首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The effect of hydrogen peroxide on the activity of soxRS and oxyR regulon enzymes in different strains of Escherichia coli has been studied. Treatment of bacteria with 20 μM H2O2 caused an increase in catalase and peroxidase activities (oxyR regulon) in all strains investigated. It is shown for the first time that oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide causes in some E. coli strains a small increase in activity of superoxide dismutase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (soxRS regulon). This effect is cancelled by chloramphenicol, an inhibitor of protein synthesis in prokaryotes. The increase in soxRS regulon enzyme activities was not found in the strain lacking the soxR gene. These results provide evidence for the involvement of the soxRS regulon in the adaptive response of E. coli to oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide. __________ Translated from Biokhimiya, Vol. 70, No. 11, 2005, pp. 1506–1513. Original Russian Text Copyright ? 2005 by Semchyshyn, Bagnyukova, Lushchak.  相似文献   

2.
PEROXISOMES are cytoplasmic organelles which occur in liver and kidney cells of higher animals and in lower forms of life. They have a unique enzyme composition and function in the oxidation of specific substrates by oxidases1. Catalase (hydrogen peroxide: hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase E.C. 1.11.1.6) is an essential component of this oxidizing system which facilitates the catalytic or peroxidatic destruction of hydrogen peroxide. Large granular catalase activity serves as a marker for the organelle and has been used here to describe the ontogeny of peroxisomes in mouse liver. The results indicate that bursts of peroxisomal synthesis occur during the development of the mouse liver, particularly in the early postnatal stages and during maturation.  相似文献   

3.
Deactivation of immobilized beef liver catalase by hydrogen peroxide   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Immobilized beef liver catalase has been used in a flow reactor to decompose hydrogen peroxide; at the same time the catalase is inactivated by its substrate. A model has been developed which predicts this rate of decomposition of peroxide and inactivation of catalase. First order dependence on peroxide concentration is assumed. The model was verified by experiment for a range of operating conditions and then used to predict the effects of a change in operating variables.  相似文献   

4.
The quasi-steady behavior of a continuous flow reactor in which hydrogen peroxide is decomposed by immobilized catalase is investigated. Under certain conditions, reactors involving such substrate-inhibited, self-poisoning reactions are susceptible to suddne failure and the reactor moves catastrophically from high- to low-conversion quasi-steady states. This exchange-of-steady-states phenomenon is ex-amined in the light of experimental evidence for the enzyme catalase from bovine liver. (c) 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Catalase-peroxidases have a predominant catalase activity but differ from monofunctional catalases in exhibiting a substantial peroxidase activity and in having different residues in the heme cavity. We present a kinetic study of the formation of the key intermediate compound I by probing the role of the conserved distal amino acid triad Arg-Trp-His of a recombinant catalase-peroxidase in its reaction with hydrogen peroxide, peroxoacetic acid, and m-chloroperbenzoic acid. Both the wild-type enzyme and six mutants (R119A, R119N, W122F, W122A, H123Q, H123E) have been investigated by steady-state and stopped-flow spectroscopy. The turnover number of catalase activity of R119A is 14.6%, R119N 0.5%, H123E 0.03%, and H123Q 0.02% of wild-type activity. Interestingly, W122F and W122A completely lost their catalase activity but retained their peroxidase activity. Bimolecular rate constants of compound I formation of the wild-type enzyme and the mutants have been determined. The Trp-122 mutants for the first time made it possible to follow the transition of the ferric enzyme to compound I by hydrogen peroxide spectroscopically underlining the important role of Trp-122 in catalase activity. The results demonstrate that the role of the distal His-Arg pair in catalase-peroxidases is important in the heterolytic cleavage of hydrogen peroxide (i.e. compound I formation), whereas the distal tryptophan is essential for compound I reduction by hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

6.
A number of catalase-deficient mutants of Escherichia coli which exhibit no assayable catalase activity were isolated. The only physiological difference between the catalase mutants and their parents was a 50- to 60-fold greater sensitivity to killing by hydrogen peroxide. For comparison, mutations in the xthA and recA genes of the same strains increased the sensitivity of the mutants to hydrogen peroxide by seven- and fivefold, respectively, showing that catalase was the primary defense against hydrogen peroxide. One class of mutants named katE was localized between pfkB and xthA at 37.8 min on the E. coli genome. A second class of catalase mutants was found which did not map in this region.  相似文献   

7.
The rapid detection and identification of bacteria has application in a number of fields, e.g. the food industry, environmental monitoring and biomedicine. While in biomedicine the number of organisms present during infection is multiples of millions in the other fields it is the detection of low numbers of organisms that is important, e.g. an infective dose of Escherichia coli O157:H7 from contaminated food is less than 100 organisms. A rapid and sensitive technique has been developed to detect low numbers of the model organism E. coli O55, combining Lateral Flow Immunoassay (LFI) for capture and amperometry for sensitive detection. Nitrocellulose membranes were used as the solid phase for selective capture of the bacteria using antibodies to E. coli O55. Different concentrations of E. coli O55 in Ringers solution were applied to LFI strips and allowed to flow through the membrane to an absorbent pad. The capture region of the LFI strip was placed in close contact with the electrodes of a Clarke cell poised at +0.7 V for the detection of hydrogen peroxide. Earlier research identified that the consumption of hydrogen peroxide by bacterial catalase provided a sensitive indicator of aerobic and facultative anaerobic microorganisms numbers. Modification and application of this technique to the LFI strips demonstrated that the consumption of 8 mM hydrogen peroxide was correlated with the number of microorganisms presented to the LFI strips in the range of 2 x 10(1)-2 x 10(7) colony forming units (cfu). Capture efficiency was dependent on the number of organisms applied and varied from 71% at 2 x 10(2) cfu to 25% at 2 x 10(7) cfu. The procedure was completed in less than 10 min and could detect less than 10 cfu captured from a 200 microl sample applied to the LFI strip. The approached adopted provides proof of principle for the basis of a new technological approach to the rapid, quantitative and sensitive detection of bacteria that express catalase activity.  相似文献   

8.
A Haas  K Brehm  J Kreft    W Goebel 《Journal of bacteriology》1991,173(16):5159-5167
A gene coding for catalase (hydrogen-peroxide:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase; EC 1.11.1.6) of the gram-positive bacterium Listeria seeligeri was cloned from a plasmid library of EcoRI-digested chromosomal DNA, with Escherichia coli DH5 alpha as a host. The recombinant catalase was expressed in E. coli to an enzymatic activity approximately 50 times that of the combined E. coli catalases. The nucleotide sequence was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence revealed 43.2% amino acid sequence identity between bovine liver catalase and L. seeligeri catalase. Most of the amino acid residues which are involved in catalytic activity, the formation of the active center accession channel, and heme binding in bovine liver catalase were also present in L. seeligeri catalase at the corresponding positions. The recombinant protein contained 488 amino acid residues and had a calculated molecular weight of 55,869. The predicted isoelectric point was 5.0. Enzymatic and genetic analyses showed that there is most probably a single catalase of this type in L. seeligeri. A perfect 21-bp inverted repeat, which was highly homologous to previously reported binding sequences of the Fur (ferric uptake regulon) protein of E. coli, was detected next to the putative promoter region of the L. seeligeri catalase gene.  相似文献   

9.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an obligate aerobe that is virtually ubiquitous in the environment. During aerobic respiration, the metabolism of dioxygen can lead to the production of reactive oxygen intermediates, one of which includes hydrogen peroxide. To counteract the potentially toxic effects of this compound, P. aeruginosa possesses two heme-containing catalases which detoxify hydrogen peroxide. In this study, we have cloned katB, encoding one catalase gene of P. aeruginosa. The gene was cloned on a 5.4-kb EcoRI fragment and is composed of 1,539 bp, encoding 513 amino acids. The amino acid sequence of the P. aeruginosa katB was approximately 65% identical to that of a catalase from a related species, Pseudomonas syringae. The katB gene was mapped to the 71- to 75-min region of the P. aeruginosa chromosome, the identical region which harbors both sodA and sodB genes encoding both manganese and iron superoxide dismutases. When cloned into a catalase-deficient mutant of Escherichia coli (UM255), the recombinant P. aeruginosa KatB was expressed (229 U/mg) and afforded this strain resistance to hydrogen peroxide nearly equivalent to that of the wild-type E. coli strain (HB101). The KatB protein was purified to homogeneity and determined to be a tetramer of approximately 228 kDa, which was in good agreement with the predicted protein size derived from the translated katB gene. Interestingly, KatB was not produced during the normal P. aeruginosa growth cycle, and catalase activity was greater in nonmucoid than in mucoid, alginate-producing organisms. When exposed to hydrogen peroxide and, to a greater extent, paraquat, total catalase activity was elevated 7- to 16-fold, respectively. In addition, an increase in KatB activity caused a marked increase in resistance to hydrogen peroxide. KatB was localized to the cytoplasm, while KatA, the "housekeeping" enzyme, was detected in both cytoplasmic and periplasmic extracts. A P. aeruginosa katB mutant demonstrated 50% greater sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide than wild-type bacteria, suggesting that KatB is essential for optimal resistance of P. aeroginosa to exogenous hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

10.
Paramecium cells are usually cultured in a wheat grass powder infusion inoculated with Klebsiella pneumoniae. However, non-bacterized wheat grass powder infusion is toxic to paramecia, and bacteria-derived substance detoxifies the toxic substance. Here, the detoxifying substance from K. pneumoniae, which was found to be proteinaceous, was purified to homogeneity. The protein had an apparent molecular mass of about 200 kDa by gel filtration and 92 kDa by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Although the amino acid sequence of the amino terminal region did not show a high sequence homology with any reported proteins, amino acid sequences of internal regions of the protein were nearly identical to catalase HPII from Escherichia coli. When the wheat grass powder infusion was treated at 25 degrees C for 1 h with commercially available catalase from bovine liver, the toxicity of the infusion against paramecia was completely abolished. The initial concentration of hydrogen peroxide in the wheat grass powder infusion was about 30 microM and was completely decomposed by the catalase treatment. Therefore, the toxic substance in the wheat grass powder infusion and the detoxifying substance from K. pneumoniae are considered as hydrogen peroxide and catalase, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
Under anaerobic conditions an exponentially growing culture of Escherichia coli K-12 was exposed to hydrogen peroxide in the presence of various compounds. Hydrogen peroxide (0.1 mM) together with 0.1 mM L-cysteine or L-cystine killed the organisms more rapidly than 10 mM hydrogen peroxide alone. The exposure of E. coli to hydrogen peroxide in the presence of L-cysteine inhibited some of the catalase. This inhibition, however, could not fully explain the 100-fold increase in hydrogen peroxide sensitivity of the organism in the presence of L-cysteine. Of other compounds tested only some thiols potentiated the bactericidal effect of hydrogen peroxide. These thiols were effective, however, only at concentrations significantly higher than 0.1 mM. The effect of L-cysteine and L-cystine could be annihilated by the metal ion chelating agent 2,2'-bipyridyl. DNA breakage in E. coli K-12 was demonstrated under conditions where the organisms were killed by hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

12.
Effect of hydrogen peroxide on antibacterial activities of Canadian honeys   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Honey is recognized as an efficacious topical antimicrobial agent in the treatment of burns and wounds. The antimicrobial activity in some honeys depends on the endogenous hydrogen peroxide content. This study was aimed to determine whether honey's hydrogen peroxide level could serve as a honey-specific, activity-associated biomarker that would allow predicting and assessing the therapeutic effects of honey. Using a broth microdilution assay, I analyzed antibacterial activities of 42 Canadian honeys against two bacterial strains: Escherichia coli (ATCC 14948) and Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 6633). The MIC90 and MIC50 were established from the dose-response relationship between antibacterial activities and honey concentrations. The impact of H2O2 on antibacterial activity was determined (i) by measuring the levels of H2O2 before and after its removal by catalase and (ii) by correlating the results with levels of antibacterial activities. Canadian honeys demonstrated moderate to high antibacterial activity against both bacterial species. Both MIC90 and MIC50 revealed that the honeys exhibited a selective growth inhibitory activity against E. coli, and this activity was strongly influenced by endogenous H2O2 concentrations. Bacillus subtilis activity was marginally significantly correlated with H2O2 content. The removal of H2O2 by catalase reduced the honeys' antibacterial activity, but the enzyme was unable to completely decompose endogenous H2O2. The 25%-30% H2O2 "leftover" was significantly correlated with the honeys' residual antibacterial activity against E. coli. These data indicate that all Canadian honeys exhibited antibacterial activity, with higher selectivity against E. coli than B. subtilis, and that these antibacterial activities were correlated with hydrogen peroxide production in honeys. Hydrogen peroxide levels in honey, therefore, is a strong predictor of the honey's antibacterial activity.  相似文献   

13.
A Geerts  F Roels 《Histochemistry》1981,72(3):357-367
The absorbance of the reaction product of catalase staining with diaminobenzidine is linearly proportional to enzyme activity. This is shown in semithin Epon sections of model systems containing serum albumin and catalase from bovine or guinea pig liver. Absorbance measurements were also performed on semithin sections of guinea pig liver, and from these, the activity of cytoplasmic (extraperoxisomal) catalase has been derived.  相似文献   

14.
The function of catalase-bound NADPH   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Catalase (H2O2:H2O2 oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.6) is of historical interest for having been the subject of some of the earliest investigations of enzymes. A feature of catalase that has been poorly understood for several decades, however, is the mechanism by which catalase remains active in the presence of its own substrate, hydrogen peroxide. We reported recently that catalase contains tightly bound NADPH. The present study with bovine and human catalase revealed that NADPH both prevents and reverses the accumulation of compound II, an inactive form of catalase that is generated slowly when catalase is exposed to hydrogen peroxide. Since the effect of NADPH occurs even at NADPH concentrations below 0.1 microM, the protective mechanism is likely to operate in vivo. This discovery of the role of catalase-bound NADPH brings a unity to the concept of two different mechanisms for disposing of hydrogen peroxide (catalase and the glutathione reductase/peroxidase pathway) by revealing that both mechanisms are dependent on NADPH.  相似文献   

15.
Catalase is an enzyme that occurs in almost all aerobic organisms. Its main metabolic function is to prevent oxidative damage to tissues induced by hydrogen peroxide which is a strong oxidizing agent. Catalase is very effective in performing this task, since it has the highest turnover rate among all the enzymes. The properties of catalase have been investigated extensively for many years; however, the role of the solvent molecules in the catalytic reaction of this enzyme has not yet been investigated. Therefore, the objective of this work was to investigate the contribution of the solvent molecules on the catalytic reaction of bovine liver catalase with its substrate H2O2 by the osmotic stress method. As a probe for protein structural changes in solution, the differential number of water molecules released during the transition from free to bound form of the enzyme was measured. These assays were correlated with protein structural data provided by the SAXS technique and crystallographic structures of free and CN(-) bonded enzymes. The results showed that the difference in surface accessible area of the crystal structures does not reflect the variation that is observed in solution. Moreover, catalase is not influenced by the solvent during the catalytic reaction, which represents a lower energy barrier to be crossed in the overall energetics of the reaction, a fact that contributes to the high turnover rate of catalase.  相似文献   

16.
A novel bifunctional catalase with an additional phenol oxidase activity was isolated from a thermophilic fungus, Scytalidium thermophilum. This extracellular enzyme was purified ca. 10-fold with 46% yield and was biochemically characterized. The enzyme contains heme and has a molecular weight of 320 kDa with four 80 kDa subunits and an isoelectric point of 5.0. Catalase and phenol oxidase activities were most stable at pH 7.0. The activation energies of catalase and phenol oxidase activities of the enzyme were found to be 2.7 +/- 0.2 and 10.1 +/- 0.4 kcal/mol, respectively. The pure enzyme can oxidize o-diphenols such as catechol, caffeic acid, and L-DOPA in the absence of hydrogen peroxide and the highest oxidase activity is observed against catechol. No activity is detected against tyrosine and common laccase substrates such as ABTS and syringaldazine with the exception of weak activity with p-hydroquinone. Common catechol oxidase inhibitors, salicylhydroxamic acid and p-coumaric acid, inhibit the oxidase activity. Catechol oxidation activity was also detected in three other catalases tested, from Aspergillus niger, human erythrocyte, and bovine liver, suggesting that this dual catalase-phenol oxidase activity may be a common feature of catalases.  相似文献   

17.
The affinity of eukaryotic tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases from bovine liver and from yeast for E. coli ribosomal RNA and synthetic polyribonucleotides has been studied by protein binding on the rRNA-Sepharose column and enzyme inhibition by high molecular weight RNAs. Tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase from bovine liver (Mr 2.59 kDa) was fully retained on the rRNA-Sepharose and eluted by buffer with 100 mM KCl. The functionally active modified form of bovine liver tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase obtained by endogenous limited proteolysis (Mr 2.38 kDa) partially maintains the affinity for rRNA and is eluted by 50 mM KCl. The highest rRNA-binding ability was revealed for yeast tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase eluted by 200 mM KCl. The E. coli tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase was not retained on rRNA-Sepharose. The aminoacylation activities of both bovine liver and yeast tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases were efficiently inhibited by rRNA and the inhibition was partially competitive in respect to tRNA(Tyr). At the same time the activities of proteolytically modified bovine tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase and E. coli tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase were not influenced by the addition of rRNA. Synthetic single- and double-stranded polyribonucleotides specifically inhibited the activity of bovine tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase to different extent. The inhibition degree of bovine liver tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase decreased in the order: poly (G) greater than poly (I) greater than poly (I).poly (C) greater than poly (G).poly (C) greater than poly (C) greater than poly (A). Poly (U) did not inhibit the activity of bovine liver tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase.  相似文献   

18.
It has been shown that the experimental results obtained by Morgulis in a study of the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by liver catalase at 20°C. and in the presence of an excess of a relatively high concentration of peroxide are quantitatively accounted for by the following mechanisms. 1. The rate of formation of oxygen is independent of the peroxide concentration provided this is greater than about 0.10 M. 2. The rate of decomposition of the peroxide is proportional at any time to the concentration of catalase present. 3. The catalase undergoes spontaneous monomolecular decomposition during the reaction. This inactivation is independent of the concentration of catalase and inversely proportional to the original concentration of peroxide up to 0.4 M. In very high concentrations of peroxide the inactivation rate increases. 4. The following equation can be derived from the above assumptions and has been found to fit the experiments accurately. See PDF for Equation in which x is the amount of oxygen liberated at the time t, A is the total amount of oxygen liberated (not the total amount available), and K is the inactivation constant of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of alloxan has been studied on survival and activity of antioxidant and associated enzymes of E. coli wild strains and ones lacked of OxyR and SoxR proteins--regulators of antioxidant defense in E. coli. Bacteria treatment by 500 microM alloxan for 30 min caused an increase of catalase and peroxidase activity in wild and deltasoxRS strains. Catalase activity was not changed in response to alloxan exposure of oxyR deficient strain. It was proposed that under used condition the effect of alloxan on E. coli could be related to the growth of steadystate concentration of hydrogen peroxide. This supposition is also in agreement with the increase of soxRS regulon enzymes activities, because in our previous work it has been shown that H2O2-induced stress increases the activity of some soxRS regulon enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The absorbance of the reaction product of catalase staining with diaminobenzidine is linearly proportional to enzyme activity. This is shown in semithin Epon sections of model systems containing serum albumin and catalase from bovine or guinea pig liver. Absorbance measurements were also performed on semithin sections of guinea pig liver, and from these, the activity of cytoplasmic (extraperoxisomal) catalase has been derived.I.W.O.N.L. bursaal 1977–1979  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号