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1.
Motile actinomycetes capable of degrading walls of viable yeast cells were isolated from soil and identified as Oerskovia xanthineolytica. A lytic assay based on susceptibility of enzyme-treated cells to osmotic shock was developed, and 10 of 15 strains of O. xanthineolytica, Oerskovia turbata, and nonmotile Oerskovia- like organisms from other collections were found to possess yeast lytic activities. All lytic strains produced laminaranase and alpha-mannanase, but the amounts, determined by reducing group assays, were not proportional to the observed lytic activities. The Oerskovia isolates demonstrated chemotactic, predatory activity against various yeast strains and killed yeasts in mixed cultures. Of 15 carbon sources tested for production of lytic enzyme, purified yeast cell walls elicited the highest activity. Glucose repressed enzyme production and caused cells to remain in the microfilamentous and motile rod stages of the Oerskovia cell cycle. Crude lytic activity was optimal at pH 5.6 to 7.0 and inactivated by heating for 6 min at 50 degrees C. Partial purification by isoelectric focusing showed that all lytic activity was associated with four beta-(1-->3)-glucanases. The absence of protein disulfide reductase, N-acetyl-beta-d-hexosaminidase, and phosphomannanase in crude preparations indicated that the principal enzyme responsible for yeast wall lysis was a beta-(1-->3)-glucanase that produced relatively little reducing sugar from yeast glucan.  相似文献   

2.
Yeast lytic system produced by Arthrobacter GJM-1 bacterium during growth on baker's yeast cell walls contains a complete set of enzymes which can hydrolyze all structural components of cell walls of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Chromatographic fractionation of the lytic system showed the presence of two types of endo-beta-1,3-glucanase. Rapid lysis of isolated cell walls of yeast was induced only by endo-beta-1,3-glucanase exhibiting high affinity to insoluble beta-1,3-glucans and releasing laminaripentaose as the main product of hydrolysis of beta-1,3-glucans. This enzyme was able to lyse intact cells of S. cerevisiae only in the presence of an additional factor present in the Arthrobacter GJM-1 lytic system, which was identified as an alkaline protease. This enzyme possesses the lowest molecular weight among other identified enzyme components present in the lytic system. Its role in the solubilization of yeast cell walls from the outer surface by endo-beta-1,3-glucanase could be substituted by preincubation of cells with Pronase or by allowing the glucanase to act on cells in the presence of thiol reagents. The mechanism of lysis of intact cells and isolated cell walls by the enzymes of Arthrobacter GJM-1 is discussed in the light of the present conception of yeast cell wall structure.  相似文献   

3.
Some physico-chemical properties of lytic proteinase L2 isolated from the enzymatic microbial preparation of lysoamidase were studied. The molecular mass of the enzyme is 15 000 Da, pI is 5.3. The enzyme hydrolyzes casein as well as the cells and cell walls of Staphylococcus aureus 209-P. The pH optimum of casein hydrolysis lies at 9.5; that for cell wall hydrolysis at 8.0. The temperature optimum for casein hydrolysis and cell lysis lies at 55 degrees C and 65 degrees C, respectively. The enzyme proteolytic activity is inhibited by serine proteinase inhibitors in a greater degree than the lytic activity. 50% of the proteolytic and lytic activities is lost upon enzyme heating for 15 min at 65 degrees C.  相似文献   

4.
Oerskovia sp. CK produced three types of β-1,3-glucanases designated as F-L, F-0 and F-2. F-L showed high lytic activity to viable yeast cells and weak activity to yeast glucan. F-0 and F-2 had little or no lytic activity and strong β-1,3-gIucanase activity.

F-0 or F-2 showed high lytic activities to yeast cells pretreated with small amounts of F-L which did not lysed the cells. Lytic activity of F-0 or F-2 also increased when cells were treated with alkaline pH or with both reducing agents and pH.

From these results, it is supposed that the ineffectiveness of F-0 or F-2 on the lysis of yeast cells might be attributed to a spatial inaccessibility of enzymes to the yeast glucan layer. However, the treatment of F-L, alkaline pH and reducing agents would bring about a modification of cells to give F-0 or F-2 access to the wall glucan and consequently the lysis of cells would occur.  相似文献   

5.
A study was made of the enzyme content of the isolated cell walls and of a plasma-membrane preparation obtained by centrifugation after enzymic digestion of the cell walls of baker's yeast. The isolated cell walls showed no hexokinase, alkaline phosphatase, esterase or NADH oxidase activity. It was concluded that these enzymes exist only in the interior of the cell. Further, only a negligible activity of deamidase was detectable in the cell walls. Noticeable amounts of saccharase, phosphatases hydrolysing p-nitrophenyl phosphate, ATP, ADP, thiamin pyrophosphate and PP(i), with optimum activity at pH3-4, and an activity of Mg(2+)-dependent adenosine triphosphatase at neutral pH, were found in the isolated cell walls. During enzymic digestion, the other activities appearing in the cell walls were mostly released into the medium, but the bulk of the Mg(2+)-dependent adenosine triphosphatase remained in the plasma-membrane preparation. Accordingly, it may be assumed that the enzymes released into the medium during digestion are located in the cell wall outside the plasma membrane, whereas the Mg(2+)-dependent adenosine triphosphatase is an enzyme of the plasma membrane. This enzyme differs from the phosphatases with pH optima in the range pH3-4 with regard to location, pH optimum, substrate specificity and different requirement of activators.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effect of lytic enzymes of Micromonospora AS on isolated cell walls and intact or heat killed cells of Candida utilis was investigated. Several substances normally used as stabilizers during protoplast formation were tested for their effect on the lytic action of strepzyme M on intact and dead cells: NaCl and KCl markedly inhibited lysis, sucrose only to 40%. Sorbitol and MgSO4 have no inhibitory effect. MgSO4 was selected for further research as it was found to protect the protoplasts. Phosphate buffer pH 6.8 should not be used at concentrations above 0.01 m. When grown submerged in shaking flasks or in pilot fermentation tanks, in liquid medium containing yeast cells and salts, Micromonospora AS gave the highest yield of lytic enzymes. The strepzyme M preparation is thermolabile.  相似文献   

7.
Oenococcus oeni exhibited extracellular β (1→3) glucanase activity. This activity increased when cells were cultivated with glycosidic cell-wall macromolecules. In addition, the culture supernatant of the organism effectively lysed viable or dead cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This lytic activity appeared in the early stationary phase of bacterial growth. Yeast cells at the end of the log phase of growth were the most sensitive. The optimum temperature for lysis of viable yeast cells was 40°C, which is very different from the temperatures observed in enological conditions (15–20°C). Moreover, the rate of the lytic activity was significantly lower in comparison with yeast cell wall-degrading activities previously measured in various other microorganisms. Therefore, yeast cell death that is sometimes observed during the alcoholic fermentation could hardly be attributed to the lytic activity of O. oeni. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2000) 25, 193–197. Received 27 December 1999/ Accepted in revised form 14 July 2000  相似文献   

8.
J Grenier  C Potvin    A Asselin 《Plant physiology》1993,103(4):1277-1283
Proteins from intercellular fluid extracts of chemically stressed barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves were separated by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at alkaline or acid pH. Polyacrylamide gels contained Saccharomyces cerevisiae (bakers' yeast) or Schizosaccharomyces pombe (fission yeast) crude cell walls for assaying yeast wall lysis. In parallel, gels were overlaid with a suspension of yeasts for assaying growth inhibition by pathogenesis-related proteins. The same assays were also performed with proteins separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions. In alkaline native polyacrylamide gels, only one band corresponding to yeast cell wall lytic activity was found to be inhibitory to bakers' yeast growth, whereas in acidic native polyacrylamide gels one band inhibited the growth of both yeasts. Under denaturing nonreducing conditions, one band of 19 kD inhibited the growth of both fungi. The 19-kD band corresponded to a basic protein after two-dimensional gel analysis. The 19-kD protein with yeast cell wall lytic activity and inhibitory to both yeasts was found to be different from previously reported barley chitosanases that were lytic to fungal spores. It could be different from other previously reported lytic antifungal activities related to pathogenesis-related proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Many microorganisms produce enzymes which lyse the walls of yeasts, fungi, and bacteria. The proportions of different enzyme activities present in the lytic system, their action patterns, synergism, and dependence on inhibitors, constitute the activity profile of the lytic system. Taken together, the activity profile and process conditions for lysis determine the reaction rate and the distribution of products from lysis of any given type of cells. Kinetics of glucan hydrolysis, proteolysis, and lysis of brewer's yeast were compared for two extracellular yeast-lytic enzyme systems with different properties. The enzyme sources used were filtered culture broths from Cytophaga sp. NCIB 9497 grown in batch culture and from Oerskovia xanthineolytica LL-G109, grown under carbon limitation in continuous culture. Rate and extent of cell hydrolysis, and the accumulation of soluble proteins, peptides, and carbohydrates from the lysed yeast cells, are discussed in terms of the activity profiles and potential applications of the two enzyme systems.  相似文献   

10.
Bacillus circulans WL-12 when grown in a mineral medium with yeast cell walls or yeast glucan as the soli carbon source, produced five beta-glucanases. Two beta-(1 leads to 3)-glucanases (I and II), which are lytic to yeast cell walls, were isolated from the culture liquid by batch adsorption on yeast glucan, and separated by chromatography on hydroxylapatite. Lytic beta-(1 leads to 3)-glucanase I was further purified by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. The specific activity of lytic beta-(1 leads to 3)-glucanase I on laminarin was 4.1 U per mg of protein. The enzyme moved as a single protein with a molecular weight of 40000 during sodium dodecylsulfate electrophoresis in slab gels. It was specific for the beta-(1 leads to 3)-glucosidic bond but the enzyme did not hydrolyze laminaribiose. Hydrolysis of laminarin went through a series of oligosaccharides, and laminaribiose and glucose accumulated till the end of the reaction. A small amount of gentibiose was also produced from laminarin. Products from yeast cell walls and yeast glucan included laminaripentaose, laminaritriose, laminaribiose, glucose and gentiobiose, but no laminaritetraose was detected. This glucanase has an optimum pH of 5.5.  相似文献   

11.
The course of the parasitic action of the mouldPenicillium purpurogenum on the mycelium of a plant strain ofAspergillus niger is described in plant and laboratory conditions of surface citric acid fermentation. During the infection, a successive destruction of the mycelium ofAspergillus niger sets in, as well as a decrease in citric acid production, in this case also act the specific inhibitory thermostabile materials, secreted by the parasitic mould into the medium. The main factor is the cell lysis, effected by a specific enzymolytic system of the constitutive type. This system is evolved by the parasitic mould in the nutritions medium, resp. into the mycelium of the infected mouldAspergillus niger and causes the lysis both of entire hyphae, and of isolated cell walls. By this lytic system, up to 85% of the dry weight of the cell walls is transferred into the solution as sugars, mainly as glucose, so that the chief component undergoing the lysis is a polymer carbohydrate. The optimum temperature of the action of the lytic system lies within 30–41°C, optimum pH is 4.2–5.5. In case of several other representatives of the genusPenicillium, no lytic systems have been established, at the same time their inability for the parasitic form of life on the mycelium ofAspergillus niger was proved.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A yeast lytic enzyme was covalently immobilized on an enteric coating polymer, Eudragit S, that is reversibly soluble and insoluble (S-IS) depending on the pH of the reaction medium. The yeast lytic enzyme immobilized on Eudragit S (Y-E) showed a sharp response of solubility to slight changes in pH without decrease in enzymatic activity. The specific activity per amount of enzyme protein of Y-E for dry yeast cells was about two-thirds that of the native enzyme. In both lysis reactions of dry and pressed baker's yeast cells, changing the pH of the reaction medium from 7.0 to 4.8 at an appropriate interval allows the insoluble Y-E and the reaction products (soluble protein for dry yeast cells and invertase and soluble protein for pressed baker's yeast cells) to be repeatedly separated. The reaction method using a reversible S-IS enzyme is a promising procedure for repeated use of the enzyme in a heterogeneous reaction system containing yeast cells as a substrate.  相似文献   

13.
When grown in a mineral medium with yeast cell walls or yeast glucan as the sole carbon source, Bacillus circulans WL-12 produces wall-lytic enzymes in addition to non-lytic beta-(1 leads to 3) and beta-(1 leads to 6)-glucananases. The lytic enzymes were isolated from the culture liquid by adsorption on insoluble yeast glucan in batch operation. After digestion of the glucan, the mixture of enzymes was chromatographed on hydroxylapatite on which the lytic activity could be resolved into one lytic beta-(1 leads to 6)glucanase and two lytic beta-(1 leads to 3)-glucanase was further purified by chromatography over diethylamino-ehtyl-agarose and carboxymethyl cellulose. Its specific activity on pustulan was 6.2 units per mg of protein. The enzyme moved as a single protein with a molecular weight of 54000 during sodium dodecylsulphate electrophoresis in slab gels. Hydrolysis of pustulan went thorugh a series of oligosaccharides, leading to a mixture of gentiotriose, gentiobiose and glucose. The enzyme also produced small amounts of gentiobiose from laminarin and pachyman and on this basis its lytic activity on yeast cell walls,was attribut beta-(1 leads to 3)-linked oligosaccharides were not detected. The lytic beta-(1 leads to 6)-glucanase has an optimum pH of 6.0. Pustulan hydrolysis followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. A Km of 0.29 mg pustulan per ml and a V of 9.1 micro-equivalents of glucose released/min per mg of enzyme were calculated. The enzyme has no metal ion requirement. The lytic beta-(1 leads to 6)-glucanase differs in essence from the non-lytic beta-(1 leads to 6)-glucanase of the same organism by its positive action on yeast cell walls and yeast glucan and its much lower specific activity on soluble pustulan.  相似文献   

14.
Growth of the opportunistic yeast pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans in a synthetic medium containing yeast nitrogen base and 1.0–3.0% glucose is accompanied by spontaneous acidification of the medium, with its pH decreasing from the initial 5.5 to around 2.5 in the stationary phase. During the transition from the late exponential to the stationary phase of growth, many cells died as a consequence of autolytic erosion of their cell walls. Simultaneously, there was an increase in an ecto-glucanase active towards β-1,3-glucan and having a pH optimum between pH 3.0 and 3.5. As a response to cell wall degradation, some cells developed an unusual survival strategy by forming 'secondary' cell walls underneath the original ones. Electron microscopy revealed that the secondary cell walls were thicker than the primary ones, exposing bundles of polysaccharide microfibrils only partially masked by an amorphous cell wall matrix on their surfaces. The cells bearing secondary cell walls had a three to five times higher content of the alkali-insoluble cell wall polysaccharides glucan and chitin, and their chitin/glucan ratio was about twofold higher than in cells from the logarithmic phase of growth. The cell lysis and the formation of the secondary cell walls could be suppressed by buffering the growth medium between pH 4.5 and 6.5.  相似文献   

15.
1. When Cytophaga johnsonii was grown in the presence of suitable inducers the culture fluid was capable of lysing thiol-treated yeast cell walls in vitro. 2. Autoclaved or alkali-extracted cells, isolated cell walls and glucan preparations made from them were effective inducers, but living yeast cells or cells killed by minimal heat treatment were not. 3. Chromatographic fractionation of lytic culture fluids showed the presence of two types of endo-beta-(1-->3)-glucanase and several beta-(1-->6)-glucanases; the latter may be induced separately by growing the myxo-bacterium in the presence of lutean. 4. Extensive solubilization of yeast cell walls was obtained only with preparations of one of these glucanases, an endo-beta-(1-->3)-glucanase producing as end products mainly oligosaccharides having five or more residues. Lysis by the other endo-beta-(1-->3)-glucanase was incomplete. 5. The beta-(1-->6)-glucanases produced a uniform thinning of the cell walls, and mannan-peptide was found in the solution. 6. These results, and the actions of the enzyme preparations on a variety of wall-derived preparations made from baker's yeast, are discussed in the light of present conceptions of yeast cell-wall structure.  相似文献   

16.
Cell wall degradation in the autolysis of filamentous fungi   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A systematic study on autolysis of the cell walls of fungi has been made on Neurospora crassa, Botrytis cinerea, Polystictus versicolor, Aspergillus nidulans, Schizophyllum commune, Aspergillus niger, and Mucor mucedo. During autolysis each fungus produces the necessary lytic enzymes for its autodegradation. From autolyzed cultures of each fungus enzymatic precipitates were obtained. The degree of lysis of the cell walls, obtained from non-autolyzed mycelia, was studied by incubating these cell walls with and without a supply of their own lytic enzymes. The degree of lysis increased with the incubation time and generally was higher with a supply of lytic enzymes.Cell walls from mycelia of different ages were obtained. A higher degree of lysis was always found, in young cell walls than in older cell walls, when exogenous lytic enzymes were present.In all the fungi studied, there is lysis of the cell walls during autolysis. This is confirmed by the change of the cell wall structure as well as by the degree of lysis reached by the cell wall and the release of substances, principally glucose and N-acetylglucosamine in the medium.  相似文献   

17.
The human immunodeficiency virus protease (HIV-1 PR) was expressed both in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and in mammalian cells. Inducible expression of HIV-1 PR arrested yeast growth, which was followed by cell lysis. The lytic phenotype included loss of plasma membrane integrity and cell wall breakage leading to the release of cell content to the medium. Given that neither poliovirus 2A protease nor 2BC protein, both being highly toxic for S. cerevisiae, were able to produce similar effects, it seems that this lytic phenotype is specific of HIV-1 PR. Drastic alterations in membrane permeability preceded the lysis in yeast expressing HIV-1 PR. Cell killing and lysis provoked by HIV-1 PR were also observed in mammalian cells. Thus, COS7 cells expressing the protease showed increased plasma membrane permeability and underwent lysis by necrosis with no signs of apoptosis. Strikingly, the morphological alterations induced by HIV-1 PR in yeast and mammalian cells were similar in many aspects. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a viral protein with such an activity. These findings contribute to the present knowledge on HIV-1-induced cytopathogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Cell lysis is induced in Schizosaccharomyces pombe ?ura4 cells grown in YPD medium, which contains yeast extract, polypeptone, and glucose. To identify the medium components that induce cell lysis, we first tested various kinds of yeast extracts from different suppliers. Cell lysis of ?ura4 cells on YE medium was observed when yeast extracts from OXOID, BD, Oriental, and Difco were used, but not when using yeast extract from Kyokuto. To determine which compounds induced cell lysis, we subjected yeast extract and polypeptone to GC-MS analysis. Ten kinds of compounds were detected in OXOID and BD yeast extracts, but not in Kyokuto yeast extract. Among them was urea, which was also present in polypeptone, and it clearly induced cell lysis. Deletion of the ure2 gene, which is responsible for utilizing urea, abolished the lytic effect of urea. The effect of urea was suppressed by deletion of pub1, and a similar phenotype was observed in the presence of polypeptone. Thus, urea is an inducer of cell lysis in S. pombe ?ura4 cells.  相似文献   

19.
Sakacin A was purified to homogeneity through simple chromatographic procedures from cultures of Lactobacillus sakei DSMZ 6333 grown on a low-cost medium. The highly purified protein dissipated both transmembrane potential (ΔΨ) and transmembrane pH gradient (ΔpH) in Listeria cells in a very intense, rapid, and energy-dependent fashion. On a slower timescale, purified sakacin A also showed a lytic activity toward isolated cell walls of Listeria. Mass spectrometry was used to analyze the products of sakacin A action on cell walls, evidencing that sakacin A acts on various types of bonds within peptoglycans.  相似文献   

20.
Growth of Micromonospora chalcea on a defined medium containing laminarin as the sole carbon source induced the production of an extracellular enzyme system capable of lysing cells of various yeast species. Production of the lytic enzyme system was repressed by glucose. Incubation of sensitive cells with the active component enzymes of the lytic system produced protoplasts in high yield. Analysis of the enzyme composition indicated that beta(1-->3) glucanase and protease were the most prominent hydrolytic activities present in the culture fluids. The system also displayed weak chitinase and beta(1-->6) glucanase activities whilst devoid of mannanase activity. Our observations suggest that the glucan supporting the cell wall framework of susceptible yeast cells is not directly accessible to the purified endo-beta(1-->3) glucanase and that external proteinaceous components prevent breakdown of this polymer in whole cells. We propose that protease acts in synergy with beta(1-->3) glucanase and that the primary action of the former on surface components allows subsequent solubilization of inner glucan leading to lysis.  相似文献   

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