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1.
We isolated a thermophilic bacterium that produces both xylanase and beta-xylosidase. Based on taxonomical research, this bacterium was identified as Bacillus stearothermophilus. Each extracellular enzyme was separated by hydrophobic chromatography by using a Toyopearl HW-65 column, followed by gel filtration with a Sephacryl S-200 column. Each enzyme in the culture was further purified to homogeneity (62-fold for xylanase and 72-fold for beta-xylosidase) by using a fast protein liquid chromatography system with a Mono Q HR 5/5 column. The optimum temperatures were 60 degrees C for xylanase and 70 degrees C for beta-xylosidase. The isoelectric points and molecular masses were 5.1 and 39.5 kDa for xylanase and 4.2 and 150 kDa for beta-xylosidase, respectively. Heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 1 h did not cause inhibition of the activities of these enzymes. The action of the two enzymes on xylan gave only xylose.  相似文献   

2.
A growth medium was developed for maximal production in batch culture of extracellular xylanase and beta-xylosidase by Aspergillus awamori CMI 142717 and a mutant (AANTG 43) derived from the wild-type strain. The optimum pH for the production of xylanase and beta-xylosidase was 4.0. The best temperature of xylanase production was 30 degrees C; 35 degrees C was optimal for beta-xylosidase. Protease production was never completely suppressed under any of the conditions tested. However, protease titre was 3.5-fold less than the control in medium in which proteose peptone and yeast extract were omitted: the level of xylanase was not affected (8.6 U mL(-1)) but beta-xylosidase titre was increased 4.7-fold to 1.5 U mL(-1). When corn steep liquor was used as the sole nitrogen source, xylanse and beta-xylosidase titres were further increased by 1.5- and 1.9-fold, respectively. Of the carbon sources investigated, ball-milled oat straw or oat spelt xylan produced the highest titres of xylanse and beta-xylosidase. None of the soluble carbon sources investigated produced the high titres of xylanase or beta-xylosidase induced by either oat straw for xylanse and beta-xylosidase was 2% and the optimum spore inoculum was between 10(6) and 10(7) spores/mL(-1) final concentration. The level of xylanse activity obtained in the culture filtrates of the mutant was a remarkable 820 U mL(-1) when the reducing sugar released was measured by the dinitrosalicylic acid method. This enzyme titre would appear to be the highest reported so far. The xylanases system contained the correct balance of enzymes to effect extensive hydrolysis of oat spelt xylan. The protease titre was very low.  相似文献   

3.
An extracellular p-coumaroyl esterase produced by the anaerobic fungus Neocallimastix strain MC-2 released p-coumaroyl groups from 0-[5-0-((E)-p-coumaroyl)-alpha-L-arabinofuranosyl]-(1----3)-0-beta -D-xylopyranosyl-(1----4)-D-xylopyranose (PAXX). The esterase was purified 121-fold from culture medium in successive steps involving ultrafiltration column chromatography on S-sepharose and hydroxylapatite, isoelectric focusing, and gel filtration. The native enzyme had an apparent mass of 11 kDa under nondenaturing conditions and a mass of 5.8 kDa under denaturing conditions, suggesting that the enzyme may exist as a dimer. The isoelectric point was 4.7, and the pH optimum was 7.2. The purified esterase had 100 times more activity towards PAXX than towards the analogous feruloyl ester (FAXX). The apparent Km and Vmax of the purified p-coumaroyl esterase for PAXX at pH 7.2 and 40 degrees C were 19.4 microM and 5.1 microM min(-1), respectively. p-Coumaroyl tetrasaccharides isolated from plant cell walls were hydrolyzed at rates similar to that for PAXX, whereas a dimer of PAXX was hydrolyzed at a rate 20-fold lower, yielding 4,4'-dihydroxy-alpha-truxillic acid as an end product. Ethyl and methyl p-coumarates were hydrolyzed at very slow rates, if at all. The purified esterase released p-coumaroyl groups from finely, but not coarsely, ground plant cell walls, and this activity was enhanced by the addition of xylanase and other cell wall-degrading enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Acremonium zeae, one of the most prevalent fungal colonists of preharvest corn, possesses a suite of hemicellulolytic activities including xylanase, xylosidase, and arabinofuranosidase. Two enzymes with arabinofuranosidase activity were purified from cell-free culture supernatants of A. zeae grown on oat spelt xylan. A 47 kDa enzyme (AF47) was optimally active at 37 °C and pH 6.0, and had a specific activity for 4-nitrophenyl-α-L-arabinofuranoside (4NPA) of 6.2 U/mg. A 30 kDa enzyme (AF30) was optimally active at 50 °C and pH 4.5, and had a specific activity for 4NPA of 12.4 U/mg. AF47 hydrolyzed 4-nitrophenyl-β-D-xylopyranoside, 4-nitrophenyl-β-D-glucopyranoside, and 4-nitrophenyl-β-D-cellobioside, as well as producing reducing sugars from corn fiber, wheat, and oat spelt arabinoxylan. AF30 had little detectable activity on the 4-nitrophenyl substrates, except for 4NPA, but activity on arabinoxylans from corn fiber, wheat, and oat spelt was at least 7-fold higher than AF47, with specific activities of 109, 358, and 153 U/mg, respectively. A combination of the two enzymes released 61 and 88% of the total arabinose from corn fiber and wheat arabinoxylans. The arabinofuranosidases produced by A. zeae may have industrial application for the enzymatic hydrolysis of recalcitrant lignocellulosic feedstocks such as corn fiber and wheat straw.  相似文献   

5.
Renewable natural resources such as xylans are abundant in many agricultural wastes. Penicillium sp. AHT-1 is a strong producer of xylanolytic enzymes. The sequential activities of its xylanase, alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase, and beta-xylosidase on model hemicellulose oat-spelt xylan was investigated. Optimum production of the enzymes was found in culture containing oat-spelt xylan at 30 degrees C and initial pH 7.0 after 6 days. The enzymes were partially purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation and anion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl 650 S. The apparent molecular mass was 21 kDa, and the protein displayed an "endo" mode of action. The xylanase exhibited glycotansferase activity. It synthesized higher oligosaccharides from the initial substrates, and xylotriose was the shortest unit of substrate transglycosylated. Xylanolytic enzymes (enzyme mixture) produced by this Penicillium sp. interacted cooperatively and sequentially in the hydrolysis of oat-spelt xylan in the following order: alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase --> xylanase --> beta-xylosidase. All three enzymes exhibited optimal activity under the same conditions (temperature, pH, cultivation), indicating that they alone are sufficient to completely depolymerize the test xylan. Results indicate that the xylanolytic enzyme mixture of Penicillium sp. AHT-1 could be useful for bioconversion of xylan-rich plant wastes to value-added products.  相似文献   

6.
The genes encoding acetyl xylan esterase 1 (axe1) and a beta-xylosidase (xylB) have been cloned and sequenced from Thermoanaerobacterium sp. strain JW/SL YS485. axe1 is located 22 nucleotides 3' of the xylB sequence. The identity of axe1 was confirmed by comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence to peptide sequence analysis data from purified acetyl xylan esterase 1. The xylB gene was identified by expression cloning and by sequence homology to known beta-xylosidases. Plasmids which independently expressed either acetyl xylan esterase 1 (pAct1BK) or beta-xylosidase (pXylo-1.1) were constructed in Escherichia coli. Plasmid pXylAct-1 contained both genes joined at a unique EcoRI site and expressed both activities. Substrate specificity, pH, and temperature optima were determined for partially purified recombinant acetyl xylan esterase 1 and for crude recombinant beta-xylosidase. Similarity searches showed that the axe1 and xylB genes were homologs of the ORF-1 and xynB genes, respectively, isolated from Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum. Although the deduced sequence of the axe1 product had no significant amino acid sequence similarity to any reported acetyl xylan esterase sequence, it did have strong similarity to cephalosporin C deacetylase from Bacillus subtilis. Recombinant acetyl xylan esterase 1 was found to have thermostable deacetylase activity towards a number of acetylated substrates, including cephalosporin C and 7-aminocephalosporanic acid.  相似文献   

7.
The objective of this work was to apply low cost materials, agricultural residues, to the purification of xylanase. The results showed that crude extracellular, cellulase-free xylanase of an alkaliphilic Bacillus sp. strain K-8 could be purified in a single step by affinity adsorption–desorption on a corn husk column using a high flow rate, under the conditions 25 mM acetate buffer, pH 4.0, 4 °C, which prevented the hydrolysis of xylan by xylanase. After adsorption, the xylanase was eluted from the enzyme–corn husk complex with 500 mM Urea. The enzyme was purified 5.3-fold to homogeneity from culture supernatant. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was 24 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The specific activity and recovery yield after purification were 25.4 U/mg protein and 42.3%, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
An esterase catalyzing the hydrolysis of acetyl ester moieties in cellulose acetate was purified 1,110-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity from the culture supernatant of Neisseria sicca SB, which can assimilate cellulose acetate as the sole carbon and energy source. The purified enzyme was a monomeric protein with a molecular mass of 40 kDa and the isoelectric point was 5.3. The pH and temperature optima of the enzyme were 8.0-8.5 and 45 degrees C. The enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of acetyl saccharides, p-nitrophenyl esters of short-chain fatty acids, and was slightly active toward aliphatic and aromatic esters. The K(m) and Vmax for cellulose acetate (degree of substitution, 0.88) and p-nitrophenyl acetate were 0.0162% (716 microM as acetyl content in the polymer) and 36.0 microM, and 66.8 and 39.1 mumol/min/mg, respectively. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and diisopropyl fluorophosphate, which indicated that the enzyme was a serine esterase.  相似文献   

9.
An acetylxylan esterase from Thermobifida fusca NTU22 was purified 51-fold as measured by specific activity from crude culture filtrate by ultrafiltration concentration, Sepharose CL-6B and DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B column chromatography. The overall yield of the purified enzyme was 14.4%. The purified enzyme gave an apparent single protein band on an SDS-PAGE. The molecular mass of purified enzyme as estimated by SDS-PAGE and by gel filtration on Sepharose CL-6B was found to be 30 and 28kDa, respectively, indicating that the acetylxylan esterase from T. fusca NTU22 is a monomer. The pI value of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 6.55 by isoelectric focusing gel electrophoresis. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified esterase was ANPYERGP. The optimum pH and temperature for the purified enzyme were 8.0 and 80°C, respectively. The Zn(2+), Hg(2+), PMSF and DIPF inhibited the enzyme activity. The K(m) value for p-nitrophenyl acetate and acetylxylan were 1.86μM and 0.15%, respectively. Co-operative enzymatic degradation of oat-spelt xylan by purified acetylxylan esterase and xylanase significantly increased the acetic acid liberation compared to the acetylxylan esterase action alone.  相似文献   

10.
Acetyl esterase was produced by Streptomyces sp. PC22 at comparable levels of about 0.3 U ml−1 using either 1.0% (w/v) birchwood xylan or 1.5% (w/v) corn husks as a carbon source and cultivating at 45 °C, at pH 9 for 3 or 2 days, respectively. The enzyme was purified from culture filtrate to about 54-fold purity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, followed by consecutive chromatography using a Macro-Prep DEAE, t-butyl hydrophobic interaction and hydroxyapatite, respectively. The approximate molecular weight of the purified enzyme was 155 kDa as analyzed by gel filtration, and it contained four identical 34 kDa subunits, as assessed by SDS-PAGE. It had K m and V max values for p-nitrophenyl acetate of 0.43 mM and 70.78 U mg−1 and 7.8 mM and 1,027 U mg−1 for α-naphthyl acetate, respectively. Its optimal pH and temperature were 6.5–7.0 and 50 °C, respectively. It was stable for 30 min at a broad range of pH values, from 5.0 to 9.0, and at temperatures up to 60 °C. The purified enzyme had no other xylanolytic activities. It showed cooperative action on birchwood xylan degradation, when used in combination with xylanase from the same strain and β-xylosidase from Streptomyces sp. CH7. Enhancement was 1.4-fold, compared to the expected amount of individual enzymes alone. This indicates that the enzyme has potential industrial applications, especially for utilizing renewable hemicelluloses containing acetyl xylan for the production of biofuels or other fermentation products.  相似文献   

11.
A facultatively anaerobic bacterium, Paenibacillus curdlanolyticus B-6, isolated from an anaerobic digester produces an extracellular xylanolytic-cellulolytic enzyme system containing xylanase, beta-xylosidase, arabinofuranosidase, acetyl esterase, mannanase, carboxymethyl cellulase (CMCase), avicelase, cellobiohydrolase, beta-glucosidase, amylase, and chitinase when grown on xylan under aerobic conditions. During growth on xylan, the bacterial cells were found to adhere to xylan from the early exponential growth phase to the late stationary growth phase. Scanning electron microscopic analysis revealed the adhesion of cells to xylan. The crude enzyme preparation was found to be capable of binding to insoluble xylan and Avicel. The xylanolytic-cellulolytic enzyme system efficiently hydrolyzed insoluble xylan, Avicel, and corn hulls to soluble sugars that were exclusively xylose and glucose. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of a crude enzyme preparation exhibited at least 17 proteins, and zymograms revealed multiple xylanases and cellulases containing 12 xylanases and 9 CMCases. The cellulose-binding proteins, which are mainly in a multienzyme complex, were isolated from the crude enzyme preparation by affinity purification on cellulose. This showed nine proteins by SDS-PAGE and eight xylanases and six CMCases on zymograms. Sephacryl S-300 gel filtration showed that the cellulose-binding proteins consisted of two multienzyme complexes with molecular masses of 1,450 and 400 kDa. The results indicated that the xylanolytic-cellulolytic enzyme system of this bacterium exists as multienzyme complexes.  相似文献   

12.
T Baba  R Shinke    T Nanmori 《Applied microbiology》1994,60(7):2252-2258
Bacillus stearothermophilus 21 is a gram-positive, facultative thermophilic aerobe that can utilize xylan as a sole source of carbon. We isolated this strain from soil, purified its extracellular xylanase and beta-xylosidase, and analyzed the two-step degradation of xylan by these enzymes (T. Nanmori, T. Watanabe, R. Shinke, A. Kohno, and Y. Kawamura, J. Bacteriol. 172:6669-6672, 1990). An Escherichia coli transformant carrying a 4.2-kbp chromosomal segment of this bacterium as a recombinant plasmid was isolated. It excreted active beta-xylosidase and xylanase into the culture medium. The plasmid was introduced into UV-sensitive E. coli CSR603, and its protein products were analyzed by the maxicell method. Proteins harboring beta-xylosidase and xylanase activities were identified, and their molecular masses were estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyarylamide gel electrophoresis to be 75 and 40 kDa, respectively. The values were identical to those of proteins prepared from cells of B. stearothermophilus 21. The genes for both enzymes were encoded in a 3.4-kbp PstI fragment derived from the 4.2-kbp chromosomal segment. The nucleotide sequence of the 4.2-kbp segment was accordingly determined. The beta-xylosidase gene (xylA) is located upstream of the xylanase gene (xynA) with a possible promoter and a Shine-Dalgarno sequence. The latter gene is preceded by two possible promoters and a Shine-Dalgarno sequence that are located within the 3'-terminal coding region of the former. The two genes thus appear to be, at least partly, expressed independently, which was experimentally confirmed in E. coli by deletion analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
A method for analysis of the component composition of multienzyme complexes secreted by the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei was developed. The method is based on chromatofocusing followed by further identification of protein fractions according to their substrate specificity and molecular characteristics of the proteins. The method allows identifying practically all known cellulases and hemicellulases of T. reesei: endoglucanase I (EG I), EG II, EG III, cellobiohydrolase I (CBH I), CBH II, xylanase I (XYL I), XYL II, beta-xylosidase, alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase, acetyl xylan esterase, mannanase, alpha-galactosidase, xyloglucanase, polygalacturonase, and exo-beta-1,3-glucosidase. The component composition of several laboratory and commercial T. reesei preparations was studied and the content of the individual enzymes in these preparations was quantified. The influence of fermentation conditions on the component composition of secreted enzyme complexes was revealed. The characteristic features of enzyme preparations obtained in "cellulase" and "xylanase" fermentation conditions are shown.  相似文献   

14.
During decaffeination of Coffee Processing Plant Solid Wastes (CPSW) by actinomycetes, Thermomonospora, Strain 29 exhibited high titers of cellulase and xylanase. This organism, originally isolated on soybean seed coat was grown in solid state fermentation on CPSW supplemented with mineral salts. Enzymes recovered were arabinosidase, xylanase, and beta-D-xylosidase. Higher activity of the former two enzymes was in the extracellular broth, whereas the beta-D-xylosidase activity was highest in the cell fraction. The enzymes were characterized after precipitation with (NH(4))(2)SO(4), dialysis, and gel filtration. Production of all three enzymes was inhibited by monomeric sugars and sugar alcohols but not by arabinoxylan, xylans, or xylan containing water insoluble carbohydrates. The optimum pH for the activity was 6.5, 7.0, and 7.5 for beta-xylosidase, xylanase and arabinosidase (alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase, alpha-arabinosidase, alpha-L-arabinosidase) respectively. These enzymes were stable in the pH range of 6.5 to 8.0. All three enzymes were thermostable up to 80 degrees C. At 55 degrees C, arabinosidase had the longest half life of 120 h. However, at 40 degrees C, xylanase had the longest half life (504 h). At either temperature, beta-D-xylosidase had the shortest half life. The molecular weights (kDa), and Kms (mM) were estimated to be 95, 0.27; 45, 12.4; and 106, 0.67 for arbinosidase, xylanase, and beta-xylosidase respectively. Step wise addition of the three enzymes showed higher saccharification of lignocellulosics.  相似文献   

15.
Six xylan-hydrolyzing enzymes have been isolated from the preparations Celloviridin G20x and Xybeten-Xyl, obtained previously based on the strain Trichoderma longibrachiatum (Trichoderma reesei) TW-1. The enzymes isolated were represented by three xylanases (XYLs), XYL I (20 kDa, pi 5.5), XYL II (21 kDa, pI 9.5), XYL III (30 kDa, pI 9.1); endoglucanase I (EG I), an enzyme exhibiting xylanase activity (57 kDa, pI 4.6); and two exodepolymerases, beta-xylosidase (beta-XYL; 80 kDa, pI 4.5) and alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase I (alpha-L-AF I; 55 kDa, pI 7.4). The substrate specificity of the enzymes isolated was determined. XYL II exhibited maximum specific xylanase activity (190 U/mg). The content of the enzymes in the preparation was assessed. Maximum contributions to the total xylanase activities of the preparations Celloviridin G20x and Xy-beten-Xyl were made by EG I and XYL II, respectively. Effects of temperature and pH on the enzyme activities, their stabilities under various conditions, and the kinetics of exhaustive hydrolysis of glucuronoxylan and arabinoxylan were studied. Combinations of endodepolymerases (XYL I, XYL II, XYL III, or EG I) and exodepolymerases (alpha-L-AF I or beta-XYL) produced synergistic effects on arabinoxylan cleavage. The reverse was the case when endodepolymerases, such as XYL I or EG I, were combined with alpha-L-AF I.  相似文献   

16.
Two acetyl esterases (EC 3.1.1.6) were purified to gel electrophoretic homogeneity from Thermoanaerobacterium sp. strain JW/SL-YS485, an anaerobic, thermophilic endospore former which is able to utilize various substituted xylans for growth. Both enzymes released acetic acid from chemically acetylated larch xylan. Acetyl xylan esterases I and II had molecular masses of 195 and 106 kDa, respectively, with subunits of 32 kDa (esterase I) and 26 kDa (esterase II). The isoelectric points were 4.2 and 4.3, respectively. As determined by a 2-min assay with 4-methylumbelliferyl acetate as the substrate, the optimal activity of acetyl xylan esterases I and II occurred at pH 7.0 and 80 degrees C and at pH 7.5 and 84 degrees C, respectively. Km values of 0.45 and 0.52 mM 4-methylumbelliferyl acetate were observed for acetyl xylan esterases I and II, respectively. At pH 7.0, the temperatures for the 1-h half-lives for acetyl xylan esterases I and II were 75 degrees and slightly above 100 degrees C, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
An alkaliphilic bacterium, Bacillus sp. strain K-1, produces extracellular xylanolytic enzymes such as xylanases, β-xylosidase, arabinofuranosidase, and acetyl esterase when grown in xylan medium. One of the extracellular xylanases that is stable in an alkaline state was purified to homogeneity by affinity adsorption-desorption on insoluble xylan. The enzyme bound to insoluble xylan but not to crystalline cellulose. The molecular mass of the purified xylan-binding xylanase was estimated to be approximately 23 kDa. The enzyme was stable at alkaline pHs up to 12. The optimum temperature and optimum pH of the enzyme activity were 60°C and 5.5, respectively. Metal ions such as Fe2+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ greatly increased the xylanase activity, whereas Mn2+ strongly inhibited it. We also demonstrated that the enzyme could hydrolyze the raw lignocellulosic substances effectively. The enzymatic products of xylan hydrolysis were a series of short-chain xylooligosaccharides, indicating that the enzyme was an endoxylanase.  相似文献   

18.
Xue Y  Shao W 《Biotechnology letters》2004,26(19):1511-1515
A thermostable beta-xylosidase from a hyperthermophilic bacterium, Thermotoga maritima, was over-expressed in Escherichia coli using the T7 polymerase expression system. The expressed beta-xylosidase was purified in two steps, heat treatment and immobilized metal affinity chromatography, and gave a single band on SDS-PAGE. The maximum activity on p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xylopyranoside was at 90 degrees C and pH 6.1. The purified enzyme had a half-life of over 22-min at 95 degrees C, and retained over 57% of its activity after holding a pH ranging from 5.4 to 8.5 for 1 h at 80 degrees C. Among all tested substrates, the purified enzyme had specific activities of 275, 50 and 29 U mg(-1) on pNPX, pNPAF, and pNPG, respectively. The apparent Michaelis constant of the beta-xylosidase was 0.13 mM for p NPX with a V (max) of 280 U mg(-1). When the purified beta-xylosidase was added to xylanase, corncob xylan was hydrolized completely to xylose.  相似文献   

19.
The growth of Trichoderma reesei QM9414 in shake flasks at 28 degrees C on hemicellulose substrates and bagasse resulted in rather low yields of hemicellulolytic enzymes (1.0-1.5 units/mL xylanase and 0.05-0.08 units/mL beta-xylosidase). The influence of pH on the synthesis of beta-xylosidase was greater than on the synthesis of xylanase. Both xylanase and beta-xylosidase showed optimal activity at pH 4-5 and 55-60 degrees C. Xylanase was stable at pH 2-10 but was heat labile and totally inactivated after 1 h at 65 degrees C. Enzyme stability towards heat could be increased in the presence of bovine serum albumin. The beta-xylosidase was more tolerant to heat, but stable over a pH range 2.5-6.0. The D-xylose inhibited both enzymes in a competitive manner. Hemicellulose (heteroxylan) was degraded to the extent of 30-40%within 24 h. The degree of hydrolysis decreased as the substrate concentration increased and increased with increased amounts of enzyme. Multiple enzyme doses resulted in increased saccharification in reduced times. The degree of hydrolysis was influenced by the amount of beta-xylosidase present in the hemicellulolytic enzyme preparation. The -;xylosidase was demonstrated to play an important role in the overall conversion of heteroxylan into xylose that is analogous to the role of beta-glucosidase in the saccharification of cellulose by cellulases.  相似文献   

20.
A chimeric gene, Glu-Xyl, encoding Bacillus amyloliquefaciens glucanase (Glu, 24.4 kDa) and Bacillus subtilis xylanase (Xyl, 21.2 kDa), was constructed via end-to-end fusion and expressed successfully in Escherichia coli. The purified fusion protein (46.1 kDa) exhibited both glucanase and xylanase activities. Compared with parental enzymes, the Glu moiety was characterized by kinetic parameters of decreased K(m) (0.66-fold) and increased K(cat) (2.75-fold), whereas the Xyl moiety had an increased K(m) (1.37-fold) and decreased K(cat) (0.79-fold). These indicate a 3.15-fold net increase and a 31% decrease in catalytic efficiency (K(cat)/K(m)) of the Glu and Xyl moieties. Activities and stabilities of both moieties at 40-90 degrees C or pH 3.0-10.0 were compared with those of the parental enzymes. Despite some variations, common optima were 40 degrees C and pH 9.0 for the Glu moiety and parent, and 50-60 degrees C and pH 9.0 for the Xyl counterparts. Thus, the fusion enzyme Glu-Xyl was bifunctional, with greatly enhanced glucanase activity associated with a decrease in xylanase activity.  相似文献   

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