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1.
L-threo-3-Hydroxyaspartate dehydratase (L-threo-3-hydroxyaspartate hydro-lyase), which exhibited specificity for L-threo-3-hydroxyaspartate (K(m)=0.74 mM, V(max)=37.5 micromol min(-1) (mg protein)(-1)) but not for D-threo or D, L-erythro-3-hydroxyaspartate, was purified from a cell-free extract of Pseudomonas sp. T62. The activity of the enzyme was inhibited by hydroxylamine and EDTA, which suggests that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and divalent cations participate in the enzyme reaction. The NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequence showed significant similarity to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae YKL218c gene product, a hypothetical threonine dehydratase. However, the purified enzyme showed no threonine dehydratase activity.  相似文献   

2.
The expression vector containing the full-length cDNA of human aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.28) was transfected in COS cells by a modified calcium phosphate coprecipitation method. The cells transfected with plasmids that had a true direction of the cDNA gave a major immunoreactive band at 50 kDa. This expressed enzyme catalyzed the decarboxylation of L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA), L-5-hydroxytryptophan (L-5-HTP) and L-threo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine. The optimal pH of the enzyme activity with L-DOPA as a substrate was 6.5, whereas the enzyme had a broad pH optimum when L-5-HTP was used as a substrate. Addition of pyridoxal phosphate to the incubation mixture greatly enhanced the activity for both L-DOPA and L-5-HTP.  相似文献   

3.
D-Malic enzyme of Pseudomonas fluorescens   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
By the enrichment culture technique 14 gram-negative bacteria and two yeast strains were isolated that used D(+)-malic acid as sole carbon source. The bacteria were identified as Pseudomonas putida, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella aerogenes. In cell-free extracts of P. fluorescens and P. putida the presence of malate dehydrogenase, D-malic enzyme (NAD-dependent) and L-malic enzyme (NADP-dependent) was demonstrated. D-Malic enzyme from P. fluorescens was purified. Stabilization of the enzyme by 50 mM ammonium sulphate an 1 mM EDTA was essential. Preparation of D-malic enzyme that gave one band with disc gel electrophoresis showed a specific activity of 4-5 U/mg. D-Malic enzyme requires divalent cations. The Km values were for malate Km = 0.3 mM and for NAD Km = 0.08 mM. The pH optimum for the reaction was found to be in the range of pH 8.1 to pH 8.8. D-Malic enzyme is partially inhibited by oxaloacetic acid, meso-tartaric acid, D-lactic acid and ATP. Determined by gel filtration and gradient gel electrophoresis, the molecular weight was approximately 175 000.  相似文献   

4.
Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, two enzymes of the xylene degradative pathway encoded by the plasmid TOL of a Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas putida, were purified and characterized. Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase catalyses the oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde with the concomitant reduction of NAD+; the reaction is reversible. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase catalyses the oxidation of benzaldehyde to benzoic acid with the concomitant reduction of NAD+; the reaction is irreversible. Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase also catalyse the oxidation of many substituted benzyl alcohols and benzaldehydes, respectively, though they were not capable of oxidizing aliphatic alcohols and aldehydes. The apparent Km value of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase for benzyl alcohol was 220 microM, while that of benzaldehyde dehydrogenase for benzaldehyde was 460 microM. Neither enzyme contained a prosthetic group such as FAD or FMN, and both enzymes were inactivated by SH-blocking agents such as N-ethylmaleimide. Both enzymes were dimers of identical subunits; the monomer of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase has a mass of 42 kDa whereas that of the monomer of benzaldehyde dehydrogenase was 57 kDa. Both enzymes transfer hydride to the pro-R side of the prochiral C4 of the pyridine ring of NAD+.  相似文献   

5.
The fungal path for the catabolism of D-galacturonate is only partially known. It is however distinctly different to the well-known bacterial path. The known elements of the fungal path are D-galacturonate reductase converting D-galacturonate to L-galactonate and L-galactonate dehydratase converting L-galactonate to L-threo-3-deoxy-hexulosonate (2-keto-3-deoxy-L-galactonate). Here we describe the missing link in this pathway, an aldolase converting L-threo-3-deoxy-hexulosonate to pyruvate and L-glyceraldehyde. Fungal enzymes converting L-glyceraldehyde to glycerol have been described previously. The L-threo-3-deoxy-hexulosonate aldolase activity was induced in the mold Hypocrea jecorina (Trichoderma reesei) during growth on D-galacturonate. The enzyme was purified from this mold and a partial amino acid sequence obtained. This sequence was then used to identify the corresponding gene from the H. jecorina genome. The deletion of the gene resulted in a strain unable to grow on d-galacturonate and accumulating L-threo-3-deoxy-hexulosonate. The open reading frame was cloned from cDNA and functionally expressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A histidine-tagged protein was expressed, purified, and characterized. The enzyme catalyzed reaction was reversible. With L-threo-3-deoxy-hexulosonate as substrate the K(m) was 3.5 mM and with pyruvate and L-glyceraldehyde the K(m) were 0.5 and 1.2 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
The alpha-methylserine aldolase gene from Variovorax paradoxus strains AJ110406, NBRC15149, and NBRC15150 was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Formaldehyde release activity from alpha-methyl-L-serine was detected in the cell-free extract of E.coli expressing the gene from three strains. The recombinant enzyme from V. paradoxus NBRC15150 was purified. The Vmax and Km of the enzyme for the formaldehyde release reaction from alpha-methyl-L-serine were 1.89 micromol min(-1) mg(-1) and 1.2 mM respectively. The enzyme was also capable of catalyzing the synthesis of alpha-methyl-L-serine and alpha-ethyl-L-serine from L-alanine and L-2-aminobutyric acid respectively, accompanied by hydroxymethyl transfer from formaldehyde. The purified enzyme also catalyzed alanine racemization. It contained 1 mole of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mol of the enzyme subunit, and exhibited a specific spectral peak at 429 nm. With L-alanine and L-2-aminobutyric acid as substrates, the specific peak, assumed to be a result of the formation of a quinonoid intermediate, increased at 498 nm and 500 nm respectively.  相似文献   

7.
2,3-Diaminopropionate:ammonia-lyase, an induced enzyme in a Pseudomonas isolate, has been purified 40-fold and found to be homogeneous by disc gel electrophoresis and by ultracentrifugation. Some of its properties have been studied. The optimum pH and temperature for activity are 8 and 40 degrees C, respectively. The enzyme shows a high degree of substrate specificity, acting only on 2,3-diaminopropionate; the D-isomer is only one-eighth as effective as the L-form. L-Homoserine and DL-cystathionine are not substrates, and 3-cyanolalanine does not inhibit its activity. It is a pyridoxal phosphate enzyme which requires free enzyme sulphhydryls for activity. The Km values for L-2,3-diaminopropionate and pyridoxal phosphate are 1mM and 25 muM, respectively. The molecular weight of the enzyme is about 80 000 as determined by gel filtration. On treatment with 0.5M urea or guanidine by hydrochloride, the enzyme dissociates into inactive subunits with an approximate molecular weight of 45 000. One mole of the active enzyme binds one mole of pyridoxal phosphate. The bacterial enzyme seems to be quite different in many of its properties from the rat liver enzyme which also exhibits the substrate specificity of cystathionine gamma-lyase.  相似文献   

8.
We have examined the interaction of hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase with the phenylalanine analogs, tryptophan and the diastereomers of 3-phenylserine (beta-hydroxyphenylalanine). Both isomers of phenylserine are substrates for native phenylalanine hydroxylase at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees C, when activity is measured with the use of the dihydropteridine reductase assay coupled with NADH in the presence of the synthetic cofactor, 6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin. However, while erythro-phenylserine exhibits simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Km = 1.2 mM, Vmax = 1.2 mumol/min X min) under these conditions, the threo isomer exhibits strong positive cooperativity (S0.5 = 4.8 mM Vmax = 1.4 mumol/min X mg, nH = 3). Tryptophan also exhibits cooperativity under these conditions (S0.5 = 5 mM, Vmax = 1 mumol/min X mg, nH = 3). The presence of 1 mM lysolecithin results in a hyperbolic response of phenylalanine hydroxylase to tryptophan (Km = 4 mM, Vmax = 1 mumol/min X mg) and threo-phenylserine (Km = 2 mM, Vmax = 1.4 mumol/min X mg). erythro-Phenylserine is a substrate for native phenylalanine hydroxylase in the presence of the natural cofactor, L-erythro-tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) (Km = 2 mM, Vmax 0.05 mumol/min X mg, nH = 2). Preincubation of phenylalanine hydroxylase with erythro-phenylserine results in a 26-fold increase in activity upon subsequent assay with BH4 and erythro-phenylserine, and hyperbolic kinetic plots are observed. In contrast, both threo-phenylserine and tryptophan exhibit negligible activity in the presence of BH4 unless the enzyme has been activated. The product of the reaction of phenylalanine hydroxylase with either isomer of phenylserine was identified as the corresponding p-hydroxyphenylserine by reaction with sodium periodate and nitrosonaphthol. With erythro-phenylserine, the hydroxylation reaction is tightly coupled (i.e. 1 mol of hydroxyphenylserine is formed for every mole of tetrahydropterin cofactor consumed), while with threo-phenylserine and tryptophan the reaction is largely uncoupled (i.e. more cofactor consumed than product formed). Erythro-phenylserine is a good activator, when preincubated with phenylalanine hydroxylase (A0.5 = 0.2 mM), with a potency about one-third that of phenylalanine (A0.5 = 0.06 mM), while threo-phenylserine (A0.5 = 6 mM) and tryptophan (A0.5 approximately 10 mM) are very poor activators. Addition of 4 mM tryptophan or threo-phenylserine or 0.2 mM erythro-phenylserine to assay mixtures containing BH4 and phenylalanine results in a dramatic increase in the hydroxylation at low concentrations of phenylalanine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
A novel enzyme, D-3-hydroxyaspartate aldolase (D-HAA), catalyzing the conversion of D-3-hydroxyaspartate to glyoxylate plus glycine, was purified to homogeneity from Paracoccus denitrificans IFO 13301. D-HAA is strictly D-specific as to the alpha-position, whereas the enzyme does not distinguish between threo and erythro forms at the beta-position. In addition to D-3-hydroxyaspartate, the enzyme also acts on d-threonine, D-3-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine, D-3-3,4-methylenedioxyphenylserine, and D-3-phenylserine. The D-HAA gene was cloned and sequenced. The gene contains an open reading frame consisting of 1,161 nucleotides corresponding to 387 amino acid residues. The predicted amino acid sequence displayed 35% and 22% identity with that of the D-threonine aldolase of Arthrobacter sp. DK-38 and Alcaligenes xylosoxidan IFO 12669, respectively. This is the first paper reporting both a purified enzyme with D-3-hydroxyaspartate aldolase activity and also its gene cloning.  相似文献   

10.
L-Serine dehydratase with a specific activity of 15 nkat/mg protein was present in the anaerobic eubacterium Peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus grown either on L-glutamate or L-serine. The enzyme was highly specific for L-serine with the lowest Km = 0.8 mM ever reported for an L-serine dehydratase. L-Threonine (Km = 22 mM) was the only other substrate. V/Km for L-serine was 500 times higher than that for L-threonine. L-Cysteine was the best inhibitor (Ki = 0.3 mM, competitive towards L-serine). The enzyme was purified 400-fold to homogeneity under anaerobic conditions (specific activity 6 mukat/mg). PAGE in the presence of SDS revealed two subunits with similar intensities (alpha, 30 kDa; beta, 25 kDa). The molecular mass of the native enzyme was estimated as 200 +/- 20 kDa (gel filtration) and 180 kDa (gradient PAGE). In the absence of oxygen the enzyme was moderately stable even in the presence of sodium borohydride or phenylhydrazine (5 mM each). However, by exposure to air the activity was lost, especially when the latter agent was added. The enzyme was reactivated by ferrous ion under anaerobic conditions. The inability of several nucleophilic agents to inactivate the enzyme indicated the absence of pyridoxal phosphate. This was confirmed by a microbiological determination of pyridoxal phosphate. However, the enzyme contained 3.8 +/- 0.2 mol Fe and 5.6 +/- 0.3 mol inorganic sulfur/mol heterodimer (55 kDa) indicating the presence of an [Fe-S] center. The enzyme was successfully applied to measure L-serine concentrations in bacterial media and in human sera.  相似文献   

11.
Y H Lim  K Yokoigawa  N Esaki    K Soda 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(13):4213-4217
We have found that Pseudomonas putida ATCC 17642 cells grown in a medium containing D-threonine as the sole nitrogen source produce an enzyme that catalyzes epimerization of threonine. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of the enzyme reaction in deuterium oxide clearly showed epimerization from L- to D-allo-threonine and also from D- to L-allo-threonine. This is the first example of an enzyme that was clearly shown to epimerize threonine. The enzyme has been purified to homogeneity, which was shown by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 82,000 and consists of two subunits identical in molecular weight (about 41,000). The enzyme contains 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mol of subunit as a cofactor, and its absorption spectrum exhibits absorption maxima at 280 and 420 nm. The enzyme catalyzes not only epimerization of threonine by stereoconversion at the alpha position but also racemization of various amino acids, except acidic and aromatic amino acids. The enzyme is similar to amino acid racemase with low substrate specificity (EC 5.1.1.10) in enzymological properties but is distinct from it in the action on threonine.  相似文献   

12.
The photorespiratory enzyme L-serine:glyoxylate amino- transferase (SGAT; EC 2.6.1.45) was purified from Arabidopsis thaliana leaves. The f'mal enzyme was approximately 80 % pure as revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with silver staining. The identity of the enzyme was confirmed by LC/MS/MS analysis. The molecular mass estimated by gel filtration chromato- graphy on Sephadex G-150 under non-denaturing conditions, mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ ionization/time of flight technique) and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 82.4 kDa, 42.0 kDa, and 39.8 kDa, respectively, indicating dimer as the active form. The optimum pH value was 9.2. The enzyme activity was inhibited by aminooxyacetate and β-chloro-L-alanine both compounds reacting with the carbonyl group of pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme's transaminating activity with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates was approximately 55 % of that observed with L-serine and glyoxylate. The lower Kmvalue (1.25 mM) for L-alanine, compared with that of other plant SGATs, and the kcat/Km(Ala) ratio being approxi- mately 2-fold higher than kcat/Km(Ser) suggested that, during photorespiration, Ala and Ser are used by Arabidopsis SGAT with equal efficiency as amino group donors for glyoxylate. The equilibrium constant (Keq), derived from the Haldane relation, for the transamination reaction between L-serine and glyoxylate with the formation of hydroxypyruvate and glycine was 79.1, strongly favoring glycine synthesis. However, it was accompanied by a low Km value of 2.83 mM for glycine. A comparison of some kinetic properties of the studied enzymes with the recombinant Arabidopsis SGATs previously obtained revealed substantial differences. The ratio of the velocity of the transamination reaction with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates versus that with L-serine and glyoxylate was 1:1.8 for the native enzyme, whereas it was 1:7 for the recombinant SGAT. Native SGAT showed a much lower Km value for L-alanine compared to the recombinant enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
A pyridoxal dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from Aureobacterium luteolum, which can use pyridoxine as a carbon and nitrogen source, and characterized. The enzyme was a dimeric protein with a subunit molecular weight of 38,000. It had several properties distinct from those of the partially purified enzyme from Pseudomonas MA-1. The optimum pH (8.0-8.5) was 0.8-1.3 lower than that of the Pseudomonas enzyme. The Aureobacterium enzyme showed much higher and lower affinities for NAD+ (Km, 0.140 +/- 0.008 mM) and pyridoxal (0.473 +/- 0.109 mM), respectively, than those of the Pseudomonas enzyme. The Aureobacterium enzyme could use NADP+ as a substrate: the reactivity was 6.5% of NAD+. The enzyme was much more tolerant to metal-chelating agents. Irreversibility of the enzymatic reaction was shared by the two enzymes. No aldehyde dehydrogenase showed similarity to the amino-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
A novel enzyme, arylalkyl acylamidase, which shows a strict specificity for N-acetyl arylalkylamines, but not acetanilide derivatives, was purified from the culture broth of Pseudomonas putida Sc2. The purified enzyme appeared to be homogeneous, as judged by native and SDS/PAGE. The enzyme has a molecular mass of approximately 150 kDa and consists of four identical subunits. The purified enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of N-acetyl-2-phenylethylamine to 2-phenylethylamine and acetic acid at the rate of 6.25 mumol.min-1.mg-1 at 30 degrees C. It also catalyzed the hydrolysis of various N-acetyl arylalkylamines containing a benzene or indole ring, and acetic acid arylalkyl esters. The enzyme did not hydrolyze acetanilide, N-acetyl aliphatic amines, N-acetyl amino acids, N-acetyl amino sugars or acylthiocholine. The apparent Km for N-acetylbenzylamine, N-acetyl-2-phenylethylamine and N-acetyl-3-phenylpropylamine are 41 mM, 0.31 mM and 1.6 mM, respectively. The purified enzyme was sensitive to thiol reagents such as Ag2SO4, HgCl2 and p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, and its activity was enhanced by divalent metal ions such as Zn2+, Mg2+ and Mn2+.  相似文献   

15.
An enzyme which cleaves L-threo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine into protocatechualdehyde and glycine was demonstrated in extracts of human brains. Equimolar production of protocachualdehyde and glycine was quantitatively confirmed using high-performance liquid chromatography. In subcellular fractions of the brain, the highest enzyme activity was found in cytosol and soluble fraction. L-threo-DOPS proved to be the best substrate for this enzyme. The L-erythroisomer was less active and D-threo- and D-erythro-isomers were essentially inactive. The enzyme activity has an optimal pH around 7.4, and requires pyridoxal phosphate for maximal activity.  相似文献   

16.
Two aldehyde dehydrogenases involved in the degradation of toluene and xylenes, namely, benzaldehyde dehydrogenase and 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde dehydrogenase, are encoded by the xylC and xylG genes, respectively, on TOL plasmid pWW0 of Pseudomonas putida. The nucleotide sequence of xylC was determined in this study. A protein exhibiting benzaldehyde dehydrogenase activity had been purified from cells of P. putida (pWW0) (J. P. Shaw and S. Harayama, Eur. J. Biochem. 191:705-714, 1990); however, the amino-terminal sequence of this protein does not correspond to that predicted from the xylC sequence but does correspond to that predicted from the xylG sequence. The protein purified in the earlier work was therefore 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (the xylG gene product). This conclusion was confirmed by the fact that this protein oxidized 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde (kcat/Km = 1.6 x 10(6) s-1 M-1) more efficiently than benzaldehyde (kcat/Km = 3.2 x 10(4) s-1 M-1). The xylC product, the genuine benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, was purified from extracts of P. putida (pWW0-161 delta rylG) which does not synthesize 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde dehydrogenase. The amino-terminal sequence of the purified protein corresponds to the amino-terminal sequence deduced from the xylC sequence. This enzyme efficiently oxidized benzaldehyde (kcat/Km = 1.7 x 10(7) s-1 M-1) and its analogs but did not oxidize 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde or its analogs.  相似文献   

17.
The kynurenine aminotransferase activity of supernatant and mitochondrial fractions obtained from rat liver and kidney was studied with L-kynurenine and L-3-hydroxykynurenine as substrates. A substrate inhibition with L-kynurenine at concentrations higher than 6-7mM was observed with all four enzyme preparations. This did not happen with L-3-hydroxykynurenine as a substrate. Moreover, the liver mitochondrial enzyme shows a Km for pyridoxal phosphate 2-4 times smaller than the other preparations when assayed with L-3-hydroxykynurenine as a substrate. Therefore, the accumulation of xanthurenic acid and not of kynurenic acid in B6 deficiency could be related both to this high activity of liver mitochondrial kynurenine aminotransferase with L-3-hydroxykynurenine, even at small concentrations of B6, and to substrate inhibition observed with L-kynurenine and not with L-3-hydroxykynurenine.  相似文献   

18.
Two 3-hydroxybenzoate-inducible gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases were purified to homogeneity from Pseudomonas alcaligenes NCIB 9867 (P25X) and Pseudomonas putida NCIB 9869 (P35X), respectively. The estimated molecular mass of the purified P25X gentisate 1, 2-dioxygenase was 154 kDa, with a subunit mass of 39 kDa. Its structure is deduced to be a tetramer. The pI of this enzyme was established to be 4.8 to 5.0. The subunit mass of P35X gentisate 1, 2-dioxygenase was 41 kDa, and this enzyme was deduced to exist as a dimer, with a native molecular mass of about 82 kDa. The pI of P35X gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase was around 4.6 to 4.8. Both of the gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases exhibited typical saturation kinetics and had apparent Kms of 92 and 143 microM for gentisate, respectively. Broad substrate specificities were exhibited towards alkyl and halogenated gentisate analogs. Both enzymes had similar kinetic turnover characteristics for gentisate, with kcat/Km values of 44.08 x 10(4) s-1 M-1 for the P25X enzyme and 39.34 x 10(4) s-1 M-1 for the P35X enzyme. Higher kcat/Km values were expressed by both enzymes against the substituted gentisates. Significant differences were observed between the N-terminal sequences of the first 23 amino acid residues of the P25X and P35X gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases. The P25X gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase was stable between pH 5.0 and 7.5, with the optimal pH around 8.0. The P35X enzyme showed a pH stability range between 7.0 and 9.0, and the optimum pH was also 8.0. The optimal temperature for both P25X and P35X gentisate 1, 2-dioxygenases was around 50 degrees C, but the P35X enzyme was more heat stable than that from P25X. Both enzymes were strongly stimulated by 0.1 mM Fe2+ but were completely inhibited by the presence of 5 mM Cu2+. Partial inhibition of both enzymes was also observed with 5 mM Mn2+, Zn2+, and EDTA.  相似文献   

19.
Arthrobacter simplex AKU 626 was found to synthesize 4-hydroxyisoleucine from acetaldehyde, alpha-ketobutyrate, and L-glutamate in the presence of Escherichia coli harboring the branched chain amino acid transaminase gene (ilvE) from E. coli K12 substrain MG1655. By using resting cells of A. simplex AKU 626 and E. coli BL21(DE3)/pET-15b-ilvE, 3.2 mM 4-hydroxyisoleucine was produced from 250 mM acetaldehyde, 75 mM alpha-ketobutyrate, and 100 mM L-glutamate with a molar yield to alpha-ketobutyrate of 4.3% in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5) containing 2 mM MnCl(2) x 4H(2)O at 28 degrees C for 2 h. An aldolase that catalyzes the aldol condensation of acetaldehyde and alpha-ketobutyrate was purified from A. simplex AKU 626. Mn(2+) and pyridoxal 5'-monophosphate were effective in stabilizing the enzyme. The native and subunit molecular masses of the purified aldolase were about 180 and 32 kDa respectively. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme showed no significant homology to known aldolases.  相似文献   

20.
A new enzyme, phenylacetyl-CoA ligase (AMP-forming) (PA-CoA ligase, EC 6.2.1-) involved in the catabolism of phenylacetic acid (PAA) in Pseudomonas putida is described and characterized. PA-CoA ligase was specifically induced by PAA when P. putida was grown in a chemically defined medium in which phenylacetic acid was the sole carbon source. Hydroxyl, methyl-phenylacetyl derivatives, and other PAA close structural molecules did not induce the synthesis of this enzyme and neither did acetic, butyric, succinic, nor fatty acids (greater than C5 atoms carbon length). PA-CoA ligase requires ATP, CoA, PAA, and MgCl2 for its activity. The maximal rate of catalysis was achieved in 50 mM HCl/Tris buffer, pH 8.2, at 30 degrees C and under these conditions, the Km calculated for ATP, CoA, and PAA were 9.7, 1.0, and 16.5 mM, respectively. The enzyme is inhibited by some divalent cations (Cu2+, Zn2+, and Hg2+) and by the sulfhydryl reagents N-ethylmaleimide, 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), and p-chloromercuribenzoate. PA-CoA ligase was purified to homogeneity (513-fold). It runs as a single polypeptide in 12% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and has a molecular mass of 48 +/- 1 kDa. PA-CoA ligase does not use as substrate either 3-hydroxyphenylacetic, 4-hydroxyphenylacetic, or 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acids and shows a substrate specificity different from other acyl-CoA-activating enzymes. The enzyme is detected in P. putida from the early logarithmic phase of growth and is repressed by glucose, suggesting that PA-CoA ligase is a specific enzyme involved in the utilization of PAA as energy source.  相似文献   

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