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1.
The histidine, tyrosine, tryPtoPhan and carboxyl grouPs in the enzyme glucoamylase fromAsPergillus Candidus andRhizoPus sPecies were modified using grouP sPecific reagents. Treatment of the enzyme with diethylPyrocarbonate resulted in the modification of 0.3 and 1 histidine residues with only a slight loss in activity (10% and 35%) of glucoamylase fromAsPergillus candidus andRhizoPus sPecies resPectively. Modification of tyrosine either by N-acetylimidazole or [I125]-leads to a Partial loss of activity. Under denaturing conditions, maltose did not helP in Protecting the enzyme against tyrosine modification or inactivation. Treatment with 2-Hydroxy-5-nitro benzyl bromide in the Presence of urea, Photooxidation at PH 9.0, N-bromosuccinamide at PH 4.8 resulted in a comPlete loss of activity. However, the results of exPeriments in the Presence of maltose and at PH 4.8 Photooxidation and N-bromosuccinamide treatment suggested the Presence of two tryPtoPhan residues at the active site. There was a comPlete loss of enzyme activity when 10 and 28 carboxyl grouPs fromAsPergillus candidus andRhizoPus, resPectively were modified. Modification in the Presence of substrate maltose, showed at least two carboxyl grouPs were Present at the active site of enzyme and that only one active center seems to be involved in breaking ally 3 tyPes of α-glucosidic linkages namely α-1, 4, α-1, 6 and α-l, 3.  相似文献   

2.
The structure of pig pancreatic alpha-amylase in complex with carbohydrate inhibitor and proteinaceous inhibitors is known but the successive events occurring at the catalytic center still remain to be elucidated. The X-ray structure analysis of a crystal of pig pancreatic alpha-amylase (PPA, EC 3.2.1.1.) soaked with an enzyme-resistant substrate analogue, methyl 4,4'-dithio-alpha-maltotrioside, showed electron density corresponding to the binding of substrate analogue molecules at the active site and at the "second binding site." The electron density observed at the active site was interpreted in terms of overlapping networks of oligosaccharides, which show binding of substrate analogue molecules at subsites prior to and subsequent to the cleavage site. A weaker patch of density observed at subsite -1 (using a nomenclature where the site of hydrolysis is taken to be between subsites -1 and +1) was modeled with water molecules. Conformational changes take place upon substrate analogue binding and the "flexible loop" that constitutes the surface edge of the active site is observed in a specific conformation. This confirms that this loop plays an important role in the recognition and binding of the ligand. The crystal structure was refined at 2.03 A resolution, to an R-factor of 16.0 (Rfree, 18.5).  相似文献   

3.
Most of the glycosyltransferases involved in O antigen biosynthesis have not yet been characterized. We recently demonstrated that the wbbD gene of the O7 lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis cluster in E. coli strain VW187 (O7:K1) encodes WbbD, a UDP-Gal: GlcNAcα-pyrophosphate-lipid β1,3-Gal-transferase (EC 2.4.1., accession number AAC27537) that transfers the second sugar moiety in the assembly of the O7 repeating unit. The enzyme utilizes undecaprenol-pyrophosphate-GlcNAc as a natural acceptor substrate, but can also transfer Gal to GlcNAcα-PO3-PO3-(CH2)11-O-phenyl (GlcNAc-PP-PhU). A number of acceptor substrate analogs have now been tested to further characterize the acceptor specificity of WbbD and to determine the roles of the pyrophosphate bond and the lipid moiety in the acceptor substrate. The enzyme was found to have a low activity with a substrate containing only one phosphate group directly α-linked to GlcNAc, and the enzyme was inactive when the phosphate was absent or further removed from the anomeric carbon of GlcNAc. Modifications of the lipid chain yielded substrates with variable activities. GlcNAc derivatives that were inactive as substrates did not inhibit WbbD suggesting that these compounds did not bind to the active site of the enzyme. The specificity of mammalian β4-galactosyltransferase I has been compared to that of WbbD. The results indicate that the bacterial WbbD enzyme has a distinct specificity for GlcNAc-PP-lipid, and that WbbD recognition of its acceptor substrate is very different from that of the ubiquitous mammalian β4-galactosyltransferase I. These studies help to understand mechanisms of O antigen synthesis, to develop methods to synthesize defined oligosaccharide structures and to develop specific O antigen inhibitors.  相似文献   

4.
Fibrobacter succinogenes 1,3-1,4-beta-D-glucanase (Fsbeta-glucanase) catalyzes the specific hydrolysis of beta-1,4 glycosidic bonds adjacent to beta-1,3 linkages in beta-D-glucans or lichenan. This is the first report to elucidate the crystal structure of a truncated Fsbeta-glucanase (TFsbeta-glucanase) in complex with beta-1,3-1,4-cellotriose, a major product of the enzyme reaction. The crystal structures, at a resolution of 2.3 angstroms, reveal that the overall fold of TFsbeta-glucanase remains virtually unchanged upon sugar binding. The enzyme accommodates five glucose residues, forming a concave active cleft. The beta-1,3-1,4-cellotriose with subsites -3 to -1 bound to the active cleft of TFsbeta-glucanase with its reducing end subsite -1 close to the key catalytic residues Glu56 and Glu60. All three subsites of the beta-1,3-1,4-cellotriose adopted a relaxed C(1)4 conformation, with a beta-1,3 glycosidic linkage between subsites -2 and -1, and a beta-1,4 glycosidic linkage between subsites -3 and -2. On the basis of the enzyme-product complex structure observed in this study, a catalytic mechanism and substrate binding conformation of the active site of TFsbeta-glucanase is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Synthetically prepared congeners of sponge-derived bastadin derivatives such as 5,5′-dibromohemibastadin-1 (DBHB) that suppress the settling of barnacle larvae were identified in this study as strong inhibitors of blue mussel phenoloxidase that is involved in the firm attachment of mussels to a given substrate. The IC50 value of DBHB as the most active enzyme inhibitor encountered in this study amounts to 0.84 μM. Inhibition of phenoloxidase by DBHB is likely due to complexation of copper(II) ions from the catalytic centre of the enzyme by the α-oxo-oxime moiety of the compound as shown here for the first time by structure activity studies and by X-ray structure determination of a copper(II) complex of DBHB.  相似文献   

6.
The mutation Gly467-->Ser in Glu glucoamylase was designed to investigate differences between two highly homologous wild-type Saccharomycopsis fibuligera Gla and Glu glucoamylases. Gly467, localized in the conserved active site region, S5, is replaced by Ser in the Gla glucoamylase. These amino acid residues are the only two known to occupy this position in the elucidated glucoamylase sequences. The data from the kinetic analysis revealed that replacement of Gly467 with Ser in Glu glucoamylase decreased the kcat towards all substrates tested to values comparable with those of the Gla enzyme. Moreover, the mutant glucoamylase appeared to be less stable compared to the wild-type Glu glucoamylase with respect to thermal unfolding. Microcalorimetric titration studies of the interaction with the inhibitor acarbose indicated differences in the binding between Gla and Glu enzymes. The Gla glucoamylase, although less active, binds acarbose stronger (Ka congruent with 10(13).M(-1)) than the Glu enzyme (Ka congruent with 10(12).M(-1)). In all enzymes studied, the binding of acarbose was clearly driven by enthalpy, with a slightly favorable entropic contribution. The binding of another glucoamylase inhibitor, 1-deoxynojirimycin, was about 8-9 orders of magnitude weaker (Ka congruent with 10(4).M(-1)) than that of acarbose. From comparison of kinetic parameters for the nonglycosylated and glycosylated enzymes it can be deduced that the glycosylation does not play a critical role in enzymatic activity. However, results from differential scanning calorimetry demonstrate an important role of the carbohydrate moiety in the thermal stability of glucoamylase.  相似文献   

7.
An extracellular glucoamylase produced by Paecilomyces variotii was purified using DEAE-cellulose ion exchange chromatography and Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. The purified protein migrated as a single band in 7% PAGE and 8% SDS-PAGE. The estimated molecular mass was 86.5 kDa (SDS-PAGE). Optima of temperature and pH were 55 °C and 5.0, respectively. In the absence of substrate the purified glucoamylase was stable for 1 h at 50 and 55 °C, with a t 50 of 45 min at 60 °C. The substrate contributed to protect the enzyme against thermal denaturation. The enzyme was mainly activated by manganese metal ions. The glucoamylase produced by P. variotii preferentially hydrolyzed amylopectin, glycogen and starch, and to a lesser extent malto-oligossacarides and amylose. Sucrose, p-nitrophenyl α-d-maltoside, methyl-α-d-glucopyranoside, pullulan, α- and β-cyclodextrin, and trehalose were not hydrolyzed. After 24 h, the products of starch hydrolysis, analyzed by thin layer chromatography, showed only glucose. The circular dichroism spectrum showed a protein rich in α-helix. The sequence of amino acids of the purified enzyme VVTDSFR appears similar to glucoamylases purified from Talaromyces emersonii and with the precursor of the glucoamylase from Aspergillus oryzae. These results suggested the character of the enzyme studied as a glucoamylase (1,4-α-d-glucan glucohydrolase).  相似文献   

8.
InbredDrosophila melanogaster stocks were surveyed for α-glucosidases with nondenaturing gel electrophoresis using a fluorogenic substrate to stain the gels. The glucosidase most active under these conditions is polymorphic. We established that the polymorphism is genetic in origin and that the glucosidase was not likely to be a previously characterized enzyme. The gene encoding the enzyme was mapped cytogenetically to 33 A1-2- 33A8-B1, confirming that this is an enzyme not yet reported inD. melanogaster. The enzyme was partially purified by elution from nondenaturing gels, which enabled us to establish that it has optimal activity at pH 6 and interacts most strongly with α-1–4 glucosides. A developmental and tissue survey suggested that this enzyme could have a purely digestive role or be involved in carbohydrate metabolism inside the organism. We propose that this enzyme is involved in either starch digestion or glycogen metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
Glycoside hydrolase family (GH) 11 xylanase A from Bacillus subtilis (BsXynA) was subjected to site-directed mutagenesis to probe the role of aglycon active site residues with regard to activity, binding of decorated substrates and hydrolysis product profile. Targets were those amino acids identified to be important by 3D structure analysis of BsXynA in complex with substrate bound in the glycon subsites and the + 1 aglycon subsite. Several aromatic residues in the aglycon subsites that make strong substrate–protein interactions and that are indispensable for enzyme activity, were also important for the specificity of the xylanase. In the + 2 subsite of BsXynA, Tyr65 and Trp129 were identified as residues that are involved in the binding of decorated substrates. Most interestingly, replacement of Tyr88 by Ala in the + 3 subsite created an enzyme able to produce a wider variety of hydrolysis products than wild type BsXynA. The contribution of the + 3 subsite to the substrate specificity of BsXynA was established more in detail by mapping the enzyme binding site of the wild type xylanase and mutant Y88A with labelled xylo-oligosaccharides. Also, the length of the cord – a long loop flanking the aglycon subsites of GH11 xylanases – proved to impact the hydrolytic action of BsXynA. The aglycon side of the active site cleft of BsXynA, therefore, offers great potential for engineering and design of xylanases with a desired specificity.  相似文献   

10.
Restructuring the network of xyloglucan (XG) and cellulose during plant cell wall morphogenesis involves the action of xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases (XETs). They cleave the XG chains and transfer the enzyme-bound XG fragment to another XG molecule, thus allowing transient loosening of the cell wall and also incorporation of nascent XG during expansion. The substrate specificity of a XET from Populus (PttXET16-34) has been analyzed by mapping the enzyme binding site with a library of xylogluco-oligosaccharides as donor substrates using a labeled heptasaccharide as acceptor. The extended binding cleft of the enzyme is composed of four negative and three positive subsites (with the catalytic residues between subsites -1 and +1). Donor binding is dominated by the higher affinity of the XXXG moiety (G=Glcbeta(1-->4) and X=Xylalpha(1-->6)Glcbeta(1-->4)) of the substrate for positive subsites, whereas negative subsites have a more relaxed specificity, able to bind (and transfer to the acceptor) a cello-oligosaccharyl moiety of hybrid substrates such as GGGGXXXG. Subsite mapping with k(cat)/K(m) values for the donor substrates showed that a GG-unit on negative and -XXG on positive subsites are the minimal requirements for activity. Subsites -2 and -3 (for backbone Glc residues) and +2' (for Xyl substitution at Glc in subsite +2) have the largest contribution to transition state stabilization. GalGXXXGXXXG (Gal=Galbeta(1-->4)) is the best donor substrate with a "blocked" nonreducing end that prevents polymerization reactions and yields a single transglycosylation product. Its kinetics have unambiguously established that the enzyme operates by a ping-pong mechanism with competitive inhibition by the acceptor.  相似文献   

11.
It has been previously reported that a glucoamylase from Curvularia lunata is able to hydrolyze the terminal 1,2-linked rhamnosyl residues of sugar chains at C-3 position of steroidal saponins. In this work, the enzyme was isolated and identified after isolation and purification by column chromatography including gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. Analysis of protein fragments by MALDI-TOF/TOF™ proteomics Analyzer indicated the enzyme to be 1,4-alpha-D-glucan glucohydrolase EC 3.2.1.3, GA and had considerable homology with the glucoamylase from Aspergillus oryzae. We first found that the glucoamylase was produced from C. lunata and was able to hydrolyze the terminal rhamnosyl of steroidal saponins. The enzyme had the general character of glucoamylase, which hydrolyze starch. It had a molecular mass of 66 kDa and was optimally active at 50°C, pH 4, and specific activity of 12.34 U mg of total protein−1 under the conditions, using diosgenin-3-O-α-L-rhamnopyranosyl(1→4)-[α-L-rhamnopyranosyl (1→2)]-β-D-glucopyranoside (compound II) as the substrate. Furthermore, four kinds of commercial glucoamylases from Aspergillus niger were investigated in this work, and they had the similar activity in hydrolyzing terminal rhamnosyl residues of steroidal saponin. This project was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC; 30572333).  相似文献   

12.
A simple structured model is proposed for simulating batch cultivation data on growth, substrate utilization, and heterologous enzyme production of recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae YPB-G. The enzyme is a fusion protein displaying α-amylase and glucoamylase activities. Cell growth is modulated mainly by intracellular substrate and ethanol concentrations. Intracellular substrate concentration is evaluated by means of the extracellular substrate and biomass concentrations. Extracellular α-amylase and glucoamylase activities are taken to depend on biomass concentration. The nine parameters of the proposed model are determined using nonlinear estimation techniques, and the model is validated against experiments not used in parameter determination. The model developed simulates glucose consumption, cell mass, α-amylase and glucoamylase production in a batch system. Simulation and experimental results are found to be in good agreement. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2002) 29, 111–116 doi:10.1038/sj.jim.7000281 Received 07 January 2002/ Accepted in revised form 22 May 2002  相似文献   

13.
The amylopullulanse produced by Bacillus sp. DSM 405 was purified to homogeneity. It exhibited dual activity, cleaving the α1-4 bonds in starch, releasing a range of malto-oligosaccharides, and also cleaving the α1-6 bonds in pullulan, releasing maltotriose as the sole end-product. The enzyme was a glycoprotein and had a relative molecular mass of 126 000 and an isoelectric point of 4.3. While the enzyme was optimally active on starch at pH 6.5 and at pH 6.0 on pullulan, activity on both substrates was maximal at 70 °C. Kinetic analyses of the enzyme in a system that contained both starch and pullulan as two competing substrates demonstrated the dual specificity of the enzyme. Chemical modification of the carboxyl groups within the active centre of the protein showed that one active site was responsible for hydrolysis of the α1-4 and α1-6 bonds in starch and pullulan respectively. This is the first comprehensive investigation of an amylopullulanse produced by an aerobic bacterium, showing a single active site responsible for both activities. Received: 3 August 1998 / Received revision: 13 October 1998 / Accepted: 16 October 1998  相似文献   

14.
GH 11 (glycoside hydrolase family 11) xylanases are predominant enzymes in the hydrolysis of heteroxylan, an abundant structural polysaccharide in the plant cell wall. To gain more insight into the protein-ligand interactions of the glycone as well as the aglycone subsites of these enzymes, catalytically incompetent mutants of the Bacillus subtilis and Aspergillus niger xylanases were crystallized, soaked with xylo-oligosaccharides and subjected to X-ray analysis. For both xylanases, there was clear density for xylose residues in the -1 and -2 subsites. In addition, for the B. subtilis xylanase, there was also density for xylose residues in the -3 and +1 subsite showing the spanning of the -1/+1 subsites. These results, together with the observation that some residues in the aglycone subsites clearly adopt a different conformation upon substrate binding, allowed us to identify the residues important for substrate binding in the aglycone subsites. In addition to substrate binding in the active site of the enzymes, the existence of an unproductive second ligand-binding site located on the surface of both the B. subtilis and A. niger xylanases was observed. This extra binding site may have a function similar to the separate carbohydrate-binding modules of other glycoside hydrolase families.  相似文献   

15.
Rockey WM  Laederach A  Reilly PJ 《Proteins》2000,40(2):299-309
The Lamarckian genetic algorithm of AutoDock 3.0 was used to dock alpha-maltotriose, methyl alpha-panoside, methyl alpha-isopanoside, methyl alpha-isomaltotrioside, methyl alpha-(6(1)-alpha-glucopyranosyl)-maltoside, and alpha-maltopentaose into the closed and, except for alpha-maltopentaose, into the open conformation of the soybean beta-amylase active site. In the closed conformation, the hinged flap at the mouth of the active site closes over the substrate. The nonreducing end of alpha-maltotriose docks preferentially to subsites -2 or +1, the latter yielding nonproductive binding. Some ligands dock into less optimal conformations with the nonreducing end at subsite -1. The reducing-end glucosyl residue of nonproductively-bound alpha-maltotriose is close to residue Gln194, which likely contributes to binding to subsite +3. In the open conformation, the substrate hydrogen-bonds with several residues of the open flap. When the flap closes, the substrate productively docks if the nonreducing end is near subsites -2 or -1. Trisaccharides with alpha-(1-->6) bonds do not successfully dock except for methyl alpha-isopanoside, whose first and second glucosyl rings dock exceptionally well into subsites -2 and -1. The alpha-(1-->6) bond between the second and third glucosyl units causes the latter to be improperly positioned into subsite +1; the fact that isopanose is not a substrate of beta-amylase indicates that binding to this subsite is critical for hydrolysis.  相似文献   

16.
A thermophilic fungus Thermomyces lanuginous strain IISc 91, secreted one form each of α-amylase and glucoamylase during growth. Both enzymes were purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange and gel-filtration chromatography and obtained in mg quantities. α-Amylase was considered to be a dimeric protein of ∼ 42 kDa and contained 5% (by mass) carbohydrate. It was maximally active at pH 5.6 and at 65°C. It had an activation energy of 44 kJ mol-1. The apparent Km for soluble starch was 2.5 mg ml-1. The enzyme produced exceptionally high levels of maltose from raw potato starch. At 50°C, the enzyme was stable for > 7h. At 65°C, α-amylase was nearly 8-times more stable in the presence of calcium. Addition of calcium increaed the melting temperature of α-amylase from 66°C to 73°C. Upon incubation at 94°C, α-amylase was progressively and irreversibly inactivated, and converted into an inactive 72 kDa trimeric species. Glucoamylase was a monomeric glycoprotein of ∼ 45 kDa with a carbohydrate content of 11% (by mass). It effected up to 76% conversion of starch in 24 h producing glucose as the sole product. Its apparent Km for soluble starch was 0.04 mg ml-1 and Vmax was 660 Mmol glucose min-1 mg protein-1. It also hydrolyzed maltose. Its activity on maltooligosaccharides increased with the chain length of the substrates. Glucoamylase was stable at 60°C for over 7h. Its activation energy was 61 kJ mol-1 Glucoamylase did not show synergistic effect with α-amylase. The properties of α-amylase and glucoamylase of Thermomyces lanuginosus strain IISc 91 suggest their usefulness in the commercial production of maltose and glucose syrups.  相似文献   

17.
A simple and specific recovery method for α-cyclodextrin (α-CD) was developed by employing co-digestion of CD reaction mixtures with CGTase fromBacillus ohbensis and α-glucosidase. The combination of CGTase fromB. ohbensis and α-glucosidase, such as α-amylase, β-amylase, or glucoamylase was examined for the selective degradation of β-and γ-CD in the CD reaction mixture formed by CGTase fromB. macerans. The co-digestion of the CD mixture with Taka-amylase and the CGTase resulted in α-CD and maltodextrins, the combination with β-amylase resulted in α-CD and maltose, and that with glucoamylase resulted in α-CD and glucose. The conditions of selective degradation of β- and γ-CD by co-digestion with the CGTase and glucoamylase were optimized as follows: the incubation pH, 5.5; incubation temperature, 50°C; CGTase concentration, 15 u/g of substrate; glucoamylase, 10 u/g of substrate; substrate concentration, 10% (w/v); the incubation time was fixed for 18 hr from the stand point of operation convenience. Most part of the content was presented in poster session at the 7th International Cyclodextrin Symposium, Tokyo, April 1994.  相似文献   

18.
A common feature in the structures of GT-A-fold-type glycosyltransferases is a mobile polypeptide loop that has been observed to participate in substrate recognition and enclose the active site upon substrate binding. This is the case for the human ABO(H) blood group B glycosyltransferase GTB, where amino acid residues 177-195 display significantly higher levels of disorder in the unliganded state than in the fully liganded state. Structural studies of mutant enzymes GTB/C80S/C196S and GTB/C80S/C196S/C209S at resolutions ranging from 1.93 to 1.40 Å display the opposite trend, where the unliganded structures show nearly complete ordering of the mobile loop residues that is lost upon substrate binding. In the liganded states of the mutant structures, while the UDP moiety of the donor molecule is observed to bind in the expected location, the galactose moiety is observed to bind in a conformation significantly different from that observed for the wild-type chimeric structures. Although this would be expected to impede catalytic turnover, the kinetics of the transfer reaction are largely unaffected. These structures demonstrate that the enzymes bind the donor in a conformation more similar to the dominant solution rotamer and facilitate its gyration into the catalytically competent form. Further, by preventing active-site closure, these structures provide a basis for recently observed cooperativity in substrate binding. Finally, the mutation of C80S introduces a fully occupied UDP binding site at the enzyme dimer interface that is observed to be dependent on the binding of H antigen acceptor analog.  相似文献   

19.
Sierks MR  Svensson B 《Biochemistry》2000,39(29):8585-8592
Molecular recognition using a series of deoxygenated maltose analogues was used to determine the substrate transition-state binding energy profiles of 10 single-residue mutants at the active site of glucoamylase from Aspergillus niger. The individual contribution of each substrate hydroxyl group to transition-state stabilization with the wild type and each mutant GA was determined from the relation Delta(DeltaG()) = -RT ln[(k(cat)/K(M))(x)/(k(cat)/K(M))(y)], where x represents either a mutant enzyme or substrate analogue and y the wild-type enzyme or parent substrate. The resulting binding energy profiles indicate that disrupting an active site hydrogen bond between enzyme and substrate, as identified in crystal structures, not only sharply reduces or eliminates the energy contributed from that particular hydrogen bond but also perturbs binding contributions from other substrate hydroxyl groups. Replacing the active site acidic groups, Asp55, Glu180, or Asp309, with the corresponding amides, and the neutral Trp178 with the basic Arg, all substantially reduced the binding energy contribution of the 4'- and 6'-OH groups of maltose at subsite -1, even though both Glu180 and Asp309 are localized at subsite 1. In contrast, the substitution, Asp176 --> Asn, located near subsites -1 and 1, did not substantially perturb any of the individual hydroxyl group binding energies. Similarly, the substitutions Tyr116 --> Ala, Ser119 --> Tyr, or Trp120 --> Phe also did not substantially alter the energy profiles even though Trp120 has a critical role in directing conformational changes necessary for activity. Since the mutations at Trp120 and Asp176 reduced k(cat) values by 50- and 12-fold, respectively, a large effect on k(cat) is not necessarily accompanied by changes in hydroxyl group binding energy contributions. Two substitutions, Asn182 --> Ala and Tyr306 --> Phe, had significant though small effects on interactions with 3- and 4'-OH, respectively. Binding interactions between the enzyme and the glucosyl group in subsite -1, particularly with the 4'- and 6'-OH groups, play an important role in substrate binding, while subsite 1 interactions may play a more important role in product release.  相似文献   

20.
Laminarinase, or ß-l, 3-glucanohydrolase, is a stableand highly active catalyst of the breakdown of ß-l,3 linked polysaccharides into glucose subunits. The enzyme isapparently unique to herbivores among marine planktonic zooplankton,and its specific substrate, chrysolaminarin-a ß-1,3 linked storage product-is unique to phytoplankton. Evidenceis presented to show that the enzyme is substrate inducibleand that enzyme activities rise and fall in proportion to theamount of ß-1, 3-glucan in the diet. Our data from SanClemente and Santa Barbara Basins (California) showed a negativecorrelation between laminarinase activity and zooplankton biomassdensity when samples were taken at closely spaced intervalsover a three day period. This result suggests that the negativecorrelation between phytoplankton and zooplankton which is oftenobserved may at least in part be due to grazing activity. Implicationsfor phytoplankton-zooplankton relationships are discussed.  相似文献   

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