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1.
Amino acid changes S180A (S-->A at site 180), H197Y, Y277F, T285A, and A308S are known to shift the maximum wavelength of absorption (lambda max) of red and green visual pigments toward blue, essentially in an additive fashion. To test the generality of this "five-sites" rule, we have determined the partial amino acid sequences of red and green pigments from five mammalian orders (Artiodactyla, Carnivora, Lagomorpha, Perissodactyla, and Rodentia). The result suggests that cat (Felis catus), dog (Canis familiaris), and goat (Capra hircus) pigments all with AHYTA at the five critical sites have lambda max values of approximately 530 nm, whereas rat (Rattus norvegicus) pigment with AYYTS has a lambda max value of approximately 510 nm, which is accurately predicted by the five-sites rule. However, the observed lambda max values of the orthologous pigments of European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus), white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis), and guinea pig (Cavia procellus) are consistently more than 10 nm higher than the predicted values, suggesting the existence of additional molecular mechanisms for red and green color vision. The inferred amino acid sequences of ancestral organisms suggest that the extant mammalian red and green pigments appear to have evolved from a single ancestral green-red hybrid pigment by directed amino acid substitutions.   相似文献   

2.
Phoborhodopsin (pR or sensory rhodopsin II, sRII) and pharaonis phoborhodopsin (ppR or pharaonis sRII, psRII) have a unique absorption maximum (lambda(max)) compared with three other archaeal rhodopsins: lambda(max) of pR and ppR is approx. 500 nm and of others (e.g. bacteriorhodopsin, bR) is 560-590 nm. To determine the residue contributing to the opsin shift from ppR to bR, we constructed various ppR mutants, in which a single residue was substituted for a residue corresponding to that of bR. The residues mutated were those which differ from that of bR and locate within 5 A from the conjugated polyene chain of the chromophore or any methyl group of the polyene chain. The shifts of lambda(max) of all mutants were small, however. We constructed a mutant in which all residues which differ from those of bR in the retinal binding site were simultaneously substituted for those of bR, but the shift was only from 499 to 509 nm. Next, we constructed a mutant in which 10 residues located within 5 A from the polyene as described above were simultaneously substituted. Only 44% of the opsin shift (lambda(max) of 524 nm) from ppR to bR was obtained even when all amino acids around the chromophore were replaced by the same residues as bR. We therefore conclude that the structural factor is more important in accounting for the difference of lambda(max) between ppR and bR rather than amino acid substitutions. The possible structural factors are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
We previously reported that zebrafish have four tandemly duplicated green (RH2) opsin genes (RH2-1, RH2-2, RH2-3, and RH2-4). Absorption spectra vary widely among the four photopigments reconstituted with 11-cis retinal, with their peak absorption spectra (lambda(max)) being 467, 476, 488, and 505 nm, respectively. In this study, we inferred the ancestral amino acid (aa) sequences of the zebrafish RH2 opsins by likelihood-based Bayesian statistics and reconstituted the ancestral opsins by site-directed mutagenesis. The ancestral pigment (A1) to the four zebrafish RH2 pigments and that (A3) to RH2-3 and RH2-4 showed lambda(max) at 506 nm, while that (A2) to RH2-1 and RH2-2 showed a lambda(max) at 474 nm, indicating that a spectral shift had occurred toward the shorter wavelength on the evolutionary lineages A1 to A2 by 32 nm, A2 to RH2-1 by 7 nm, and A3 to RH2-3 by 18 nm. Pigment chimeras and site-directed mutagenesis revealed a large contribution (approximately 15 nm) of glutamic acid to glutamine substitution at residue 122 (E122Q) to the A1 to A2 and A3 to RH2-3 spectral shifts. However, the remaining spectral differences appeared to result from complex interactive effects of a number of aa replacements, each of which has only a minor spectral contribution (1-3 nm). The four zebrafish RH2 pigments cover nearly an entire range of lambda(max) distribution among vertebrate RH2 pigments and provide an excellent model to study spectral tuning mechanisms of RH2 in vertebrates.  相似文献   

4.
When invertebrate rhodopsins were used as the outgroup, the rooted phylogenetic tree of 26 vertebrate visual pigments (VPs) was constructed. These VPs are distinguished into the following four clusters: (1) RH1 cluster consisting of rhodopsins, (2) RH2 cluster consisting of VPs with variable ranges of absorption spectra, (3) SWS cluster of short wavelength-sensitive VPs, and (4) LWS/MSW cluster of long and medium wavelength-sensitive VPs. Short wavelength-sensitive VPs from Astyanax fasciatus (AF23), goldfish (BCa), chicken (BCg and VGg), and human (BHs) belong to SWS cluster, whereas that from gecko (BGge) belongs to the RH2 cluster. The SWS cluster is further divided into SWS-I (BHs and VGg) and SWS-II (AF23, BCa, and BGg) groups. The SWS-I group has accumulated more amino acid changes than any other group of VPs. It is suggested that amino acid changes at a few key positions might have been important in the functional differentiation of the SWS-I group from the SWS-II group.   相似文献   

5.
Takahashi Y  Ebrey TG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(20):6025-6034
Previously we reported the sequence of the member of the short wavelength sensitive 2 (SWS2) family of vertebrate visual pigments from the retina of the Japanese common newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster[Takahashi, Y. et al. (2001) FEBS Lett. 501, 151-155]. Now we have expressed the apopigment and regenerated it with A1 retinal. Its absorption maximum, 474 nm, is greatly red shifted compared to other known SWS2 pigments (418-455 nm). To determine the amino acid residues that control its spectral tuning, we replaced the residues that were near the chromophore and which differed between the newt and the bullfrog (lambda(max) = 430 nm) wild-type SWS2 pigments: Pro91Ser, Ser94Ala, Ile122Met, Cys127Ser, Ser211Cys, Tyr261Phe, and Ala292Ser. Each of these site-directed mutants led to blue shifts of the newt pigment with five of them causing substantial shifts; their sum was about equal to the difference between the absorption maximum of the bullfrog and newt pigments, 44 nm. The 32 nm shift of the absorption maximum of the multiple seven-residue mutant to 442 nm is fairly close to that of the wild-type bullfrog pigment. Thus, the seven amino acid residues that we replaced are the major cause of the red shift of the newt SWS2 pigment's spectrum. Two of the residues, 91 and 94, have not previously been identified as wavelength regulating sites in visual pigments. One of these, 91, probably regulates color via a new mechanism: altering of a hydrogen bonding network that is connected via a water to the chromophore, in this case its counterion, Glu113.  相似文献   

6.
The coelacanth, a "living fossil," lives at a depth of about 200 m near the coast of the Comoros archipelago in the Indian Ocean and receives only a narrow range of light at about 480 nm. To see the entire range of "color" the Comoran coelacanth appears to use only rod-specific RH1 and cone-specific RH2 visual pigments, with the optimum light sensitivities (lambda max) at 478 nm and 485 nm, respectively. These blue-shifted lambda max values of RH1 and RH2 pigments are fully explained by independent double amino acid replacements E122Q/A292S and E122Q/M207L, respectively. More generally, currently available mutagenesis experiments identify only 10 amino acid changes that shift the lambda max values of visual pigments more than 5 nm. Among these, D83N, E1220, M207L, and A292S are associated strongly with the adaptive blue shifts in the lambda max values of RH1 and RH2 pigments in vertebrates.  相似文献   

7.
The violet- and ultraviolet-sensitive visual pigments of birds belong to the same class of pigments as the violet-sensitive (so-called blue) pigments of mammals. However, unlike the pigments from mammals and other vertebrate taxa which, depending on species, have lambda(max) values of either around 430 nm or around 370 nm, avian pigments are found with lambda(max) values spread across this range. In this paper, we present the sequences of two pigments isolated from Humbolt penguin and pigeon with intermediate lambda(max) values of 403 and 409 nm, respectively. By comparing the amino acid sequences of these pigments with the true UV pigments of budgerigar and canary and with chicken violet with a lambda(max) value of 420 nm, we have been able to identify five amino acid sites that show a pattern of substitution between species that is consistent with differences in lambda(max). Each of these substitutions has been introduced into budgerigar cDNA and expressed in vitro in COS-7 cells. Only three resulted in spectral shifts in the regenerated pigment; two had relatively small effects and may account for the spectral shifts between penguin, pigeon, and chicken whereas one, the replacement of Ser by Cys at site 90 in the UV pigments, produced a 35 nm shortwave shift that could account for the spectral shift from 403 nm in penguin to around 370 nm in budgerigar and canary.  相似文献   

8.
Yokoyama S  Blow NS  Radlwimmer FB 《Gene》2000,259(1-2):17-24
We have isolated and sequenced the RH1(Tg), RH2(Tg), SWS2(Tg), and LWS(Tg) opsin cDNAs from zebra finch retinas. Upon binding to 11-cis-retinal, these opsins regenerate the corresponding photosensitive molecules, visual pigments. The absorption spectra of visual pigments have a broad bell shape, with the peak being called lambda(max). Previously, SWS1(Tg) opsin cDNA was isolated from zebra finch retinal RNA, expressed in cultured COS1 cells, reconstituted with 11-cis-retinal, and the lambda(max) of the resulting visual pigment was shown to be 359nm. Here, the lambda(max) values of the RH1(Tg), RH2(Tg), SWS2(Tg), and LWS(Tg) pigments are determined to be 501, 505, 440, and 560nm, respectively. Molecular evolutionary analyses suggest that specific amino acid replacements in the SWS1 and SWS2 pigments, resulting from accelerated evolution, must have been responsible for their functional divergences among the avian pigments.  相似文献   

9.
V R Viviani  E J Bechara  Y Ohmiya 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8271-8279
Phrixothrix railroad-worms emit yellow-green light through 11 pairs of lateral lanterns along the body and red light through two cephalic lanterns. The cDNAs for the lateral lanterns luciferase of Phrixothrix vivianii, which emit green light (lambda max= 542 nm), and for the head lanterns of P. hirtus, which emit the most red-shifted bioluminescence (lambda max= 628 nm) among luminescent beetles, were cloned. Positive clones which emitted green (PvGR: lambda max= 549 nm) and red (PhRE: lambda max= 622 nm) bioluminescence were isolated. The lucifereases coded by PvGR (545 amino acid residues) and PhRE (546 amino acid residues) cDNAs share 71% identity. PvGR and PhRE luciferases showed 50-55% and 46-49% identity with firefly luciferases, respectively, and 47-49% with click-beetle luciferases. PhRE luciferase has some unique residues which replace invariant residues in other beetle luciferases. The additional residue Arg 352 in PhRE, which is deleted in PvGR polypeptide, seems to be another important structural feature associated with red light production. As in the case of other railroad-worms and click-beetle luciferases studied, Phrixothrix luciferases do not undergo the typical red shift suffered by firefly luciferases upon decreasing pH, a property which might be related to the many amino acid residues shared in common between railroad-worm and click-beetle luciferase.  相似文献   

10.
The equilibrium reactions involved in the formation of the apurinic acid (APA)-Schiff chromophores in the staining phase of the Feulgen-Schiff reaction do not allow a quantitative conversion of APA to these chromophores. By modification of the sulfite and dye concentrations and the pH of the staining reagents, or by using better solvents for pararosaniline like acetic acid or dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) a shift of these equilibria was attempted in order to obtain a higher amount of APA-bound dye. A 40% higher absorbance, when compared with the normal Schiff-staining, was obtained in model films by staining with a saturated solution of pararosaniline in a 1:1 v/v mixture of DMSO and SO2-water, followed by rinsing in SO2-water. A doubling of the absorbance resulted in the same objects when a saturated solution of pararosaniline in a 2 M acetic acid/acetate buffer of pH 4.45 was used for staining, followed by a short rinse in SO2-water. Amino groups (as found in histones) are shown to compete with the amino groups of pararosaniline for the APA aldehydes. This effect, although causing lower staining intensities, is shown not to be the explanation for the differences in stain content found between more and less compact forms of chromatin. Depending on the pH, and dye and sulfite concentrations of the staining reagents, the following components are considered as possible contributors to the mixture of chromophores (Duijndam et al., 1973 b) formed between APA and Schiff's reagent or its modifications: 1. An acid labile component with a wavelength of maximal absorbance (lambda max) near 510 nm; its structure is probably the azomethine--CH=N--; 2. A relatively acid stable component with a high value of molecular absorbance (epsilon), an lambda max near 570 nm and possibly having an enamine structure--CH=CH--NH--; 3. A component with intermediate acid stability, low epsilon, and lambda max near 540 nm, and which is probably an alkylsulfonic acid --CH(SO3H)--NH--compound. Small differences in the staining conditions in the histochemical application of the Feulgen-Schiff reaction may cause a shift in the ratio between especially components 2 and 3, resulting in variations in stain content and in lambda max.  相似文献   

11.
The mycosporine-like amino acid (MAA), porphyra-334 (lambda(max) = 334 nm; epsilon = 42,300 M(-1) cm(-1)), was isolated from the aquatic cyanobacterium Aphanizomenon flos-aquae (AFA) and its structure was verified by spectroscopic methods. The UVA absorption properties of the crude methanolic extract were determined against two commercial sun care products in terms of mean critical wavelength, mean UVA/UVB ratios and UVA protection category (Boots the Chemists, Ltd.). The crude methanolic extract from AFA exhibited maximum UVA protection comparable to that determined for Boots SPF 4.  相似文献   

12.
The absorption spectra of two photoactive yellow protein model chromophores have been measured in vacuum using an electrostatic ion storage ring. The absorption spectrum of the isolated chromophore is an important reference for deducing the influence of the protein environment on the electronic energy levels of the chromophore and separating the intrinsic properties of the chromophore from properties induced by the protein environment. In vacuum the deprotonated trans-thiophenyl-p-coumarate model chromophore has an absorption maximum at 460 nm, whereas the photoactive yellow protein absorbs maximally at 446 nm. The protein environment thus only slightly blue-shifts the absorption. In contrast, the absorption of the model chromophore in aqueous solution is significantly blue-shifted (lambda(max) = 395 nm). A deprotonated trans-p-coumaric acid has also been studied to elucidate the effect of thioester formation and phenol deprotonation. The sum of these two changes on the chromophore induces a red shift both in vacuum and in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

13.
The ultrasonic absorption coefficient per wavelength (alpha lambda), as a function of temperature and frequency, was determined for large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) in the vicinity of their phospholipid phase transition temperature, using a double crystal acoustic interferometer. (The vesicles were composed of a 4:1 (w/w) mixture of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG). It has been found that alpha lambda reaches a maximum (alpha lambda)max at the phase transition temperature (tm) of the phospholipids in the bilayer, at an ultrasonic relaxation frequency of 2.1 MHz. Divalent cations (Ca2+ and Mg2+), added to LUV suspensions, shifted (alpha lambda)max to higher temperatures, dependent upon the concentration of divalent cation. It was also found that the shape of the alpha lambda versus t curve was significantly changed, representing changes in the Van't Hoff enthalpy of the transition, and therefore, the cooperative unit of the transition. This suggests that divalent cations interact individually with the negatively charged phospholipid headgroups of DPPG and with DPPC headgroups, thus decreasing the cooperative unit of the transition. The observed upward shift in tm suggests an interaction that increases the activation energy and, therefore, the temperature of the phase transition. However, alpha lambda as a function of frequency did not change with the addition of divalent cations and, thus, the relaxation time of the event responsible for the absorption of ultrasound is not changed by the addition of divalent cations.  相似文献   

14.
Butterfly long-wavelength (L) photopigments are interesting for comparative studies of adaptive evolution because of the tremendous phenotypic variation that exists in their wavelength of peak absorbance (lambda(max) value). Here we present a comprehensive survey of L photopigment variation by measuring lambda(max) in 12 nymphalid and 1 riodinid species using epi-microspectrophotometry. Together with previous data, we find that L photopigment lambda(max) varies from 510-565 nm in 22 nymphalids, with an even broader 505- to 600-nm range in riodinids. We then surveyed the L opsin genes for which lambda(max) values are available as well as from related taxa and found 2 instances of L opsin gene duplication within nymphalids, in Hermeuptychia hermes and Amathusia phidippus, and 1 instance within riodinids, in the metalmark butterfly Apodemia mormo. Using maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood ancestral state reconstructions to map the evolution of spectral shifts within the L photopigments of nymphalids, we estimate the ancestral pigment had a lambda(max) = 540 nm +/- 10 nm standard error and that blueshifts in wavelength have occurred at least 4 times within the family. We used ancestral state reconstructions to investigate the importance of several amino acid substitutions (Ile17Met, Ala64Ser, Asn70Ser, and Ser137Ala) previously shown to have evolved under positive selection that are correlated with blue spectral shifts. These reconstructions suggest that the Ala64Ser substitution has indeed occurred along the newly identified blueshifted L photopigment lineages. Substitutions at the other 3 sites may also be involved in the functional diversification of L photopigments. Our data strongly suggest that there are limits to the evolution of L photopigment spectral shifts among species with only one L opsin gene and that opsin gene duplication broadens the potential range of lambda(max) values.  相似文献   

15.
Different fluorescent labels were tested in order to monitor conformational transitions of the four-hexamer haemocyanin from the tarantula Eurypelma californicum during the oxygenation process. When the four-hexamer was labelled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole, the maximum wavelength lambda max of the fluorescence emission spectrum was significantly shifted up to 5 nm, depending on pH and the degree of oxygenation. The values for lambda max of the fully oxygenated haemocyanin were 531.5 nm (pH less than 7.8) and 530.0 nm (pH greater than 7.8). For deoxygenated haemocyanin the values were 533.5 nm (pH less than 7.2) and 535.2 nm (pH greater than 7.2). The occurrence of four distinct emission maxima supports the hypothesis of four conformational species for the tarantula haemocyanin, which have been predicted by the nesting model [Robert, C. H., Decker, H., Richey, B., Gill, S. J. & Wyman, J. (1987) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 84, 1891-1895]. Only four amino acids of the four-hexamer were labelled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole. They were identified as lysine 484 on the purified peptide Leu-Arg-Lys-Phe-His-Arg. This amino acid is located on the surface of the four copies of subunit d. The sharp shift of the maxima of the emission wavelengths during oxygenation indicates that the four copies of subunits d synchronously take part in the conformational switch. This points to a concerted mechanism for the conformational transitions of the tarantula haemocyanin.  相似文献   

16.
The absorption maximum of the far-red absorbing form of phytochrome in the difference spectrum for phototransformation (Pfr max) was investigated in vivo and in in vitro pellets from dark grown Hordeum vulgare L. primary leaves. Exposure of pellets in Honda medium from tissue pre-irradiated with red light to far red light gave a Pfr max of 734 nm, a slightly longer wavelength than was seen in vivo (730 nm). After incubation as the red absorbing form of phytochrome (Pr) for 2 h at 0° C irradiation with red light showed that Pfr max had shifted to shorter wavelength (716 nm) in Honda medium. Further incubation as Pfr for 2 h at 0° C and irradiation with far red light showed that Pfr max had shifted to longer wavelength (726 nm). Similar shifts were also seen in other media, although the peak positions were different. Phytochrome remained pelletable throughout these experiments and Pfr max is compared to that of soluble phytochrome in similar media. The results are interpreted as indicating changes in molecular environment of the putative phytochrome membrane receptor site and that Pfr max can be used to probe the nature of this binding.Abbreviations D Dark - EDTA Ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid - F far red light - MOPS N-morpholino-3-propane-sulphonic acid - P Phytochrome - Pr red absorbing form of P - Pfr far red absorbing form of P - Pfr max wavelength maximum of Pfr absorbance in a phototransformation difference spectrum - R red light  相似文献   

17.
Yokoyama S  Takenaka N  Blow N 《Gene》2007,396(1):196-202
The molecular bases of spectral tuning in the UV-, violet-, and blue-sensitive pigments are not well understood. Using the in vitro assay, here we show that the SWS1, SWS2-A, and SWS2-B pigments of bluefin killifish (Lucania goodei) have the wavelengths of maximal absorption (lambda(max)'s) of 354, 448, and 397 nm, respectively. The spectral difference between the SWS2-A and SWS2-B pigments is largest among those of all currently known pairs of SWS2 pigments within a species. The SWS1 pigment contains no amino acid replacement at the currently known 25 critical sites and seems to have inherited its UV-sensitivity directly from the vertebrate ancestor. Mutagenesis analyses show that the amino acid differences at sites 44, 46, 94, 97, 109, 116, 118, 265, and 292 of the SWS2-A and SWS2-B pigments explain 80% of their spectral difference. Moreover, the larger the individual effects of amino acid changes on the lambda(max)-shift are, the larger the synergistic effects tend to be generated, revealing a novel mechanism of spectral tuning of visual pigments.  相似文献   

18.
Takenaka N  Yokoyama S 《Gene》2007,399(1):26-32
At present, molecular bases of spectral tuning in rhodopsin-like (RH2) pigments are not well understood. Here, we have constructed the RH2 pigments of nocturnal Tokay gecko (Gekko gekko) and diurnal American chameleon (Anolis carolinensis) as well as chimeras between them. The RH2 pigments of the gecko and chameleon reconstituted with 11-cis-retinal had the wavelengths of maximal absorption (lambda(max)'s) of 467 and 496 nm, respectively. Chimeric pigment analyses indicated that 76-86%, 14-24%, and 10% of the spectral difference between them could be explained by amino acid differences in transmembrane (TM) helices I-IV, V-VII, and amino acid interactions between the two segments, respectively. Evolutionary and mutagenesis analyses revealed that the lambda(max)'s of the gecko and chameleon pigments diverged from each other not only by S49A (serine to alanine replacement at residue 49), S49F (serine to phenylalanine), L52M (leucine to methionine), D83N (aspartic acid to asparagine), M86T (methionine to threonine), and T97A (threonine to alanine) but also by other amino acid replacements that cause minor lambda(max)-shifts individually.  相似文献   

19.
The photobleaching pathway of a short-wavelength cone opsin purified in delipidated form (lambda(max) = 425 nm) is reported. The batho intermediate of the violet cone opsin generated at 45 K has an absorption maximum at 450 nm. The batho intermediate thermally decays to the lumi intermediate (lambda(max) = 435 nm) at 200 K. The lumi intermediate decays to the meta I (lambda(max) = 420 nm) and meta II (lambda(max) = 388 nm) intermediates at 258 and 263 K, respectively. The meta II intermediate decays to free retinal and opsin at >270 K. At 45, 75, and 140 K, the photochemical excitation of the violet cone opsin at 425 nm generates the batho intermediate at high concentrations under moderate illumination. The batho intermediate spectra, generated via decomposing the photostationary state spectra at 45 and 140 K, are identical and have properties typical of batho intermediates of other visual pigments. Extended illumination of the violet cone opsin at 75 K, however, generates a red-shifted photostationary state (relative to both the dark and the batho intermediates) that has as absorption maximum at approximately 470 nm, and thermally reverts to form the normal batho intermediate when warmed to 140 K. We conclude that this red-shifted photostationary state is a metastable state, characterized by a higher-energy protein conformation that allows relaxation of the all-trans chromophore into a more planar conformation. FTIR spectroscopy of violet cone opsin indicates conclusively that the chromophore is protonated. A similar transformation of the rhodopsin binding site generates a model for the VCOP binding site that predicts roughly 75% of the observed blue shift of the violet cone pigment relative to rhodopsin. MNDO-PSDCI calculations indicate that secondary interactions involving the binding site residues are as important as the first-order chromophore protein interactions in mediating the wavelength maximum.  相似文献   

20.
The white-rot fungus Ceriporiopsis subvermispora delignifies lignocellulose with high selectivity, but until now it has appeared to lack the specialized peroxidases, termed lignin peroxidases (LiPs) and versatile peroxidases (VPs), that are generally thought important for ligninolysis. We screened the recently sequenced C. subvermispora genome for genes that encode peroxidases with a potential ligninolytic role. A total of 26 peroxidase genes was apparent after a structural-functional classification based on homology modeling and a search for diagnostic catalytic amino acid residues. In addition to revealing the presence of nine heme-thiolate peroxidase superfamily members and the unexpected absence of the dye-decolorizing peroxidase superfamily, the search showed that the C. subvermispora genome encodes 16 class II enzymes in the plant-fungal-bacterial peroxidase superfamily, where LiPs and VPs are classified. The 16 encoded enzymes include 13 putative manganese peroxidases and one generic peroxidase but most notably two peroxidases containing the catalytic tryptophan characteristic of LiPs and VPs. We expressed these two enzymes in Escherichia coli and determined their substrate specificities on typical LiP/VP substrates, including nonphenolic lignin model monomers and dimers, as well as synthetic lignin. The results show that the two newly discovered C. subvermispora peroxidases are functionally competent LiPs and also suggest that they are phylogenetically and catalytically intermediate between classical LiPs and VPs. These results offer new insight into selective lignin degradation by C. subvermispora.  相似文献   

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