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1.

Background  

Penicillin G acylase of Escherichia coli (PGAEc) is a commercially valuable enzyme for which efficient bacterial expression systems have been developed. The enzyme is used as a catalyst for the hydrolytic production of β-lactam nuclei or for the synthesis of semi-synthetic penicillins such as ampicillin, amoxicillin and cephalexin. To become a mature, periplasmic enzyme, the inactive prepropeptide of PGA has to undergo complex processing that begins in the cytoplasm (autocatalytic cleavage), continues at crossing the cytoplasmic membrane (signal sequence removing), and it is completed in the periplasm. Since there are reports on impressive cytosolic expression of bacterial proteins in Pichia, we have cloned the leader-less gene encoding PGAEc in this host and studied yeast production capacity and enzyme authenticity.  相似文献   

2.
Penicillin acylases are industrially important enzymes for the production of 6‐APA, which is used extensively in the synthesis of secondary antibiotics. The enzyme translates into an inactive single chain precursor that subsequently gets processed by the removal of a spacer peptide connecting the chains of the mature active heterodimer. We have cloned the penicillin G acylase from Kluyvera citrophila (KcPGA) and prepared two mutants by site‐directed mutagenesis. Replacement of N‐terminal serine of the β‐subunit with cysteine (Serβ1Cys) resulted in a fully processed but inactive enzyme. The second mutant in which this serine is replaced by glycine (Serβ1Gly) remained in the unprocessed and inactive form. The crystals of both mutants belonged to space group P1 with four molecules in the asymmetric unit. The three‐dimensional structures of these mutants were refined at resolutions 2.8 and 2.5 Å, respectively. Comparison of these structures with similar structures of Escherichia coli PGA (EcPGA) revealed various conformational changes that lead to autocatalytic processing and consequent removal of the spacer peptide. The large displacements of residues such as Arg168 and Arg477 toward the N‐terminal cleavage site of the spacer peptide or the conformational changes of Arg145 and Phe146 near the active site in these structures suggested probable steps in the processing dynamics. A comparison between the structures of the processed Serβ1Cys mutant and that of the processed form of EcPGA showed conformational differences in residues Argα145, Pheα146, and Pheβ24 at the substrate binding pocket. Three conformational transitions of Argα145 and Pheα146 residues were seen when processed and unprocessed forms of KcPGA were compared with the substrate bound structure of EcPGA. Structure mediation in activity difference between KcPGA and EcPGA toward acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) is elucidated.  相似文献   

3.
《Process Biochemistry》2010,45(3):390-398
A novel approach is proposed to prepare a set of immobilized derivatives of a enzyme covalently rigidified through different regions of its surface. Six different variants of penicillin G acylase (PGA) from Escherichia coli (which lacks Cys) were prepared by introducing a unique Cys residue via site-directed mutagenesis in six different enzyme regions which were rich in Lys residues. All variants exhibited a similar activity and stability compared to those of the native enzyme. Each variant was immobilized on supports having a low concentration of reactive disulfide moieties and a high concentration of poorly reactive epoxy groups. After immobilization at pH 7.0 by site-directed thiol-disulfide intermolecular exchange, derivatives were further incubated at pH 10.0 for 48 h to promote an additional intramolecular reaction between Lys residues of enzyme and epoxy groups of the support. The establishment of at least three covalent attachments per PGA molecule was determined for all immobilized enzyme variants. The different derivatives exhibited diverse stability against several distorting agents and different selectivity in two interesting reactions. The derivative of the PGA variant obtained by replacement of GlnB380 by Cys was the most stable against heat and organic cosolvents: it preserved 90% of the initial activity and was 30-fold more stable than soluble PGA. This derivative also exhibited an improved enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of chiral esters (E was improved from 8 to 16) and in kinetically controlled synthesis of amides (synthetic yields were increased from 31 to 49%).  相似文献   

4.

Background  

During the last years B. megaterium was continuously developed as production host for the secretion of proteins into the growth medium. Here, recombinant production and export of B. megaterium ATCC14945 penicillin G amidase (PGA) which is used in the reverse synthesis of β-lactam antibiotics were systematically improved.  相似文献   

5.
The use of penicillin G acylase (PGA) covalently linked to insoluble carrier is expected to produce major advances in pharmaceutical processing industry and the enzyme stability enhancement is still a significant challenge. The objective of this study was to improve catalytic performance of the covalently immobilized PGA on a potential industrial carrier, macroporous poly(glycidyl methacrylate‐co‐ethylene glycol dimethacrylate) [poly(GMA‐co‐EGDMA)], by optimizing the copolymerization process and the enzyme attachment procedure. This synthetic copolymer could be a very promising alternative for the development of low‐cost, easy‐to‐prepare, and stable biocatalyst compared to expensive commercially available epoxy carriers such as Eupergit or Sepabeads. The PGA immobilized on poly(GMA‐co‐EGDMA) in the shape of microbeads obtained by suspension copolymerization appeared to have higher activity yield compared to copolymerization in a cast. Optimal conditions for the immobilization of PGA on poly(GMA‐co‐EGDMA) microbeads were 1 mg/mL of PGA in 0.75 mol/L phosphate buffer pH 6.0 at 25°C for 24 h, leading to the active biocatalyst with the specific activity of 252.7 U/g dry beads. Chemical amination of the immobilized PGA could contribute to the enhanced stability of the biocatalyst by inducing secondary interactions between the enzyme and the carrier, ensuring multipoint attachment. The best balance between the activity yield (51.5%), enzyme loading (25.6 mg/g), and stability (stabilization factor 22.2) was achieved for the partially modified PGA. © 2015 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 32:43–53, 2016  相似文献   

6.
According to the comparison of amino acid sequence between PGA (Penicillin G Acylase) and PBPs (Penicillin Binding Protein), We suggest that No. 565-595 peptide fragment in beta-subunit of PGA may be a substrate-binding site of enzyme. Plasmid pTZGA was constructed by cloning the 2.6 kb PGA gene of pWGA into phagemid pTZ18U The technique of site-specific mutagenesis was used to study the role of residue No. 579 (Ser) and No. 580 (Arg) of PGA. Four kinds of mutants were obtained (Ser579-->Gly579, Arg580-->Gly580, Arg580-->Glu580, Arg580-->Lys580), both Glu580 and Gly580 mutants showed no activity of enzyme and Lys580 mutant remained 30% and Gly579 mutant kept 70% activity of wilde type. The same protein expression of four mutants according to the results of ELISA indicate that mutation does not affect the expression of PGA, but Arg580 residue may be essential for substrate-binding or catalysis of PGA.  相似文献   

7.
Highly activated glyoxyl-supports rapidly immobilize proteins at pH 10 (where the -amino groups of the Lys groups of the protein surface are very reactive), and stabilize them by multipoint covalent attachment. However, they do not immobilize proteins at pH 8. This paper shows that the enzyme immobilization at this mild pH value is possible by incubation of the enzymes in the presence of different thiolated compounds (dithiothreitol, DTT; was selected as optimal reagent). The thiolated compounds (even the not reducing ones) stabilized the imino bonds formed at pH 8 between the aldehydes in the support and the amino groups of the protein. However, thiolated compounds are unable to reduce the imino bonds or the aldehyde groups and a final reduction step (e.g., using sodium borohydride) was always necessary. After enzyme immobilization through the most reactive amino group of the protein, the further incubation of this immobilized enzyme at pH 10 would improve the reactivity of the -amino groups of the Lys residues of the protein surface. Then, an intense multipoint covalent reaction of the enzyme with the dense layer of glyoxyl groups in the support could be obtained, increasing the stability of the immobilized enzyme. Using three different industrially relevant enzymes (penicillin G acylase from Escherichia coli (PGA), lipase from Bacillus thermocatenulatus (BTL2) and glutaryl acylase from Pseudomonas sp. (GA)), new immobilized-stabilized biocatalysts of the enzymes were produced. After reduction, the preparations incubated at pH 10 were more stable than those that were only immobilized and reduced at pH 8. In the case of the PGA, this preparation was even 4–5-fold more stable than those obtained by direct immobilization at pH 10 (around 40,000–50,000-fold more stable than the soluble enzyme).  相似文献   

8.

Background  

Oligomeric enzymes can undergo a reversible loss of activity at low temperatures. One such enzyme is tryptophanase (Trpase) from Escherichia coli. Trpase is a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent tetrameric enzyme with a Mw of 210 kD. PLP is covalently bound through an enamine bond to Lys270 at the active site. The incubation of holo E. coli Trpases at 2°C for 20 h results in breaking this enamine bond and PLP release, as well as a reversible loss of activity and dissociation into dimers. This sequence of events is termed cold lability and its understanding bears relevance to protein stability and shelf life.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Human RNase6 is a small cationic antimicrobial protein that belongs to the vertebrate RNaseA superfamily. All members share a common catalytic mechanism, which involves a conserved catalytic triad, constituted by two histidines and a lysine (His15/His122/Lys38 in RNase6 corresponding to His12/His119/Lys41 in RNaseA). Recently, our first crystal structure of human RNase6 identified an additional His pair (His36/His39) and suggested the presence of a secondary active site.

Methods

In this work we have explored RNase6 and RNaseA subsite architecture by X-ray crystallography, site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic characterization.

Results

The analysis of two novel crystal structures of RNase6 in complex with phosphate anions at atomic resolution locates a total of nine binding sites and reveals the contribution of Lys87 to phosphate-binding at the secondary active center. Contribution of the second catalytic triad residues to the enzyme activity is confirmed by mutagenesis. RNase6 catalytic site architecture has been compared with an RNaseA engineered variant where a phosphate-binding subsite is converted into a secondary catalytic center (RNaseA-K7H/R10H).

Conclusions

We have identified the residues that participate in RNase6 second catalytic triad (His36/His39/Lys87) and secondary phosphate-binding sites. To note, residues His39 and Lys87 are unique within higher primates. The RNaseA/RNase6 side-by-side comparison correlates the presence of a dual active site in RNase6 with a favored endonuclease-type cleavage pattern.

General significance

An RNase dual catalytic and extended binding site arrangement facilitates the cleavage of polymeric substrates. This is the first report of the presence of two catalytic centers in a single monomer within the RNaseA superfamily.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Xylanases (EC 3.2.1.8) hydrolyze xylan, one of the most abundant plant polysaccharides found in nature, and have many potential applications in biotechnology.

Methods

Molecular dynamics simulations were used to investigate the effects of temperature between 298 to 338 K and xylobiose binding on residues located in the substrate-binding cleft of the family 11 xylanase from Bacillus circulans (BcX).

Results

In the absence of xylobiose the BcX exhibits temperature dependent movement of the thumb region which adopts an open conformation exposing the active site at the optimum catalytic temperature (328 K). In the presence of substrate, the thumb region restricts access to the active site at all temperatures, and this conformation is maintained by substrate/protein hydrogen bonds involving active site residues, including hydrogen bonds between Tyr69 and the 2′ hydroxyl group of the substrate. Substrate access to the active site is regulated by temperature dependent motions that are restricted to the thumb region, and the BcX/substrate complex is stabilized by extensive intermolecular hydrogen bonding with residues in the active site.

General significance

These results call for a revision of both the “hinge-bending” model for the activity of group 11 xylanases, and the role of Tyr69 in the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Yin Q  Teng Y  Ding M  Zhao F 《Biotechnology letters》2011,33(11):2209-2216
The endoglucanase, EGA, from Bacillus sp. AC-1 comprises a glycosyl hydrolase family-9 catalytic module (CM9) and a family-3 carbohydrate-binding module (CBM3). Seven aromatic residues were subjected to site-directed mutagenesis in both CBM3 and EGA to investigate their roles in enzyme thermostability. The complexes generated by mixing CBMY527G, CBMW532A, or CBMF592G with CM9 each lost their activities after 15 min at 45°C, while the wild-type complex retained >70% activity after 2 h. The mutants EGAY527G, EGAW532A, and EGAF592G showed little activity after 15 min at 60°C, whereas EGA remained 70% active after 2 h. Thus the residues Tyr527, Trp532, and Phe592 contribute not only to CBM3-mediated stability of CM9 but also to EGA thermostability suggesting that hydrophobic interaction between the two modules, independent of covalent linkages, is important for enzyme thermostability.  相似文献   

12.

Abstract  

The pathogenicity of Helicobacter pylori depends on the activity of urease for pH modification. Urease activity requires assembly of a dinickel active site that is facilitated in part by GTP hydrolysis by UreG. The proper functioning of Helicobacter pylori UreG (HpUreG) is dependent on Zn(II) binding and dimerization. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and structural modeling were used to elucidate the structure of the Zn(II) site in HpUreG. These studies independently indicated a site at the dimer interface that has trigonal bipyramidal geometry and is composed of two axial cysteines at 2.29(2) ?, two equatorial histidines at 1.99(1) ?, and a solvent-accessible coordination site. The final model for the Zn(II) site structure was determined by refining multiple-scattering extended X-ray absorption fine structure fits using the geometry predicted by homology modeling and ab initio calculations.  相似文献   

13.

Background  

The maturation of hydrogenases into active enzymes is a complex process and e.g. a correctly assembled active site requires the involvement of at least seven proteins, encoded by hypABCDEF and a hydrogenase specific protease, encoded either by hupW or hoxW. The N2-fixing cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120 may contain both an uptake and a bidirectional hydrogenase. The present study addresses the presence and expression of hyp-genes in Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120.  相似文献   

14.
Penicillin G acylase (PGA) is one of the most important enzymes for the pharmaceutical industry. Bacillus megaterium has the advantage of producing extra-cellular PGA. This work compares two neural networks (NNs) architectures for on-line inference of B. megaterium cell mass in an aerated stirred tank bioreactor, during the production of PGA. Nowadays, intelligent computing tools such as artificial NNs and fuzzy logic are commonly applied for state inference and modeling of bioreactors. Combining these two approaches in hybrid, neuro-fuzzy systems, may be advantageous. Our results indicate that a neuro-fuzzy inference system showed a better performance to infer cell concentrations, when compared to multilayer perceptrons networks.  相似文献   

15.

Background  

Important biological processes require selective and orderly protein-protein interactions at every level of the signalling cascades. G proteins are a family of heterotrimeric GTPases that effect eukaryotic signal transduction through the coupling of cell surface receptors to cytoplasmic effector proteins. They have been associated with growth and pathogenicity in many fungi through gene knock-out studies. In Sporothrix schenckii, a pathogenic, dimorphic fungus, we previously identified a pertussis sensitive G alpha subunit, SSG-1. In this work we inquire into its interactions with other proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Yeom SJ  Kim YS  Lim YR  Jeong KW  Lee JY  Kim Y  Oh DK 《Biochimie》2011,93(10):1659-1667
Mannose-6-phosphate isomerase catalyzes the interconversion of mannose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate. The gene encoding a putative mannose-6-phosphate isomerase from Thermus thermophilus was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The native enzyme was a 29 kDa monomer with activity maxima for mannose 6-phosphate at pH 7.0 and 80 °C in the presence of 0.5 mM Zn2+ that was present at one molecule per monomer. The half-lives of the enzyme at 65, 70, 75, 80, and 85 °C were 13, 6.5, 3.7, 1.8, and 0.2 h, respectively. The 15 putative active-site residues within 4.5 Å of the substrate mannose 6-phosphate in the homology model were individually replaced with other amino acids. The sequence alignments, activities, and kinetic analyses of the wild-type and mutant enzymes with amino acid changes at His50, Glu67, His122, and Glu132 as well as homology modeling suggested that these four residues are metal-binding residues and may be indirectly involved in catalysis. In the model, Arg11, Lys37, Gln48, Lys65 and Arg142 were located within 3 Å of the bound mannose 6-phosphate. Alanine substitutions of Gln48 as well as Arg142 resulted in increase of Km and dramatic decrease of kcat, and alanine substitutions of Arg11, Lys37, and Lys65 affected enzyme activity. These results suggest that these 5 residues are substrate-binding residues. Although Trp13 was located more than 3 Å from the substrate and may not interact directly with substrate or metal, the ring of Trp13 was essential for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Summary The penicillin G amidase (PGA) activity of a parent strain of E. coli (PCSIR-102) was enhanced by chemical mutagenization with N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG). After screening and optimization, a penicillinase deficient mutant (MNNG-37) was isolated and found effective for the production of penicillin G amidase as compared to the parent strain of E. coli (PCSIR-102). Penicillin G amidase activity of MNNG-37 appeared during an early stage of growth, whereas PCSIR-102 did not exhibit PGA activity due to the presence of penicillinase enzyme which inhibits the activity of enzyme PGA. However, MNNG-37 gave a three-fold increase in enzyme activity (231 IU mg−1) as compared to PCSIR-102 (77 IU mg−1) in medium containing 0.15 and 0.1% concentrations of phenylacetic acid, respectively which was added after 6 h of cultivation. The difference in K m values of the enzyme produced by parent strain PCSIR-102 (0.26 mM) and mutant strain MNNG-37 (0.20 mM) is significant (1.3-fold increase in K m value) which may show the superiority of the latter in terms of better enzyme properties.  相似文献   

19.

Background  

The enzyme dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) participates in the de novo synthesis of folate cofactors by catalyzing the formation of 7,8-dihydropteroate from condensation of p-aminobenzoic acid with 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropteroate pyrophosphate. DHPS is absent from humans, who acquire folates from diet, and has been validated as an antimicrobial therapeutic target by chemical and genetic means. The bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia is an opportunistic pathogen and an infective agent of cystic fibrosis patients. The organism is highly resistant to antibiotics and there is a recognized need for the identification of new drugs against Burkholderia and related Gram-negative pathogens. Our characterization of the DHPS active site and interactions with the enzyme product are designed to underpin early stage drug discovery.  相似文献   

20.

Background  

FK506 binding proteins (FKBPs) and cyclophilins (CYPs) are abundant and ubiquitous proteins belonging to the peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) superfamily, which regulate much of metabolism through a chaperone or an isomerization of proline residues during protein folding. They are collectively referred to as immunophilin (IMM), being present in almost all cellular organs. In particular, a number of IMMs relate to environmental stresses.  相似文献   

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