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1.
Turkey pancreatic phospholipase (TPP) has been purified from delipidated pancreases. The purification included ammonium sulfate fractionation, acidic (pH 5) treatment, followed by sequencial column chromatographies on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-75, and reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography. The purified enzyme was found to be a monomeric protein with molecular mass of 14 kDa. The optimal activity was measured at pH 8 and 37°C using egg yolk emulsion as substrate. Our results show that the enzyme (TPP) was not stable for 1 h at 60°C, and that bile salt and Ca2+ were required for the expression of the purified enzyme. The sequence of the N-terminal amino acids of the purified enzyme shows a very close similarity between TPP and all other known pancreatic phospholipases.  相似文献   

2.
The trehalose-phosphate phosphatase (TPP) was purified from the cytosol of Mycobacterium smegmatis to near homogeneity using a variety of conventional steps to achieve a purification of about 1600-fold with a yield of active enzyme of about 1%. Based on gel filtration, the active enzyme had a molecular weight of about 27,000, and the most purified fraction also gave a major band on SDS-PAGE corresponding to a molecular weight of about 27,000. A number of peptides from the 27-kDa protein were sequenced and these sequences showed considerable homology to the trehalose-P phosphatase (otsB) of Escherichia coli. Based on these peptides, the M. smegmatis gene for TPP was cloned and expressed in E. coli. The recombinant protein was synthesized with a (His)(6) tag at the amino terminus. Most of the TPP activity in the crude E. coli sonicate was initially found in the membrane fraction, but it became solubilized in the presence of 0.2% Sarkosyl. The solubilized protein was purified to apparent homogeneity on a metal ion column and this fraction had high phosphatase activity that was completely specific for trehalose-P. The purified enzyme, either isolated from M. smegmatis, or expressed in E. coli, rapidly dephosphorylated trehalose-6-P, but had essentially no activity on any other sugar phosphates, or on p-nitrophenyl phosphate. The K(m) for trehalose-6-P was about 1.6 mm, and the pH optimum was about 7.5. The native enzyme showed an almost absolute requirement for Mg(2+) and was not very active with Mn(2+), whereas both of these cations were equally effective with the recombinant TPP. The enzyme activity was inhibited by the antibiotics, diumycin and moenomycin, but not by a number of other antibiotics or trehalose analogs. TPP activity was strongly inhibited by the detergents, Sarkosyl and deoxycholate, even at 0.025%, but it was not inhibited by Nonidet P-40, Triton X-100, or octyl glucoside, even at concentrations up to 0.3%. The purified enzyme was stable to heating at 60 degrees C for up to 6 min, but was slowly inactivated at 70 degrees C. Circular dichroism studies on recombinant TPP indicate that the secondary structure of this protein has considerable beta-pleated sheet and is very compact. TPP may play a key role in the biosynthesis of trehalose compounds, such as trehalose mycolates, and therefore may represent an excellent target site for chemotherapy against tuberculosis and other mycobacterial diseases.  相似文献   

3.
A trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase (TPP) gene, otsB, from a psychrotrophic bacterium, Arthrobacter strain A3, was identified. The product of this otsB gene is 266 amino acids in length with a calculated molecular weight of 27,873 Da. The protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to apparent homogeneity. The purified recombinant TPP catalyzed the dephosphorylation of trehalose-6-phosphate to form trehalose and showed a broad optimum pH range from 5.0 to 7.5. This enzyme also showed an absolute requirement for Mg(2+) or Co(2+) for catalytic activity. The recombinant TPP had a maximum activity at 30 °C and maintained activity over a temperature range of 4-30 °C. TPP was generally heat-labile, losing 70 % of its activity when subjected to heat treatment at 50 °C for 6 min. Kinetic analysis of the Arthrobacter strain A3 TPP showed ~tenfold lower K (m) values when compared with values derived from other bacterial TPP enzymes. The highest k (cat)/K (m) value was 37.5 mM(-1) s(-1) (repeated three times), which is much higher than values published for mesophilic E. coli TPP, indicating that the Arthrobacter strain A3 TPP possessed excellent catalytic activity at low temperatures. Accordingly, these characteristics suggest that the TPP from the Arthrobacter strain A3 is a new cold-adapted enzyme. In addition, this is the first report characterizing the enzymatic properties of a TPP from a psychrotrophic organism.  相似文献   

4.
A tissue carboxypeptidase-A-like enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity from terminally differentiated epidermal cells of 2-day-old rats by potato inhibitor affinity chromatography followed by FPLC Mono Q column chromatography. The enzyme has an Mr of 35,000 as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and HPLC gel filtration. It has a pH optimum of 8.5 for hydrolysis of benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Leu (Km = 0.22 mM, kcat = 57.9 s-1). The enzyme does not hydrolyze substrates with Arg, Lys and Pro at the C-terminal and Pro at the penultimate position. Angiotensin I was effectively hydrolyzed (Km = 0.06 mM, kcat = 6.48 s-1) and produced both des-Leu10-angiotensin I and angiotensin II. The enzyme activity, relatively stable at 4 degrees C and pH 8.0-10.5, was inactivated at pH values higher than 12.0 and lower than 5.0 or at 65 degrees C for 10 min. Inhibitor profiles of the epidermal enzyme also differed slightly from those of tissue carboxypeptidase A of pancreatic or mast cell origin.  相似文献   

5.
Thermomonospora curvata produces an extracellular alpha-amylase. Maximal amylase production by cultures in a starch-mineral salts medium occurred at pH 7.5 and 53 degrees C. The crude enzyme was unstable to heating (65 degrees C) at pH 4 to 6, and was activated when heated at pH 8. The enzyme was purified 66-fold with a 9% yield and appeared homogeneous on discontinuous gel electrophoresis. The pH and temperature optima for activity of the purified enzyme were 5.5 to 6.0 and 65 degrees C. The molecular weight was calculated to be 62,000. The Km for starch was 0.39 mg/ml. The amylolytic pattern consisted of a mixture of maltotetraose and maltopentaose.  相似文献   

6.
Ostrich pancreatic phospholipase A(2) (OPLA(2)) was purified from delipidated pancreases. Pure protein was obtained after heat treatment (70 degrees C), precipitation by ammonium sulphate and ethanol, respectively followed by sequential column chromatography on MonoQ Sepharose and size exclusion HPLC column. Purified OPLA(2), which is not a glycosylated protein, was found to be monomeric protein with a molecular mass of 13773.93 Da. A specific activity of 840U/mg for purified OPLA(2) was measured at optimal conditions (pH 8.2 and 37 degrees C) in the presence of 4 mM NaTDC and 10 mM CaCl(2) using PC as substrate. This enzyme was also found to be able to hydrolyze, at low surface pressure, 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3 phosphocholine (di C(12)-PC) monolayers. Maximal activity was measured at 5-8 mNm(-1). The sequence of the first 22 amino-acid residues at the N-terminal extremity of purified bird PLA(2) was determined by automatic Edman degradation and showed a high sequence homology with known mammal pancreatic secreted phospholipases A(2).  相似文献   

7.
DNase I in human urine was purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state by column chromatographies on DEAE-lignocellulose, hydroxyapatite, DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-75 and elastin-celite. The purified enzyme was immunologically identical with human pancreatic DNase I, but not with bovine pancreatic DNase I. The molecular weight and isoelectric point of the enzyme were estimated to be 4.1 X 10(4) and 3.6, respectively. The amino acid analysis revealed that 1 mol of the enzyme contained 8 mol of half-cystine. The N-terminal amino acid was identified as leucine by the dansyl chloride method. The enzyme was active in the presence of Mg2+, Co2+, or Mn2+, The optimum pH was around 6.5. The enzyme was stable in the pH range from 5.0 to 9.0 and at temperatures lower than 45 degrees C. The rate of hydrolysis of native DNA by the enzyme was twice as fast as that observed with heat-denatured DNA. This enzyme exhaustively degraded about 20% of the phosphodiester bonds in native DNA. The enzyme also degraded poly(dA) and poly(dT), but hardly degraded poly(dG) and poly(dC).  相似文献   

8.
Sayari A  Mejdoub H  Gargouri Y 《Biochimie》2000,82(2):153-159
Turkey pancreatic lipase (TPL) was purified from delipidated pancreases. Pure TPL (glycerol ester hydrolase, EC 3.1.1.3) was obtained after ammonium sulfate fractionation, Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration, anion exchange chromatography (DEAE-Sepharose) and size exclusion column using high performance liquid chromatography system (HPLC). The pure lipase, which is not a glycoprotein, was presented as a monomer having a molecular mass of about 45 kDa. The lipase activity was maximal at pH 8.5 and 37 degrees C. TPL hydrolyses the long chains triacylglycerols more efficiently than the short ones. A specific activity of 4300 U/mg was measured on triolein as substrate at 37 degrees C and at pH 8.5 in the presence of colipase and 4 mM NaTDC. This enzyme presents the interfacial activation when using tripropionin as substrate. TPL was inactivated when the enzyme was incubated at 65 degrees C or at pH less than 5. Natural detergent (NaTDC), synthetic detergent (Tween-20) or amphipatic protein (beta-lactoglobulin A) act as potent inhibitors of TPL activity. To restore the lipase activity inhibited by NaTDC, colipase should be added to the hydrolysis system. When lipase is inhibited by synthetic detergent or protein, simultaneous addition of colipase and NaTDC was required to restore the TPL activity. The first 22 N-terminal amino acid residues were sequenced. This sequence was similar to those of mammal's pancreatic lipases. The biochemical properties of pancreatic lipase isolated from bird are similar to those of mammals.  相似文献   

9.
Thermomonospora curvata produces an extracellular alpha-amylase. Maximal amylase production by cultures in a starch-mineral salts medium occurred at pH 7.5 and 53 degrees C. The crude enzyme was unstable to heating (65 degrees C) at pH 4 to 6, and was activated when heated at pH 8. The enzyme was purified 66-fold with a 9% yield and appeared homogeneous on discontinuous gel electrophoresis. The pH and temperature optima for activity of the purified enzyme were 5.5 to 6.0 and 65 degrees C. The molecular weight was calculated to be 62,000. The Km for starch was 0.39 mg/ml. The amylolytic pattern consisted of a mixture of maltotetraose and maltopentaose.  相似文献   

10.
Mannitol 2-dehydrogenase (MDH) catalyzes the pyridine nucleotide dependent reduction of fructose to mannitol. Lactobacillus intermedius (NRRL B-3693), a heterofermentative lactic acid bacterium (LAB), was found to be an excellent producer of mannitol. The MDH from this bacterium was purified from the cell extract to homogeneity by DEAE Bio-Gel column chromatography, gel filtration on Bio-Gel A-0.5m gel, octyl-Sepharose hydrophobic interaction chromatography, and Bio-Gel Hydroxyapatite HTP column chromatography. The purified enzyme (specific activity, 331 U/mg protein) was a heterotetrameric protein with a native molecular weight (MW) of about 170 000 and subunit MWs of 43 000 and 34 500. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was at pH 4.7. Both subunits had the same N-terminal amino acid sequence. The optimum temperature for the reductive action of the purified MDH was at 35 degrees C with 44% activity at 50 degrees C and only 15% activity at 60 degrees C. The enzyme was optimally active at pH 5.5 with 50% activity at pH 6.5 and only 35% activity at pH 5.0 for reduction of fructose. The optimum pH for the oxidation of mannitol to fructose was 7.0. The purified enzyme was quite stable at pH 4.5-8.0 and temperature up to 35 degrees C. The K(m) and V(max) values of the enzyme for the reduction of fructose to mannitol were 20 mM and 396 micromol/min/mg protein, respectively. It did not have any reductive activity on glucose, xylose, and arabinose. The activity of the enzyme on fructose was 4.27 times greater with NADPH than NADH as cofactor. This is the first highly NADPH-dependent MDH (EC 1.1.1.138) from a LAB. Comparative properties of the enzyme with other microbial MDHs are presented.  相似文献   

11.
Invertase (beta-fructofuranosidase, EC 3.2.1.26) was purified from the flowers of Woodfordia fruticosa, which is used to prepare certain fermented Ayurvedic drugs. The enzyme was purified to near homogeneity as judged by native PAGE with a yield of 10.7%, using (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, followed by gel filtration through Sepharose 4B and DEAE cellulose chromatography at pH 6.8 and 4.42. The molecular mass of the purified enzyme as determined by elution through Sepharose 4B gel column was found to be approximately 280 kDa. SDS-PAGE of the purified enzyme showed that the enzyme is composed of three subunits with molecular mass of 66, 43 and 40 kDa. The enzyme showed a broad pH optimum between 4.0-7.0. Optimum assay temperature was 37 degrees C and above 45 degrees C, the enzyme activity slowly declined and inactivated around 80 degrees C. The apparent Km value of the enzyme for sucrose was 160 mM.  相似文献   

12.
Aspergillus awamori IFO 4033 produced an acid-stable protopectinase in solid-state fermentation using wheat bran as the medium. The enzyme was purified to a homogeneous preparation with anion-exchange, hydrophobic, and size-exclusion chromatography. The enzyme was a monomeric protein of 52 kDa, by SDS-PAGE analysis, with an isoelectric point of pH 3.7. The optimum pH for enzyme activity was 2.0, and it was most active at 50 degrees C (at pH 2.0) and was stable up to 50 degrees C (at pH 2.0). The enzyme showed pectin-releasing activity toward protopectins from various origins, especially on lemon protopectin. An outstanding characteristic of the enzyme was its extreme stability in acidic conditions: the enzyme activity was not lost after incubating at pH 2.0 and 37 degrees C for 24 h.  相似文献   

13.
A novel goose-type lysozyme was purified from egg white of cassowary bird (Casuarius casuarius). The purification step was composed of two fractionation steps: pH treatment steps followed by a cation exchange column chromatography. The molecular mass of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 20.8 kDa by SDS-PAGE. This enzyme was composed of 186 amino acid residues and showed similar amino acid composition to reported goose-type lysozymes. The N-terminal amino acid sequencing from transblotted protein found that this protein had no N-terminal. This enzyme showed either lytic or chitinase activities and had some different properties from those reported for goose lysozyme. The optimum pH and temperature on lytic activity of this lysozyme were pH 5 and 30 degrees C at ionic strength of 0.1, respectively. This lysozyme was stable up to 30 degrees C for lytic activity and the activity was completely abolished at 80 degrees C. The chitinase activity against glycol chitin showed dual optimum pH around 4.5 and 11. The optimum temperature for chitinase activity was at 50 degrees C and the enzyme was stable up to 40 degrees C.  相似文献   

14.
W Shao  J Wiegel 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(18):5848-5853
A highly thermostable beta-xylosidase, exhibiting similarly high activities for arylxylose and arylarabinose, was purified (72-fold) to gel electrophoretic homogeneity from the ethanologenic thermophilic anaerobe Thermoanaerobacter ethanolicus. The isoelectric point is pH 4.6; the apparent molecular weight is around 165,000 for the native enzyme (gel filtration and gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) and 85,000 for the two subunits (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis). The enzyme exhibited the highest affinity towards p-NO2-phenyl xyloside (pNPX) (substrate concentration for half-maximal activity = 0.018 mM at 82 degrees C and pH 5.0) but the highest specific activity with p-NO2-phenylarabinofuranoside. T(opt), 5 min, the temperature for the maximum initial activity in a 5-min assay of the purified enzyme, was observed around pH 5.9 and 93 degrees C; however at 65 and 82 degrees C, the pH optimum was 5.0 to 5.2, and at this pH the maximal initial activity was observed at 82 degrees C (pH 5.0 to 5.5). The pH curves and temperature curves for arylxylosides as substrates differed significantly from those for arylarabinosides as substrates. An incubation for 3 h at 82 degrees C in the absence of substrate reduced the activity to around 75%. At 86 degrees C the half-life was around 15 min. With pNPX as the substrate, an Arrhenius energy of 69 kJ/mol was determined. The N-terminal sequence did not reveal a high similarity to those from other published enzyme sequences.  相似文献   

15.
The acidic Protease was extracted from the intestine of the grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idellus) by 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0 at 4 degrees C after neat intestine was defatted with acetone, and partially purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration chromatography and ionic exchange chromatography. SDS-PAGE electrophoresis showed that the enzyme was homogeneous with a relative molecular mass of 28,500. Substrate-PAGE at pH7.0 showed that the purified acidic protease has only an active component. Specificity and inhibiting assays showed that it should be a cathepsin D. The optimal pH and optimal temperature of the enzyme were pH2.5 and 37 degrees C, respectively. It retained only 20% of its initial activity after incubating at 50 degrees C for 30 min. The enzyme lost 81% of its activity after incubation with pepstatin A at room temperature, but was not inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor or phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF). Its V(max) and K(m) values were determined to be 3.57 mg/mL and 0.75 min(-1), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
H Trindade  A Karmali  M S Pais 《Biochimie》1988,70(12):1759-1764
Catalase (E.C 1.11.1.6) was purified from leaves of Zandedeschia aethiopica to apparent homogeneity by a one-step hydrophobic interaction chromatography on a phenyl Sepharose CL-4B column. The purified enzyme preparation was obtained with a final recovery of enzyme activity of about 61% and a specific activity of 146 U/mg protein. The purified enzyme ran as a single protein band when analyzed both by native PAGE and SDS-PAGE corresponding to an Mr of 220,000 Da, which consists of 4 subunits with identical Mr of 54,000 Da. The pI of purified enzyme was found to be 5.2 by isoelectric focusing on ultrathin polyacrylamide gels. The purified catalase has an optimum temperature of activity at 40 degrees C, whereas it is stable between 0 degrees and 50 degrees C. As regards pH, the enzyme has an optimum activity at pH 7.0 and it is stable in the range pH 6-8. The absorption spectrum of the purified enzyme exhibited 2 peaks at 280 nm and 405 nm.  相似文献   

17.
An enzyme producing isoprimeverose from xyloglucan fragment oligosaccharides has been purified to the electrophoretically pure state from a commercial enzyme preparation of Aspergillus oryzae (Sanzyme 1000). The purified enzyme showed approximately 1,280-fold increase of the specific activity over the original preparation. The purified enzyme was shown to be an oligomeric protein consisting of two subunits, each of which had a molecular weight of 115,000. The enzyme showed the highest activity at pH 5.0 and 60 degrees C, and was stable in the pH range from 5 to 7 and at up to 50 degrees C. The isoelectric point of this enzyme was pH 3.9. The purified enzyme was highly specific for xyloglucan fragment oligosaccharides and split off isoprimeverose units from the non-reducing end of the backbone of the substrate.  相似文献   

18.
Bacillus stearothermophilus T-6 produces an extracellular xylanase that was shown to optimally bleach pulp at pH 9 and 65 degrees C. The enzyme was purified and concentrated in a single adsorption step onto a cation exchanger and is made of a single polypeptide with an apparent M(r) of 43,000 (determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis). Xylanase T-6 is an endoxylanase that completely degrades xylan to xylose and xylobiose. The pIs of the purified protein were 9 and 7 under native and denaturing conditions, respectively. The optimum activity was at pH 6.5; however, 60% of the activity was still retained at pH 10. At 65 degrees C and pH 7, the enzyme was stable for more than 10 h; at 65 degrees C and pH 9, the half-life of the enzyme was approximately 6 h. Kinetic experiments at 55 degrees C gave Vmax and Km values of 288 U/mg and 1.63 mg/ml, respectively. The enzyme had no apparent requirement for cofactors, and its activity was strongly inhibited by Zn2+, Cd2+, and Hg2+. Xylan completely protected the protein from inactivation by N-bromosuccinimide. The N-terminal sequence of the first 45 amino acids of the enzyme showed high homology with the N-terminal region of xylanase A from the alkalophilic Bacillus sp. strain C-125.  相似文献   

19.
Shi Y  Jiang Z  Han P  Zheng GX  Song KK  Chen QX 《Biochimie》2007,89(3):347-354
A beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (NAGase) from the cabbage butterfly (Pieris rapae) was purified. The purified enzyme was a single band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the specific activity was determined to be 8715 U/mg. The molecular weight of whole enzyme was determined to be 106 kDa by gel filtration, and the result of SDS-PAGE showed that the enzyme was a heterodimer, which contained two subunits with different mass of 59.5 and 57.2 kDa. The optimum pH and optimum temperature of the enzyme for the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl-N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminide (pNP-NAG) were investigated to be at pH 6.2 and at 42 degrees C, respectively, and the Michaelis-Menten constant (K(m)) was determined to be 0.285 mM at pH 6.2 and 37 degrees C. The stability of the enzyme was investigated and the results showed that the enzyme was stable at the pH range from 4.0 to 9.0 and at the temperature below 45 degrees C. The activation energy was 83.86 kJ/mol. The reaction of this enzyme with pNP-NAG was judged to be Ordered Bi-Bi mechanism according to the inhibitory behaviors of the products. The ionization constant, pK(e), of ionizing group at the active site of the enzyme was found to be 5.20 at 39.0 degrees C, and the standard dissociation enthalpy (DeltaH(o)) was determined to be 2.18 kcal/mol. These results showed that the ionizing group of the enzyme active center was the carboxyl group. The results of chemical modification also suggested that carboxyl group was essential to the enzyme activity. Moreover, Zn(2+), Hg(2+), Cu(2+) had strongly inhibitory effects on the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

20.
Tripeptidyl-peptidase I (TPP I, CLN2 protein) is a lysosomal aminopeptidase that cleaves off tripeptides from the free N termini of oligopeptides and also shows minor endopeptidase activity. TPP I is synthesized as a preproenzyme. Its proenzyme autoactivates under acidic conditions in vitro, resulting in a rapid conversion into the mature form. In this study, we examined the process of maturation in vitro of recombinant latent human TPP I purified to homogeneity from secretions of Chinese hamster ovary cells overexpressing TPP I cDNA. Autoprocessing of TPP I proenzyme was carried out at a wide pH range, from approximately 2.0 to 6.0, albeit with different efficiencies depending on the pH and the type of buffer. However, the acquisition of enzymatic activity in the same buffer took place in a narrower pH "window," usually in the range of 3.6-4.2. N-terminal sequencing revealed that mature, inactive enzyme generated during autoactivation at higher pH contained N-terminal extensions (starting at 6 and 14 amino acid residues upstream of the prosegment/mature enzyme junction), which could contribute to the lack of activity of TPP I generated in this manner. Autoprocessing was not associated with any major changes of the secondary structure of the proenzyme, as revealed by CD spectroscopy. Both the activation and proteolytic processing of the recombinant TPP I precursor were primarily concentration-independent. The addition of the mature enzyme did not accelerate the processing of the proenzyme. In addition, the maturation of the proenzyme was not affected by the presence of glycerol. Finally, the proenzyme with the active site mutated (S475L) was not processed in the presence of the wild-type enzyme. All of these findings indicate a primarily intramolecular (unimolecular) mechanism of TPP I activation and autoprocessing and suggest that in vivo mature enzyme does not significantly participate in its own generation from the precursor.  相似文献   

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