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1.
Cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase) from Bacillus circulans (ATCC 21783) was immobilised on a silica-based support: purified seasand. Although adsorption of 98% was achieved, considerable desorption was encountered. This problem was minimised by crosslinking the adsorbed enzyme with glutaraldehyde. The immobilised enzyme after crosslinking could be used repeatedly for cyclodextrin (CD) production in a batch process. The activity retention was 80% at the end of the eighth cycle. The immobilised enzyme showed a shift in the pH optimum towards the alkaline side and also an improvement in the pH stability compared to the free enzyme. It catalysed the formation of β-CD as a major product. A significant amount of α-CD production was also observed on prolonged incubation. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

2.
We found a novel cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase) from alkalophilic Bacillus sp. G-825-6. The enzyme was expressed in the culture broth by recombinant Bacillus subtilis KN2 and was purified and characterized. The enzyme named CGTase825-6 showed 95% amino acid sequence identity with a known enzyme β-/γ-CGTase from Bacillus firmus/lentus 290-3. However, the product specificity of CGTase825-6 differed from that of β-/γ-CGTase. CGTase825-6 produced γ-cyclodextrin (CD) as the main product, but degradation of γ-CD was observed with prolonged reaction. The product specificity of the enzyme was positioned between γ-CGTase produced by Bacillus clarkii 7364 and B. firmus/lentus 290-3 β-/γ-CGTase. It showed that the difference of product specificity was dependent on only 28 amino acid residues in 671 residues in CGTase825-6. We compared the amino acid sequence of CGTase825-6 and those of other CGTases and constructed a protein structure model of CGTase825-6. The comparison suggested that the diminished loop (Val138-Asp142) should provide subsite -8 for γ-CD production and that Asp142 might have an important role in product specificity. CGTase825-6 should be a useful tool to produce γ-CD and to study the differences of producing mechanisms between γ-CD and β-CD.  相似文献   

3.
A major disadvantage of cyclodextrin production is the limited cyclodextrin product specificity of cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase). Here, we described mutations of Asp372 and Tyr89 at subsite −3 in the CGTase from Paenibacillus macerans strain JFB05-01. The results showed that Asp372 and Tyr89 played important roles in cyclodextrin product specificity of CGTase. The replacement of Asp372 by lysine and Tyr89 by aspartic acid, asparagine, lysine, and arginine resulted in a shift in specificity towards the production of α-cyclodextrin, which was most apparent for the mutants D372K and Y89R. Furthermore, the changes in cyclodextrin product specificity for the single mutants D372K and Y89R could be combined in the double mutant D372K/Y89R, which displayed a 1.5-fold increase in the production of α-cyclodextrin, with a concomitant 43% decrease in the production of β-cyclodextrin when compared to the wild-type CGTase. Thus, the D372K and Y89R single and double mutants were much more suitable for the industrial production of α-cyclodextrin than the wild-type enzyme. The enhanced α-cyclodextrin specificity of these mutants might be a result of stabilizing the bent conformation of the intermediate in the cyclization reaction.  相似文献   

4.
A simple and specific recovery method for α-cyclodextrin (α-CD) was developed by employing co-digestion of CD reaction mixtures with CGTase fromBacillus ohbensis and α-glucosidase. The combination of CGTase fromB. ohbensis and α-glucosidase, such as α-amylase, β-amylase, or glucoamylase was examined for the selective degradation of β-and γ-CD in the CD reaction mixture formed by CGTase fromB. macerans. The co-digestion of the CD mixture with Taka-amylase and the CGTase resulted in α-CD and maltodextrins, the combination with β-amylase resulted in α-CD and maltose, and that with glucoamylase resulted in α-CD and glucose. The conditions of selective degradation of β- and γ-CD by co-digestion with the CGTase and glucoamylase were optimized as follows: the incubation pH, 5.5; incubation temperature, 50°C; CGTase concentration, 15 u/g of substrate; glucoamylase, 10 u/g of substrate; substrate concentration, 10% (w/v); the incubation time was fixed for 18 hr from the stand point of operation convenience. Most part of the content was presented in poster session at the 7th International Cyclodextrin Symposium, Tokyo, April 1994.  相似文献   

5.
The cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase, EC 2.4.1.19) gene from Bacillus sp. G1 was successfully isolated and cloned into Escherichia coli. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed the presence of an open reading frame of 2,109 bp and encoded a 674 amino acid protein. Purified CGTase exhibited a molecular weight of 75 kDa and had optimum activity at pH 6 and 60°C. Heterologous recombinant protein expression in E. coli is commonly problematic causing intracellular localization and formation of inactive inclusion bodies. This paper shows that the majority of CGTase was secreted into the medium due to the signal peptide of Bacillus sp. G1 that also works well in E. coli, leading to easier purification steps. When reacted with starch, CGTase G1 produced 90% β-cyclodextrin (CD) and 10% γ-CD. This enzyme also preferred the economical tapioca starch as a substrate, based on kinetics studies. Therefore, CGTase G1 could potentially serve as an industrial enzyme for the production of β-CD.  相似文献   

6.
The thermoalkaliphilic anaerobic bacterium Anaerobranca gottschalkii produces an extracellular CGTase when grown on starch at 55°C and pH 9.0. The gene encoding this CGTase was cloned and successfully expressed in Escherichia coli. It encodes a protein consisting of 721 amino acids with a signal sequence of 34 amino acids. On SDS–polyacrylamide gels, the purified CGTase from A. gottschalkii displayed the expected molecular mass of 78 kDa. The recombinant enzyme was purified with a yield of 13.5% and displayed a specific activity of 210 units/mg. This CGTase, which represents the first report of a CGTase from an anaerobic thermoalkaliphile, was active at a broad range of temperature and pH, namely 55–70°C and pH 5–10. It completely converted amylose, amylopectin and native starch to cyclodextrins, preferentially -cyclodextrin. With a longer incubation period, the -cyclodextrin to -cyclodextrin ratio declined. Variations in substrate type and concentration influenced the product pattern. Increasing the substrate concentration (0.5–20.0%) and glucans containing branching points (-1,6 glycosidic linkages) shifted the product pattern to: -cyclodextin > -cyclodextrin > -cyclodextrin. In addition to these cyclodextrins, larger cyclodextrins (>8 glucose units) were formed in the initial reaction period. The CGTase was stabilised against thermal inactivation by calcium ions and high substrate concentrations; and 5 mM of CaCl2 shifted the apparent melting point of the enzyme from 60°C to 69°C.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Hans G. Schlegel on the occasion of his 80th birthday.  相似文献   

7.
A novel mutant enzyme namely H43T CGTase can produce up to 39% γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD) compared to the native enzyme which produces only 10% γ-CD. The effect of the reaction conditions on γ-CD production was studied using this mutant CGTase. The effects of substrate–buffer combination, starch pretreatment and concentration, pH, additives and finally the use of a debranching enzyme improved the γ-CD ratio further. The tapioca–acetate pair gave the highest conversion (16% conversion) among four types of starch and four buffer system combinations. Gelatinized starch was preferred compared to raw tapioca starch in producing a high percentage of γ-CD and conversion rate. Higher pH especially pH 8–9 led to a higher proportion of γ-CD, and was relatively more apparent when the concentration of starch was increased. Forty-six percent γ-CD was produced using 2.5% gelatinized tapioca starch at pH 8. Pullulanase enzyme was found to be useful in reducing the viscosity of tapioca starch paste thus increasing the efficiency of utilization of starch by CGTase by at least 20- to 30-fold. Up to 48% γ-CD can be produced when 4% pullulanase-pretreated tapioca starch was reacted with the CGTase mutant. It was also found that the supplementation of the reaction mixture with glucose, toluene, or cyclododecanone improved the γ-CD yield by 42.2, 46.4, 43.4, and 43.4%, respectively. All the parameters involved have been shown to affect the product specificity of the mutant H43T CGTase transglycosylation mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
The study aimed to produce 2-O-α-D-glucopyranosyl-L-ascorbic acid (AA-2G) via the transglycosylation reaction by α-cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (α- CGTase) from recombinant Escherichia coli with L-ascorbic acid (AA) and β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) as the substrates. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis was conducted for AA-2G identification, and the glucoamylase treatment was carried out to produce AA-2G from AA-2-oilgosaccharides. The optimal temperature and pH for the enzymatic AA-2G production were 37°C and 5.5, respectively, and the optimal α-CGTase concentration and substrate mass ratio (AA:β-CD) for AA-2G synthesis were 160 U/mL and 1:1, respectively. At these optimal process conditions, maximal AA-2G production reached 13 g/L. This is the first report regarding the process optimization of enzymatic AA-2G production by α-CGTase from recombinant E. coli. The results may be useful for the industrial scale production of AA-2G.  相似文献   

9.
A cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase, EC 2.4.1.19) was successfully isolated and characterized from the halophilic archaeon Haloferax mediterranei. The enzyme is a monomer with a molecular mass of 77 kDa and optimum activity at 55°C, pH 7.5 and 1.5 M NaCl. The enzyme displayed many activities related to the degradation and transformation of starch. Cyclization was found to be the predominant activity, yielding a mixture of cyclodextrins, mainly α-CD, followed by hydrolysis and to a lesser extent coupling and disproportionation activities. Gene encoding H. mediterranei CGTase was cloned and heterologously overexpressed. Sequence analysis revealed an open reading frame of 2142 bp that encodes a protein of 713 amino acids. The amino acid sequence displayed high homology with those belonging to the α-amylase family. The CGTase is secreted to the extracellular medium by the Tat pathway. Upstream of the CGTase gene, four maltose ABC transporter genes have been sequenced (malE, malF, malG, malK). The expression of the CGTase gene yielded a fully active CGTase with similar kinetic behavior to the wild-type enzyme. The H. mediterranei CGTase is the first halophilic archaeal CGTase characterized, sequenced and expressed.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase; E.C. 2.4.1.19) is an industrially important enzyme, which is used to produce cyclodextrins (CDs). In this research, we report the use of experimental factorial design to find the best conditions of pH and temperature for CGTase production by Bacillus circulans var. alkalophilus. The optimized calculated values for the tested variables were, respectively, pH 9.7 and temperature 36oC, with a CGTase activity of 615 U mL−1. The CGTase production was further studied with the optimized process parameters on submerged cultivations (SC) and solid-state cultivations (SSC) using soybean industrial fibrous residue (SIFR). The maximum CGTase activity obtained on SC was 1,155 U mL−1 under aerobic conditions. Cell growth and CGTase synthesis in SSC using SIFR as substrate was excellent, with CGTase activity of 32,776 U g(SIFR) −1. These results strongly support the use of SIFR for CGTase production since it is a non-expensive residue.  相似文献   

11.
Two methods for increasing β-cyclodextrin yield, achieved with cyclodextrin glucanotransferase from Bacillus megaterium were investigated. A membrane process was performed, allowing a reuse of the enzyme. A process for simultaneous production and isolation of β-cyclodextrin in the presence of complexing agents was conducted. The β-cyclodextrin yield was increased twofold, when the product was precipitated with trichloroethylene or toluene. A change in the product selectivity of cyclodextrin glucanotransferase occurred, resulting in an increase in the relative amount of β-cyclodextrin up to 90% of all cyclodextrins formed. Yield increase was due to the removal of product inhibition and the coupling activity of the enzyme, which limited the full conversion of starch. The isolated cyclodextrin products contained 75–79% β-cyclodextrin, and 4–6% each of α-, and γ-cyclodextrins.  相似文献   

12.
A gene that encodes the enzyme Pyrococcus furiosus cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (PFCGT) was cloned in Escherichia coli. PFCGT was highly expressed in recombinant E. coli after compensation for codon usage bias using the pRARE plasmid. Purified PFCGT was extremely thermostable with an optimal temperature and pH of 95°C and 5.0, respectively, retaining 97% of its activity at 100°C. Incubation at 60°C for 20 min during the purification process led to a 1.5-fold increase in enzymatic activity. A time course assay of the PFCGT reaction with starch indicated that cyclic α-1,4-glucans with DPs greater than 20 were produced at the beginning of the incubation followed by an increase in β-CD. The major final product of PFCGT cyclization was β-CD, and thus the enzyme is a β-CGTase.  相似文献   

13.
Formate oxidase was found in cell-free extracts of Debaryomyces vanrijiae MH201, a soil isolate. After purification by column chromatography, the preparation showed a protein band corresponding to a molecular mass (MM) of 64 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The MM, estimated by a gel filtration, was 99 kDa. The preparation showed two and three bands on isoelectric focusing under denaturing and native conditions, respectively. These results suggest that the preparation contained three isoforms, each of which might be composed of αα, αβ, and ββ subunits with apparently similar MM. The preparation acted on formate with K m and V max values of 11.7 mM and 262 μmol min−1 mg−1, respectively, at pH 4.5 and 25°C, but showed no evidence of activity on the other compounds tested. The optimum pH and temperature were pH 4.0 and 35°C, respectively. The preparation showed activities of 85% of the initial activity after storage at pH 6.0 and 4°C for 8 weeks. When 10 mM formaldehyde was reacted with 2.0 U ml−1 of the enzyme preparation at pH 5.5 and room temperature in the presence of 2.0 U ml−1 of a microbial aldehyde oxidase and 100 U ml−1 of catalase for 180 min, neither of formate nor formaldehyde was detected, suggesting that the reaction involved the quantitative conversion of formaldehyde to carbon dioxide.  相似文献   

14.
Paenibacillus graminis strains were described recently as cyclodextrin (CD) producers. Cyclodextrins are produced by cyclodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase) which has not been characterized in P. graminis. Similar amounts of α- and β-CDs were produced by P. graminis (MC22.13) and P. macerans (LMD24.10T). Primers were designed to sequence the gene encoding CGTase from P. graminis. A phylogenetic tree was constructed and P. graminis CGTase protein showed to be closer (79.4% protein identity) to P. macerans |P31835|. Hybridization studies suggested that the gene encoding CGTase is located in different positions in the genomes of P. macerans and P. graminis.  相似文献   

15.
Cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase) activity was monitored inBacillus macerans culture fluids up to 56 h incubation time using glucose (G1), maltose (G2), maltotriose (G3), maltoheptaose (G7), α-,β-,γ-cyclodextrins (CDs) and soluble starch as carbon sources. Highest maximum specific growth rates (μmax) were observed with glucose, γ-CD and soluble starch (μmax values were 0.86, 0.74 and 0.69/h, respectively) while the maximum viable cell numbers were always within the range of 2.3–7.1×1011 CFU/mL independently of the carbon source used. Highest CGTase production was found in the presence of soluble starch and G7 (55.0 and 35.4 nkat/mL, respectively), these saccharides being easily transformed to CDs by CGTase. Moreover, when culture media were supplemented with cyclic malto-oligosaccharides the CGTase activities were about twice higher (19.6–20.6 nkat/mL) than those obtained with the linear G2 and G3 saccharides (8.9 and 11.3 nkat/mL, respectively) which give rise only to negligible quantities of CDs. CDs, which are the major end products of the action of CGTase, are regarded thus as the likely physiological inducers of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
A novel raw starch degrading cyclomaltodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase; E.C. 2.4.1.19), produced by Bacillus firmus, was purified to homogeneity by ultrafiltration, affinity and gel filtration chromatography. The molecular weight of the pure protein was estimated to be 78 000 and 82 000 Da, by SDS-PAGE and gel filtration, respectively. The pure enzyme had a pH optimum in the range 5.5–8.5. It was stable over the pH range 7–11 at 10 °C, and at pH 7.0 at 60 °C. The optimum temperature for enzyme activity was 65 °C. In the absence of substrate, the enzyme rapidly lost its activity above 30 °C. K m and k cat for the pure enzyme were 1.21 mg/ml and 145.17 μM/mg per minute respectively, with soluble starch as the substrate. For cyclodextrin production, tapioca starch was the best substrate used when gelatinized, while wheat starch was the best substrate used when raw. This CGTase could degrade raw wheat starch very efficiently; up to 50% conversion to cyclodextrins was obtained from 150 g/l starch without using any additives. The enzyme produced α-, β- and γ-cyclodextrins in the ratio of 0.2:9.2:0.6 and 0.2:8.6:1.2 from gelatinized tapioca starch and raw wheat starch with 150 g/l concentration respectively, after 18 h incubation. Received: 25 September 1998 / Received revision: 15 December 1998 / Accepted: 21 December 1998  相似文献   

17.
Low reaction yields and the high cost of obtaining a single type of pure CD make γ-CD costly. Using rational design and with the aid of 3D modeling structures, recombinant CGTase from Bacillus sp. G1 was molecularly engineered with the aim of producing a higher percentage of γ-CD. A single mutation at subsite −3, denoted H43T, was found to increase γ-CD production from 10% to approximately 39% using tapioca starch. This novel increment was probably the result of reduced steric hindrance to the formation of γ-CD because of the shortened side chain together with the shortened loop at positions 86–89, at substrate-binding subsite −3. A mutation (Tyr188 → Trp) and a deletion at loop 139–144 showed little effect on product specificity; however, mutagenesis at these sites affected cyclization, coupling and hydrolysis activities as well as the kinetic properties of the mutant CGTase. Based on rational design, three further mutations of the mutant H43T (denoted H43T/Δ(139–144)/S134T/A137V/L138D/V139I, H43T/S85G and H43T/Y87F) were constructed and produced γ-CD with yields of 20%, 20% and 39%, respectively. The mutant H43T/Δ(139–144)/S134T/A137V/L138D/V139I had very low cyclization and coupling activities, however their hydrolysis activity was retained. Double mutation (H43T/S85G) caused the enzyme to exhibit higher starch hydrolysis activity, approximately 26 times higher than the native CGTase G1. Although the mutants H43T and H43T/Y87F could produce the same percentage (39%) of γ-CD, the latter was more efficient as the total amount of CD produced was higher based on the Vmax and kcat values.  相似文献   

18.
Amylolytic enzymes ofEndomycopsis capsularis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Crude enzymatic preparations were prepared from supernatants of submerged cultures ofEndomycopsis capsularis 311/1. Fractions exhibiting amyloglucosidase, α-amylase and maltase-transglucosidase activities were isolated using chromatography on DEAE cellulose. Separation by paper electrophoresis shows that α-amylase moves most rapidly to anode, amyloglucosidase is slower and maltase-transglucosidase is very slow. α-Amylase has a pH optimum of activity about 4.5, stability optimum lies within the range of 4.8–7.0 at 20°C. Temperature optimum lies between 40 and 50°C, activation energy is 8,150 cal between 20 and 45°C. The enzyme forms a mixture of erythrodextrins and oligosaccharides of a maltose series from amylose and β-limitdextrin. It degrades more slowly maltotetraose and maltose, oligosaccharides of isomaltose series are not degraded. Amyloglucosidase has the same pH optimum of activity at 4.5 and is stable within the range of pH 4.2–8.0 at 20°C. Temperature optimum is between 40–50°C, activation energy is 7200 cal between 20–45°C. It forms glucose from amylose, β-limitdextrin, maltotetrose, maltose, isomaltotetrose and isomaltose. The reaction rate decreases with decreasing molecular weight, linear substrates with α(1→6) glucosidic bonds are hydrolysed 50-times slower than compounds containing α(1→4) glucosidic bonds and having the same length of glucosidic chain. Maltase-transglucosidase has pH optimum of activity about 4.6. It is stable within the range of pH 5.5–6.8. Temperature optimum for the formation of glucose and transglucosidase products is about 40°C, activation energy is 10,900 cal between 20–40°C. Reaction rate decreases with increasing length of the molecule of substrate. It decreases much more slowly with substrates of the maltose series than with those of the isomaltose series. Michaelis constant Km is 2.94×10−3 m for maltose and 2.13×10−2 m for isomaltose. The enzyme activity is not influenced by iodoacetate, ferricyanide, HgCl2, ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid and NaF. The enzyme is inhibited by γ- and δ-gluconolactone at concentrations of 0.5 mmole and higher; “uncompetitive” inhibition is apparently involved, Ki=0.235. A relative occurrence of reaction products is not influenced by the length of chain of substrates of the maltose series. It is also not influenced by the concentration of substrates during initial steps of the reaction. A relative amount of transglucosidation products increases with increasing concentration of substrates during late phases of the reaction.  相似文献   

19.
The influence of environmental pH on biological activity of Bifidobacterium longum CRL 849 grown in MRS-raffinose was evaluated. At pH 6.0, 5.5 and 5.0, raffinose was completely consumed by this microorganism, showing different consumption rates at each pH value (between 3.03 and 0.76 mmol l−1 h−1). At pH 4.5, the growth was lowest. The removal of raffinose was due to the α-galactosidase (α-gal) activity of this bifidobacteria, which was highest at pH 6.0–5.5 (1,280–1,223 mU ml−1). The production of β-glucosidase (β-glu) showed a similar pattern to α-gal activity with major values. The yield of organic acids produced during raffinose consumption was also highest at pH 6.0–5.5. The results of this study will allow the selection of the optimum growth conditions of B. longum CRL 849, with elevated levels of α-gal to be used in the reduction of nondigestible α-oligosaccharide in soy products and β-glu activities involved in isoflavone conversion to bioactive forms when used as starter culture.  相似文献   

20.
γ-Cyclodextrin: a review on enzymatic production and applications   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cyclodextrins are cyclic α-1,4-glucans that are produced from starch or starch derivates using cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase). The most common forms are α-, β-, and γ-cyclodextrins. This mini-review focuses on the enzymatic production, unique properties, and applications of γ-cyclodextrin as well as its difference with α- and β-cyclodextrins. As all known wild-type CGTases produce a mixture of α-, β-, and γ-cyclodextrins, the obtaining of a CGTase predominantly producing γ-cyclodextrin is discussed. Recently, more economic production processes for γ-cyclodextrin have been developed using improved γ-CGTases and appropriate complexing agents. Compared with α- and β-cyclodextrins, γ-cyclodextrin has a larger internal cavity, higher water solubility, and more bioavailability, so it has wider applications in many industries, especially in the food and pharmaceutical industries.  相似文献   

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