chromatographies. The molecular weight of the enzyme determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was approximately 70,000 and the pI was around pH 4.6. Pel-15H randomly trans-eliminated polygalacturonate in the presence of Ca2+ ions, and the maximum activity was observed at pH 11.5 and at 55 degrees C in glycine-NaOH buffer. The gene for Pel-15H was cloned and sequenced, and the structural gene contained a 2,031-bp open reading frame that encoded 677 amino acids including a possible 28-amino-acid signal sequence. The mature enzyme (649 amino acids, molecular weight 69,550) showed very low similarity to Pels from Bacillus with 12.7-18.2% identity. Interestingly, part of the amino acid sequence of Pel-15H had fairly high similarity only to an N-terminal half of PelL and a C-terminal half of PeIX from Erwinia chrysanthemi 3937, and a C-terminal half of PeIX from E. chrysanthemi EC16 (approximately 35% identity for all).  相似文献   

6.
Hyaluronate lyases are a class of endoglycosaminidase enzymes, which are of considerable complexity and heterogeneity. Their primary function is to degrade hyaluronan and certain other glycosaminoglycans and facilitate the spread of disease. Among hyaluronate lyases, the bacteriophage-associated enzymes are unique as they have the lowest molecular mass, very low amino acid sequence homology with bacterial hyaluronate lyases, and exhibit absolute specificity for one type of glycosaminoglycan, i.e. hyaluronan. Despite such unique characteristics significant details on structural features of these lyases are not available. The Streptococcus pyogenes bacteriophage 10403 contains a gene, hylP2, which encodes for hyaluronate lyase (HylP2) in this organism. HylP2 was cloned, overexpressed, and purified to homogeneity. The recombinant HylP2 exists as a homotrimer of molecular mass about 110 kDa, under physiological conditions. Limited proteolysis and guanidine hydrochloride denaturation studies demonstrated that the N-terminal region of the protein is flexible, whereas the C-terminal portion has a compact conformation. The enzyme shows sequential unfolding, with the N-terminal unfolding first followed by the simultaneous unfolding and dissociation of the stabilized trimeric C-terminal domain. We isolated a functionally active C-terminal fragment (Ser(128)-Lys(337)) of the protein that was stabilized in a trimeric configuration. Comparative functional studies with full-length protein, N:C complex, and isolated C-terminal domain demonstrated that the active site of HylP2 is present in the C-terminal portion of the enzyme, and the N-terminal portion modulates the substrate specificity and enzymatic activity of the C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

7.
Penicillin G acylase is a periplasmic protein, cytoplasmically expressed as a precursor polypeptide comprising a signal sequence, the A and B chains of the mature enzyme (209 and 557 residues respectively) joined by a spacer peptide of 54 amino acid residues. The wild-type AB heterodimer is produced by proteolytic removal of this spacer in the periplasm. The first step in processing is believed to be autocatalytic hydrolysis of the peptide bond between the C-terminal residue of the spacer and the active-site serine residue at the N terminus of the B chain. We have determined the crystal structure of a slowly processing precursor mutant (Thr263Gly) of penicillin G acylase from Escherichia coli, which reveals that the spacer peptide blocks the entrance to the active-site cleft consistent with an autocatalytic mechanism of maturation. In this mutant precursor there is, however, an unexpected cleavage at a site four residues from the active-site serine residue. Analyses of the stereochemistry of the 260-261 bond seen to be cleaved in this precursor structure and of the 263-264 peptide bond have suggested factors that may govern the autocatalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
A gene (alyPEEC) encoding an alginate lyase of Pseudoalteromonas elyakovii IAM 14594 was cloned using the plasmid vector pUC118 and expressed in Escherichia coli. Sequencing of a 3.0kb fragment revealed a 1,197bp open reading frame encoding 398 amino acid residues. The calculated molecular mass and isoelectric point of the alyPEEC gene product are 43.2 kDa and pI 5.29. A region G(165) to V(194) in the AlyPEEC internal sequence is identical to the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the previously purified extracellular alginate lyase of P. elyakovii, and the calculated molecular mass (25.4 kDa) and isoelectric point (pI 4.78) of the region resembled those of the purified enzyme. Expression of enzymically-active alginate lyase from alyPEEC required growth of recombinant E. coli in LB broth containing 50% (v/v) artificial seawater (ASW). Alginate lyase activity with broad substrate specificity was detected in both 42 and 30 kDa products. Subcloning of the region G(165) to N(398) of AlyPEEC corresponding to the 30 kDa protein confirmed that this region of the alyPEEC gene encoded the active site of the enzyme. A region A(32) to G(164) corresponding to about 13 kDa of the N-terminal region of AlyPEEC showed about 30% identity to a putative chitin binding domain of Streptomyces chitinases, but did not exhibit any catalytic activity.  相似文献   

9.
A bacterium (strain A1) isolated from a ditch synthesized three types of intracellular alginate lyases: A1-I (molecular weight [M.W.] 60,000), A1-II-2 (M.W. 25,000) and A1-III (M.W. 38,000). The nucleotide sequence of the gene for A1-I lyase, which has been cloned in Escherichia coli DH1 was determined. The open reading frame of the gene encoded 622 amino acids with a calculated M.W. of 69,153. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of A1-I lyase purified from strain A1 or E. coli DH1 cells transformed with the A1-I lyase gene was consistent with the deduced sequence from 55His to 74Ala, indicating that the A1-I lyase was synthesized as a precursor with a M.W. of 69,153 and then processed to a mature form with a M.W. of 63,681. The N-terminal sequence of the first twenty amino acids of A1-III lyase was found to match that of A1-I lyase. The N-terminal sequence of the first twenty amino acids of A1-II-2 lyase was consistent with the deduced amino acid sequence from 414Ala to 433Val in the nucleotide sequence of the A1-I lyase gene. These results indicated that the A1-I lyase was further processed to generate A1-II-2 and A1-III lyase species.  相似文献   

10.
The precursor of aqualysin I, an extracellular subtilisin-type protease produced by Thermus aquaticus, consists of four domains: an N-terminal signal peptide, an N-terminal pro-sequence, a protease domain, and a C-terminal extended sequence. In an Escherichia coli expression system for the aqualysin I gene, a 38 kDa precursor protein consisting of the protease domain and the C-terminal extended sequence is accumulated in the membrane fraction and processed to a 28 kDa mature enzyme upon heat treatment at 65°C. The 38 kDa precursor protein is separated as a soluble form from denatured E. coli proteins after heat treatment. Accordingly, purification of the 38 kDa proaqualysin I was performed using chromatography. The purified precursor protein gave a single band on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The precursor protein exhibited proteolytic activity comparable to that of the mature enzyme. The purified precursor protein was processed to the mature enzyme upon heat treatment. The processing was inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate. The processing rate increased upon either the addition of mature aqualysin I or upon an increase in the concentration of the precursor, suggesting that the cleavage of the C-terminal extended sequence occurs through an intermolecular self-processing mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
cDNA cloning of an alginate lyase from abalone, Haliotis discus hannai   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
An alginate lyase, termed HdAly in the present paper, was isolated from the hepatopancreas of abalone, Haliotis discus hannai, by ammonium sulfate fractionation, followed by TOYOPEARL CM-650M column chromatography. Enzymatic properties of HdAly were similar to those of previously reported Haliotis and Turbo poly(M) lyases, e.g., it preferentially degraded a poly(beta-D-mannuronate)-rich substrate with an optimal pH and temperature at pH 8.0 and 45 degrees C, respectively. In order to determine the primary structure of abalone lyase that is still poorly understood, cDNAs for HdAly were cloned by PCR from the abalone hepatopancreas cDNA library and sequenced. From the nucleotide sequences of the cDNAs, the sequence of 909 bp in total was determined, and the amino acid sequence of 273 residues was deduced from the translational region of 822 bp locating at nucleotide positions 27-848. The N-terminal region of 16 residues, except for the initiation Met in the deduced sequence, was regarded as the signal peptide since it was absent in the HdAly protein and showed high similarity to the consensus sequence for signal peptides of eukaryote secretary proteins. This suggests that HdAly is initially produced as a precursor possessing the signal peptide in hepatopancreatic cells and then secreted into digestive tract as the mature form. Thus, the mature HdAly was regarded to consist of 256 residues with the calculated molecular mass of 28895.5 Da. The amino acid sequence of HdAly showed 85 and 28% identity to those of Turbo cornutus alginate lyase SP2 and the C-terminal region of Chlorella virus lyase-like protein CL2, respectively, while it showed no significant identity to those of any bacterial alginate lyases. In order to provide the basis for the structure-function studies and various applications of the abalone lyase, a bacterial expression system was constructed by means of the HdAly-cDNA and pET-3a expression plasmid. Although the active recombinant HdAly was hardly produced at a cultivation temperature 37 degrees C in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), a small amount of soluble and active enzyme could be produced when the temperature was lowered to 19 degrees C.  相似文献   

12.
S-Adenosyl-L-methionine: uroporphyrinogen III methyltransferase (SUMT), a key regulatory enzyme, converts uroporphyrinogen III to precorrin-2 in the porphinoids biosynthesis. In this study, the mature SUMT was signified that the maize SUMT precursor encoded by the open reading frame of maize SUMT cDNA was deleted the first 91 amino acids constituting the postulated signal peptide. Several mature SUMT fusion and deletion mutants were conducted. It actively expressed in Escherichia coli that the mature SUMT, or the truncated one deleting the C-terminal extra 52 amino acids based on SUMT sequence comparisons. On the contrary, it expressed as an inclusion body in E. coli that the mature SUMT fusion mutant, the SUMT precursor, or the mature SUMT deleting the N-terminal 36 amino acids including glycine-rich region involved directly in SAM binding. The purified His6-tagged mature SUMT was homodimer with a molecular weight of 34 kDa, as shown by SDS-PAGE, 52 kDa using gel-filtration chromatography, and 79 kDa by dynamic light scattering assay. Red fluorescent compounds were associated with the recombinant mature SUMT which were identified as sirohydrochlorin and trimethylpyrrocorphin by spectroscopic analysis. This association slightly altered the protein secondary structure confirmed by circular dichroism assay.  相似文献   

13.
The nucleotide sequence of the gene for a highly alkaline, low-molecular-mass pectate lyase (Pel-15) from an alkaliphilic Bacillus isolate was determined. It harbored an open reading frame of 672 bp encoding the mature enzyme of 197 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 20 924 Da. The deduced amino-acid sequence of the mature enzyme showed very low homology (< 20.4% identity) to those of known pectinolytic enzymes in the large pectate lyase superfamily (the polysaccharide lyase family 1). In an integrally conserved region designated the BF domain, Pel-15 showed a high degree of identity (40.5% to 79.4%) with pectate lyases in the polysaccharide lyase family 3, such as PelA, PelB, PelC, and PelD from Fusarium solani f. sp. pisi, PelB from Erwinia carotovora ssp. carotovora, PelI from E. chrysanthemi, and PelA from a Bacillus strain. By site-directed mutagenesis of the Pel-15 gene, we replaced Lys20 in the N-terminal region, Glu38, Lys41, Glu47, Asp63, His66, Trp78, Asp80, Glu83, Asp84, Lys89, Asp106, Lys107, Asp126, Lys129, and Arg132 in the BF domain, and Arg152, Tyr174, Lys182, and Lys185 in the C-terminal region of the enzyme individually with Ala and/or other amino acids. Consequently, some carboxylate and basic residues selected from Glu38, Asp63, Glu83, Asp106, Lys107, Lys129, and Arg132 were suggested to be involved in catalysis and/or calcium binding. We constructed a chimeric enzyme composed of Ala1 to Tyr105 of Pel-15 in the N-terminal regions, Asp133 to Arg159 of FsPelB in the internal regions, and Gln133 to Tyr197 of Pel-15 in the C-terminal regions. The substituted PelB segment could also express beta-elimination activity in the chimeric molecule, confirming that Pel-15 and PelB share a similar active-site topology.  相似文献   

14.
Xanthan lyase, a member of polysaccharide lyase family 8, is a key enzyme for complete depolymerization of a bacterial heteropolysaccharide, xanthan, in Bacillus sp. GL1. The enzyme acts exolytically on the side chains of the polysaccharide. The x-ray crystallographic structure of xanthan lyase was determined by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The crystal structures of xanthan lyase and its complex with the product (pyruvylated mannose) were refined at 2.3 and 2.4 A resolution with final R-factors of 17.5 and 16.9%, respectively. The refined structure of the product-free enzyme comprises 752 amino acid residues, 248 water molecules, and one calcium ion. The enzyme consists of N-terminal alpha-helical and C-terminal beta-sheet domains, which constitute incomplete alpha(5)/alpha(5)-barrel and anti-parallel beta-sheet structures, respectively. A deep cleft is located in the N-terminal alpha-helical domain facing the interface between the two domains. Although the overall structure of the enzyme is basically the same as that of the family 8 lyases for hyaluronate and chondroitin AC, significant differences were observed in the loop structure over the cleft. The crystal structure of the xanthan lyase complexed with pyruvylated mannose indicates that the sugar-binding site is located in the deep cleft, where aromatic and positively charged amino acid residues are involved in the binding. The Arg(313) and Tyr(315) residues in the loop from the N-terminal domain and the Arg(612) residue in the loop from the C-terminal domain directly bind to the pyruvate moiety of the product through the formation of hydrogen bonds, thus determining the substrate specificity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The purification and characterization of a pyrimidine dimer-specific glycosylase/AP lyase from Bacillus sphaericus (Bsp-pdg) are reported. Bsp-pdg is highly specific for DNA containing the cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer, displaying no detectable activity on oligonucleotides with trans-syn I, trans-syn II, (6-4), or Dewar photoproducts. Like other glycosylase/AP lyases that sequentially cleave the N--glycosyl bond of the 5' pyrimidine of a cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer, and the phosphodiester backbone, this enzyme appears to utilize a primary amine as the attacking nucleophile. The formation of a covalent enzyme-DNA imino intermediate is evidenced by the ability to trap this protein-DNA complex by reduction with sodium borohydride. Also consistent with its AP lyase activity, Bsp-pdg was shown to incise an AP site-containing oligonucleotide, yielding beta- and delta-elimination products. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of this 26 kDa protein revealed little amino acid homology to any previously reported protein. This is the first report of a glycosylase/AP lyase enzyme from Bacillus sphaericus that is specific for cis-syn pyrimidine dimers.  相似文献   

16.
A full length cDNA (1463 bp) encoding isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1) of Strongyloides stercoralis is described. The nucleotide sequence of this insert identified a cDNA coding for the isocitrate lyase. The conceptually translated amino acid sequence of the open reading frame for S. stercoralis isocitrate lyase encodes a 450 amino acid residue protein with an apparent molecular weight of 50 kDa and a predicted pl of 6.39. The sequence is 69% A/T, reflecting a characteristic A/T codon bias of S. stercoralis. The amino acid sequence of S. stercoralis isocitrate lyase is compared with bifunctional glyoxylate cycle protein of Caenorhabditis elegans and isocitrate lyases from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Myxococcus xanthus. The full length cDNA of S. stercoralis was expressed in pRSET vector and bacteriophage T7 promoter based expression system. S. stercoralis lyase recombinant protein, purified via immobilized metal affinity chromatography, showed a molecular mass of 50 kDa on polyacrylamide gels. The role of isocitrate lyase in the glyoxylate cycle and energy metabolism of S. stercoralis is also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
A glucuronan lyase extracted from Sinorhizobium meliloti strain M5N1CS was purified to homogeneity by anion-exchange chromatography. The purified enzyme corresponds to a monomer with a molecular mass of 20 kDa and a pI of 4.9. A specific activity was found only for polyglucuronates leading to the production of 4,5-unsaturated oligoglucuronates. The enzyme activity was optimal at pH 6.5 and 50 degrees C. Zn(2+), Cu(2+), and Hg(2+) (1 mM) inhibited the enzyme activity. No homology of the enzyme N-terminal amino acid sequence was found with any of the previously published protein sequences. This enzyme purified from S. meliloti strain M5N1CS corresponding to a new lyase was classified as an endopolyglucuronate lyase.  相似文献   

18.
The reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle functions as a carbon dioxide fixation pathway in the green sulfur bacterium, Chlorobium limicola. ATP-citrate lyase, one of the key enzymes of this cycle, was partially purified from C. limicola strain M1 and the N-terminal sequence of a 65-kDa protein was found to show similarity toward eukaryotic ATP-citrate lyase. A DNA fragment was amplified with primers designed from this sequence and an internal sequence highly conserved among eukaryotic enzymes. Using this fragment as a probe, we isolated a DNA fragment containing two adjacent open reading frames, aclB (1197 bp) and aclA (1827 bp), whose products showed significant similarity to the N- and C-terminal regions of the human enzyme, respectively. Heterologous expression of these genes in Escherichia coli showed that both gene products were essential for ATP-citrate lyase activity. The recombinant enzyme was purified from the cell-free extract of E. coli harboring aclBA for further characterization. The molecular mass of the recombinant enzyme was determined to be approximately 532--557 kDa by gel-filtration. The enzyme catalyzed the cleavage of citrate in an ATP(-), CoA- and Mg(2+)-dependent manner, where ATP and Mg(2+) could be replaced by dATP and Mn(2+), respectively. ADP and oxaloacetate inhibited the reaction. These properties suggested that ATP-citrate lyase from C. limicola controlled the cycle flux depending on intracellular energy conditions. This paper provides the first direct evidence that a bacterial ATP-citrate lyase is a heteromeric enzyme, distinct from mammalian enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Cell extracts of Rhodobacter capsulatus grown on acetate contained an apparent malate synthase activity but lacked isocitrate lyase activity. Therefore, R. capsulatus cannot use the glyoxylate cycle for acetate assimilation, and a different pathway must exist. It is shown that the apparent malate synthase activity is due to the combination of a malyl-coenzyme A (CoA) lyase and a malyl-CoA-hydrolyzing enzyme. Malyl-CoA lyase activity was 20-fold up-regulated in acetate-grown cells versus glucose-grown cells. Malyl-CoA lyase was purified 250-fold with a recovery of 6%. The enzyme catalyzed not only the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and acetyl-CoA to L-malyl-CoA but also the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and propionyl-CoA to beta-methylmalyl-CoA. Enzyme activity was stimulated by divalent ions with preference for Mn(2+) and was inhibited by EDTA. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and a corresponding gene coding for a 34.2-kDa protein was identified and designated mcl1. The native molecular mass of the purified protein was 195 +/- 20 kDa, indicating a homohexameric composition. A homologous mcl1 gene was found in the genomes of the isocitrate lyase-negative bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum in similar genomic environments. For Streptomyces coelicolor and Methylobacterium extorquens, mcl1 homologs are located within gene clusters implicated in acetate metabolism. We therefore propose that L-malyl-CoA/beta-methylmalyl-CoA lyase encoded by mcl1 is involved in acetate assimilation by R. capsulatus and possibly other glyoxylate cycle-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
The full length human adenylosuccinate lyase gene was generated by a PCR method using a plasmid encoding a truncated human enzyme as template, and was cloned into a pET-14b vector. Human adenylosuccinate lyase was overexpressed in Escherichia coli Rosetta 2(DE3)pLysS as an N-terminal histidine-tagged protein and was purified to homogeneity by a nickel-nitriloacetic acid column at room temperature. The histidine tag was removed from the human enzyme by thrombin digestion and the adenylosuccinate lyase was purified by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. The histidine-tagged and non-tagged adenylosuccinate lyases exhibit similar values of Vmax and Km for S-AMP. Analytical ultracentrifugation and circular dichroism revealed, respectively, that the histidine-tagged enzyme is in tetrameric form with a molecular weight of 220 kDa and contains predominantly alpha-helical structure. This is the first purification procedure to yield a stable form of human adenylosuccinate lyase. The enzyme is stable for at least 5 days at 25 degrees C, and upon rapid freezing and thawing. Temperature as well as reducing agent (DTT) play critical roles in determining the stability of the human adenylosuccinate lyase.  相似文献   

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