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1.
A novel subfamily of putative intracellular invertase enzymes (glycoside hydrolase family 32) has previously been identified in fungal genomes. Here, we report phylogenetic, molecular, and biochemical characteristics of SucB, one of two novel intracellular invertases identified in Aspergillus niger. The sucB gene was expressed in Escherichia coli and an invertase-negative strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Enzyme purified from E. coli lysate displayed a molecular mass of 75 kDa, judging from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. Its optimum pH and temperature for sucrose hydrolysis were determined to be 5.0 and 37 to 40 degrees C, respectively. In addition to sucrose, the enzyme hydrolyzed 1-kestose, nystose, and raffinose but not inulin and levan. SucB produced 1-kestose and nystose from sucrose and 1-kestose, respectively. With nystose as a substrate, products up to a degree of polymerization of 4 were observed. SucB displayed typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with substrate inhibition on sucrose (apparent K(m), K(i), and V(max) of 2.0 +/- 0.2 mM, 268.1 +/- 18.1 mM, and 6.6 +/- 0.2 mumol min(-1) mg(-1) of protein [total activity], respectively). At sucrose concentrations up to 400 mM, transfructosylation (FTF) activity contributed approximately 20 to 30% to total activity. At higher sucrose concentrations, FTF activity increased to up to 50% of total activity. Disruption of sucB in A. niger resulted in an earlier onset of sporulation on solid medium containing various carbon sources, whereas no alteration of growth in liquid culture medium was observed. SucB thus does not play an essential role in inulin or sucrose catabolism in A. niger but may be needed for the intracellular conversion of sucrose to fructose, glucose, and small oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

2.
An anti-insect and anti-cancer lectin has been isolated from Arisaema helleborifolium Schott by affinity chromatography using asialofetuin-linked amino activated silica beads. The bound A. helleborifolium lectin (AHL) was eluted with 100mM glycine-HCl buffer, pH 2.5. It gave a single band on SDS-PAGE, pH 8.3, and PAGE, pH 4.5. However, multiple bands were obtained in PAGE at pH 8.3 and isoelectric focusing. The lectin was a homotetramer having subunit molecular mass 13.4kDa while its native molecular mass was 52kDa. It was a glycoprotein with 3.40% carbohydrate and was stable up to 60 degrees C for 30min. It showed anti-insect activity towards second instar larvae of Bactrocera cucurbitae (Coquillett) with LC(50) value of 16.4microg/ml. Larvae fed on artificial diet containing sub-lethal dose of AHL showed a significant decrease in acid phosphatase and alkaline phosphatase activity while esterase activity markedly increased as compared to larvae fed on diet without lectin. AHL was also found to inhibit in vitro proliferation of some well established human cancer cell lines viz HOP-62 (95%), HCT-15 (92%), HEP-2 (66%), HT-29 (68%), PC-3 (39.4%), and A-549 (20.7%).  相似文献   

3.
Galactan: galactan galactosyltransferase (GGT), an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of the long-chain raffinose family of oligosaccharides (RFOs) in Ajuga reptans, catalyses the transfer of an alpha-galactosyl residue from one molecule of RFO to another one resulting in the next higher RFO oligomer. This novel galactinol (alpha-galactosyl-myo-inositol)-independent alpha-galactosyltransferase is responsible for the accumulation of long-chain RFOs in vivo. Warm treatment (20 degrees C) of excised leaves resulted in a 34-fold increase of RFO concentration and a 200-fold increase of GGT activity after 28 days. Cold treatment (10 degrees C/3 degrees C day/night) resulted in a 26- and 130-fold increase, respectively. These data support the role of GGT as a key enzyme in the synthesis and accumulation of long-chain RFOs. GGT was purified from leaves in a 4-step procedure which involved fractionated precipitation with ammonium sulphate as well as lectin affinity, anion exchange, and size-exclusion chromatography and resulted in a 200-fold purification. Purified GGT had an isoelectric point of 4.7, a pH optimum around 5, and its transferase reaction displayed saturable concentration dependence for both raffinose (Km = 42 mM) and stachyose (Km = 58 mM). GGT is a glycoprotein with a 10% glycan portion. The native molecular mass was 212 kDa as determined by size-exclusion chromatography. Purified GGT showed one single active band after native PAGE or IEF separation, respectively, which separated into three bands on SDS-PAGE at 48 kDa, 66 kDa, and 60 kDa. The amino acid sequence of four tryptic peptides obtained from the major 48-kDa band showed a high homology to plant alpha-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.22) sequences. GGT differed, however, in its substrate specificity from alpha-galactosidases; it neither hydrolysed nor transferred alpha-galactosyl-groups from melibiose, galactinol, UDP-galactose, manninotriose, and manninotetrose. Galactinol, sucrose, and galactose inhibited the GGT reaction considerably at 10-50 mM.  相似文献   

4.
Developing seeds of the kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) contain several isoforms of starch branching enzymes. Two of them, KBE1 and KBE2, which are the major forms in the premature seeds, were purified as a single band of protein on SDS-PAGE and native PAGE by chromatographies on DEAE-Sepharose, Bio-Gel P-200, and amylose-binding Sepharose 6B. The enzymes had similar pH optimum (7.0), pH stability (7.0-9.5), temperature optimum (25-30 degrees C), and temperature stability (up to 40 degrees C). Additionally, both were inhibited by various divalent metal ions and activated by citrate. Finally, though their N-terminal amino acid sequences were identical, their molecular masses and affinities for amylose differed; 80 kDa and 1.27 mM for KBE1 and 77 kDa and 0.74 mM for KBE2.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512 FMC produces dextran and levan using sucrose. Because of the industrial importance of dextrans and oligosaccharides synthesized by dextransucrase (one of glycansucrases from L. mesenteroides), much is known about the dextransucrase, including expression and regulation of gene. However, no detailed report about levansucrase, another industrially important glycansucrase from L. mesenteroides, and its gene was available. In this paper, we report the first-time isolation and molecular characterization of a L. mesenteroides levansucrase gene (m1ft). The gene m1ft is composed of 1272-bp nucleotides and codes for a protein of 424 amino acid residues with calculated molecular mass of 47.1 kDa. The purified protein was estimated to be about 51.7 kDa including a His-tag based on SDS-PAGE. It showed an activity band at 103 kDa on a non-denaturing SDS-PAGE, indicating a dimeric form of the active M1FT. M1FT levan structure was confirmed by NMR and dot blot analysis with an anti-levan-antibody. M1FT converted 150 mM sucrose to levan (18%), 1-kestose (17%), nystose (11%) and 1,1,1-kestopentaose (7%) with the liberation of glucose. The M1FT enzyme produced erlose [O-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-O-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-D-fructofuranoside] as an acceptor product with maltose. The optimum temperature and pH of this enzyme for levan formation were 30 degrees C and pH 6.2, respectively. M1FT levansucrase activity was completely abolished by 1 mM Hg2+ or Ag2+. The Km and Vmax values for levansucrase were calculated to be 26.6 mM and 126.6 micromol min-1 mg-1.  相似文献   

7.
A fructosyltransferase present in Pectinex Ultra SP-L, a commercial enzyme preparation from Aspergillus aculeatus, was purified to 107-fold and further characterised. The enzyme was a dimeric glycoprotein (20% (w/w) carbohydrate content) with a molecular mass of around 135 kDa for the dimer. Optimal activity/stability was found in the pH range 5.0-7.0 and at 60 degrees C. It was stable or slightly activated (upto 1.4-fold) in the presence of reducing agents, such as dithiothreitol and 2-mercaptoethanol, and detergents, such as sodium dodecylsulphate and Tween 80. The enzyme was able to transfer fructosyl groups from sucrose as donor producing the corresponding series of fructooligosaccharides: 1-kestose, nystose and fructosylnystose. Using sucrose as substrate, the k(cat) and K(m) values for transfructosylating activity were 1.62+/-0.09 x 10(4)s(-1) and 0.53+/-0.05 M, whereas for hydrolytic activity the corresponding values were 775+/-25s(-1) and 27+/-3 mM. At elevated sucrose concentrations, the fructosyltransferase from A. aculeatus showed a high transferase/hydrolase ratio that confers it a great potential for the industrial production of prebiotic fructooligosaccharides.  相似文献   

8.
The osmotically-sensitive os-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa overproduced conidial alkaline phosphatase. The enzyme was purified by Phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B chromatography and Sephadex G-200 gel filtration. PAGE analysis of the purified enzyme suggested the occurrence of aggregation and/or disaggregation phenomena. The enzyme is a glycoprotein containing 16% saccharide, with apparent molar mass of 137 kDa. Two protein bands (36 and 62 kDa) were observed in SDS-PAGE, suggesting that the native enzyme was a trimer. The pI was estimated to be 2.7, and optima of pH and temperature were 9.5 and 65 degrees C, respectively. The enzyme showed broad substrate specificity, hydrolyzing preferentially 4-nitrophenyl phosphate, O-phosphoamino-acids and 2-phosphoglycerate. The hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl phosphate was stimulated by Co(II) (26%), Ni(II) (23%) and Mg(II) ions (80%). The enzyme was stable for up to 6 months at 4 degrees C in 5 mmol/L Tris-HCl buffer and also upon storage at 25 degrees C for 10 d. The kinetic and structural properties of the conidial enzyme purified from the os-1 mutant were quite different from those of the wild type strain. The enzyme overproduction observed in the mutant may be related to cell wall alterations that affect the process of enzyme secretion.  相似文献   

9.
Prolactin inducible protein (PIP) is a 17 kDa glycoprotein. It binds to many proteins including fibrinogen, actin, keratin, myosin, immunoglobulin G, CD4, and human zinc-alpha-2 glycoprotein. Its ability to bind a large array of proteins indicates its multifaceted role in various biological processes, such as fertility, immunoregulation, antimicrobial activity, apoptosis, and tumor progression. Here, we present the first report of native human serum albumin (HSA)-PIP complex formation in seminal plasma. The complex was purified by chromatographic separation techniques, analyzed by gel electrophoresis, identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and validated by co-immunoprecipitation coupled with western blotting experiments. Moreover, the behavior of complex in solution was analyzed by dynamic light scattering and interacting residues were identified by in silico protein-protein docking. The purified protein complex shows two bands (67 kDa and 17 kDa) on SDS-PAGE gel and a single band (~85 kDa) on native PAGE gel. The predicted complex structure has 13 intermolecular hydrogen bonds, which may contribute to the overall stability of the complex. As HSA has been known to preserve the motility of sperm, native HSA-PIP complex formation may point towards an important role of PIP, which can directly be correlated with male fertility/infertility.  相似文献   

10.
The conventional protein chromatography technique was adopted to purify the antifreeze proteins (AFPs) from the leaves of Ammopiptanthus mongolicus ( Maxim. ) Cheng f. Two bands on native PAGE gel showed thermal hysteresis activity, one was band Bi, whose thermal hysteresis was 0.46 cE at 8 g/L, which showed two bands (67 kD, 21 kD) on SDS-PAGE gel; the other was B3, whose thermal hysteresis was 0.45 cE at 10 g/L, and it contained only a single protein (39.8 kD). Both B1 and B3 are not glycoproteins, because neither do they interact with Shift-reagent, nor show ultraviolet characteristics of a typical glycoprotein.  相似文献   

11.
Alkaline invertase from sprouting soybean (Glycine max) hypocotyls was purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity by consecutive use of DEAE-cellulose, green 19 dye, and Cibacron blue 3GA dye affinity chromatography. This protocol produced about a 100-fold purification with about a 11% yield. The purified protein had a specific activity of 48 mumol of glucose produced mg-1 protein min-1 (pH 7.0) and showed a single protein band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (58 kDa) and in native PAGE, as indicated by both protein and activity staining. The native enzyme molecular mass was about 240 kDa, suggesting a homotetrameric structure. The purified enzyme exhibited hyperbolic saturation kinetics with a Km (sucrose) near 10 mM and the enzyme did not utilize raffinose, maltose, lactose, or cellibose as a substrate. Impure alkaline invertase preparations, which contained acid invertase activity, on contrast, showed biphasic curves versus sucrose concentration. Combining equal activities of purified alkaline invertase with acid invertase resulted in a biphasic response, but there was a transition to hyperbolic saturation kinetics when the activity ratio, alkaline: acid invertase, was increased above unity. Alkaline invertase activity was inhibited by HgCl2, pridoxal phosphate, and Tris with respective Ki values near 2 microM, 5 microM, and 4 mM. Glycoprotein staining (periodic acid-Schiff method) was negative and alkaline invertase did not bind to two immobilized lectins, concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin; hence, the enzyme apparently is not a glycoprotein. The purified alkaline invertase, and a purified soybean acid invertase, was used to raise rabbit polyclonal antibodies. The alkaline invertase antibody preparation was specific for alkaline invertase and cross-reacted with alkaline invertases from other plants. Neither purified soybean alkaline invertases nor the crude enzyme from several plants cross-reacted with the soybean acid invertase antibody.  相似文献   

12.
Phenoloxidase activity in crayfish haemocyte lysates and extracts of haemocyte membranes were studied using native PAGE and SDS-PAGE gels and staining for cresolase, catecholase and laccase activities. The activation of the proenzyme, prophenoloxidase to phenoloxidase, in native PAGE was demonstrated following exposure to SDS. By staining samples separated in SDS-PAGE followed by renaturation, a high molecular mass phenoloxidase activity was identified in both the soluble and membrane fractions of haemocyte preparations. The membrane-associated activity appeared at only relatively high molecular mass (> 300 kDa), and could easily be eluted from membranes using detergents or NaCl. Further, this membrane-associated activity has a catecholase activity but not the cresolase activity seen in the soluble preparations. In addition, several other phenoloxidase enzymes were identified with different relative mobilities (250, 80, 72 and 10 kDa). Crayfish haemocytes also contained laccase activity, thought to be restricted to cuticle sclerotisation in the integument. Laccase activity in haemocytes might aid in the formation of capsule used to contain pathogens.  相似文献   

13.
Invertase was purified from rose (Fructus cynosbati) hips by ammonium sulfate fractionation and hydroxyapatite column chromatography. The enzyme was obtained with a yield of 4.25% and about 10.48-fold purification and had a specific activity of 8.59 U/mg protein. The molecular mass of invertase was estimated to be 66.51 kDa by PAGE and 34 kDa by SDS-PAGE, indicating that the native enzyme was a homodimer. The enzyme was a glycoprotein and contained 5.86% carbohydrate. The K(m) for sucrose was 14.55 mM and the optimum pH and temperature of the enzyme were 4.5 and 40 degrees C, respectively. Sucrose was the most preferred substrate of the enzyme. The enzyme also hydrolyzed D(+) raffinose, D(+) trehalose and inulin (activity 39.88, 8.12 and 4.94%, respectively of that of sucrose), while D(+) lactose, cellobiose and D(+) maltose showed no effect on the enzyme. The substrate specificity was consistent with that for a beta-fructofuranoside, which is the most popular type in the higher plants. The enzyme was completely inhibited by HgCl2, MnCl2, MnSO4, FeCl3, Pb(NO3)2, ammonium heptamolybdate, iodoacetamide and pyridoxine hydrochloride. It was also inhibited by Ba(NO3)2 (86.32%), NH4Cl (84.91%), MgCl2 (74.45%), urea (71.63%), I2 (69.64%), LiCl (64.99%), BaCl2 (50.30%), Mg(NO3)2 (49.90%), CrCl3 (31.90%) and CuSO4 (21.45%) and but was activated by Tris (73.99%) and methionine (12.47%).  相似文献   

14.
Aldehyde oxidase in roots, leaves and seeds of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Aldehyde oxidase (AO, EC 1.2.3.1) proteins in leaves, roots and seeds of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) plants were studied. Differences in substrate specificity and mobility in native PAGE between AO proteins extracted from roots, leaves and seeds have been observed. Four clear bands of AO reacting proteins were detected in barley plants capable of oxidizing a number of aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes such as indole-3-aldehyde, acetaldehyde, heptaldehyde, and benzaldehyde. Mouse polyclonal antibodies raised against purified maize AO cross-reacted with barley AO proteins extracted from roots, leaves and seeds. At least three different AO proteins were detected in roots on the basis of their mobility during PAGE after native Western blot analysis while in leaves and seeds only one polypeptide cross-reacted with the antibody. SDS-immunoblot analysis showed marked differences in molecular weight between subunits of the AO bands extracted from roots, leaves and seeds. Two distinct subunit bands were observed in roots, with relatively close molecular weights (160 kDa and 145 kDa), while a single subunit with a molecular weight of 150 kDa was observed in leaf and seed extracts.Menadione, a specific and potent inhibitor of animal AO did not affect barley AO proteins. Root and leaf AO differed in their thermostability and susceptibility to exogenous tungstate. The AO proteins in plants may be a group of enzymes with different substrate specificity, tissue distribution and presumably fulfilling different metabolic roles in each plant organ.  相似文献   

15.
Xylanase, oxidative enzymes and iron-binding compounds were detected in the filtrates of Wolfiporia cocos and Poria medula-panis grown in wheat bran liquid medium. Xylanase and iron-binding compounds were produced at high levels by the brown-rot fungus (BR) W. cocos and at low levels by the white-rot fungus (WR) P. medula-panis. Phenoloxidase was produced only by P. medula-panis. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (SDS-PAGE) showed a wide variety of bands for extracellular proteins produced by W.cocos, with low molecular weight (<30 kDa) and minor bands with molecular weight above 45 kDa. Two bands with xylanase activity derived from W. cocos extracts were detected in the gels, whereas many different bands with xylanase activity were found in the extracts from P. medula-panis. P. medula-panis is a selective lignin degrader, whereas W. cocos preferentially removes cellulose from wood.  相似文献   

16.
Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMC, a constitutive mutant for dextransucrase, was grown on glucose, fructose, or sucrose. The amount of cell-associated dextransucrase was about the same for the three sugars at different concentrations (0.6% and 3%). Enzyme produced in glucose medium was adsorbed on Sephadex G-100 and G-200, but much less enzyme was adsorbed when it was produced in sucrose medium. Sephadex adsorption decreased when the glucose-produced enzyme was preincubated with dextrans of molecular size greater than 10 kDa. The release of dextransucrase activity from Sephadex by buffer (20 mM acetate, pH 5.2) was the highest at 28°–30°C. The addition of dextran to the enzyme stimulated dextran synthesis but had very little effect on the temperature or pH stability. Dextransucrase purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydroxyapatite chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 adsorption did not contain any carbohydrate, and it synthesized dextran, showing that primers are not necessary to initiate dextran synthesis. The purified enzyme had a molecular size of 184 kDa on SDS-PAGE. On standing at 4°C for 30 days, the native enzyme was dissociated into three inactive proteins of 65, 62, and 57 kDa. However, two protein bands of 63 and 59 kDa were obtained on SDS-PAGE after heat denaturation of the 184-kDa active enzyme at 100°C. The amount of 63-kDa protein was about twice that of 59-kDa protein. The native enzyme is believed to be a trimer of two 63-kDa and one 59-kDa monomers.  相似文献   

17.
Among 30 species of filamentous fungi isolated from Brazilian soil, Aspergillus caespitosus produced and secreted the highest levels of alkaline phosphatase in culture medium supplemented with xylan. The extracellular alkaline phosphatase was purified by DEAE-cellulose and concanavalin A-sepharose chromatography. The enzyme was a glycoprotein containing up to 56% sugar with molar mass of 134.8 kDa, according to gel filtration in Sepharose CL-6B, and 57 kDa according to SDS-PAGE. Nondenaturing electrophoresis (6% PAGE) of the purified enzyme produced a single band, suggesting that the native enzyme was a homodimer. Optima of temperature and pH were 75 degrees C and 8.5, respectively. The enzyme was stable at 50 degrees C and its activity was enhanced by 95% in the presence of Mg2+ (1 mmol/L). 4-Nitrophenyl phosphate was the preferentially hydrolyzed substrate with K(m) and upsilon lim values of 74 mumol/L and 285 mumol/s, in the absence, and 90 mumol/L and 418 mumol/s, in the presence of Mg2+, respectively. The enzyme also hydrolyzed other phosphorylated amino acids (O-phosphothreonine, O-phosphotyrosine, O-phosphoserine).  相似文献   

18.
Thermostable protease is very effective to improve the industrial processes in many fields. Two thermostable extracellular proteases from the culture supernatant of the thermophilic fungus Chaetomium thermophilum were purified to homogeneity by fractional ammonium sulfate precipitation, ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose, and PhenylSepharose hydrophobic interaction chromatography. By SDS-PAGE, the molecular mass of the two purified enzymes was estimated to be 33 kDa and 63 kDa, respectively. The two proteases were found to be inhibited by PMSF, but not by iodoacetamide and EDTA. The 33 kDa protease (PRO33) exhibited maximal activity at pH 10.0 and the 63 kDa protease (PRO63) at pH 5.0. The optimum temperature for the two proteases was 65 degrees C. The PRO33 had a K(m) value of 6.6 mM and a V(max) value of 10.31 micromol/l/min, and PRO63 17.6 mM and 9.08 micromol/l/min, with casein as substrate. They were thermostable at 60 degrees C. The protease activity of PRO33 and PRO63 remained at 67.2% and 17.31%, respectively, after incubation at 70 degrees C for 1 h. The thermal stability of the two enzymes was significantly enhanced by Ca2+. The residual activity of PRO33 and PRO63 at 70 degrees C after 60 min was approximately 88.59% and 39.2%, respectively, when kept in the buffer containing Ca2+. These properties make them applicable for many biotechnological purposes.  相似文献   

19.
A lectin (HTTL) was isolated from Helianthus tuberosus L. (wild sunflower) tubers using ion-exchange chromatography, gel filtration, and affinity chromatography. The lectin agglutinated both untreated and trypsin-treated rabbit erythrocytes and did not agglutinate human blood cells of groups A, B, and O. The gel filtration showed the native molecular mass of 72 kDa and subunit molecular masses of 17 and 18.5 kDa on 12% SDS-PAGE. The lectin activity was inhibited by D-mannose. The tetrameric protein revealed a unique characteristic by forming a broad zone of protein in native PAGE at pH 8.3, which dissociated into seven subunits of varying e/m ratios on acid gel at pH 4.3. These seven bands revealed two polypeptide species of molecular masses 17 and 18.5 kDa on 12% SDS-PAGE, as in the case of the native protein. The result indicated that of the seven subunits, three were homotetramers of 17 kDa, one was a homotetramer of 18.5 kDa, and three were heterotetramers of 17 and 18.5 kDa. The lectin was thermostable with broad pH optima (pH 4-8) and had no requirement for divalent metal cations for its activity. The amino acid composition showed that the lectin contained higher amounts of glycine, alanine, and lysine, but no methionine. The sugar content was estimated to be 5.3% mannose equivalent. The HTTL was mitogenic to mouse spleen (total) cells at 25 microg/ml concentration. The lectin showed characteristics different from those of the earlier reported H. tuberosus tuber lectins and hence opens up a new avenue to investigate the structure-function relationship of lectin in Helianthus species.  相似文献   

20.
An extracellular acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) from crude culture filtrate of Penicillium chrysogenum was purified to homogeneity using high-performance ion-exchange chromatography and size-exclusion chromatography. SDS-PAGE of the purified enzyme exhibited a single stained band at an Mr of approx. 57,000. The mobility of the native enzyme indicated the Mr to be 50,000, implying that the active form is a monomer. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was estimated to be 6.2 by isoelectric focusing. Like acid phosphatases from several yeasts and fungi the Penicillium enzyme was a glycoprotein. Removal of carbohydrate resulted in a protein band with an Mr of 50,000 as estimated by SDS-PAGE, suggesting that 12% of the mass of the enzyme was carbohydrate. The enzyme was catalytically active at temperatures ranging from 20 degrees C to 65 degrees C with a maximum activity at 60 degrees C and the pH optimum was at 5.5. The Michaelis constant of the enzyme for p-nitrophenyl phosphate was 0.11 mM and it was inhibited competitively by inorganic phosphate (ki = 0.42 mM).  相似文献   

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