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1.
A gene encoding mannitol-2-dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.1.1.138) (MDH) was cloned from Lactobacillus reuteri and expressed in Escherichia coli. The 1,008-bp gene encodes a protein consisting of 336 amino acids, with a predicted molecular mass of 35,920 Da. The deduced amino acid sequence of L. reuteri MDH (LRMDH) is 77% and 76% similar to the MDHs from Leuconostoc mesenteroides and Leuconostoc pseudomesenteroides, respectively. The purified recombinant enzyme appears as a single band of 40 kDa in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, but gel filtration indicates that the native enzyme is a dimer. The optimum temperature for the recombinant enzyme is 37°C, the pH optima for D-fructose reduction and D-mannitol oxidation are 5.4 and 6.2, respectively. The Km values for NAD (9 mM) and NADH (0.24 mM) are significantly higher than those for NADP (0.35 mM) and NADPH (0.04 mM). The Km values of LRMDH for D-fructose and D-mannitol are 34 mM and 54 mM, respectively. Contrary to what the enzyme sequence suggests, recombinant LRMDH contains a single catalytic zinc per subunit.  相似文献   

2.
Native and recombinant malate dehydrogenase (MDH) was characterized from the hyperthermophilic, facultatively autotrophic archaeon Pyrobaculum islandicum. The enzyme is a homotetramer with a subunit mass of 33 kDa. The activity kinetics of the native and recombinant proteins are the same. The apparent K m values of the recombinant protein for oxaloacetate (OAA) and NADH (at 80°C and pH 8.0) were 15 and 86 μM, respectively, with specific activity as high as 470 U mg−1. Activity decreased more than 90% when NADPH was used. The catalytic efficiency of OAA reduction by P. islandicum MDH using NADH was significantly higher than that reported for any other archaeal MDH. Unlike other archaeal MDHs, specific activity of the P. islandicum MDH back-reaction also decreased more than 90% when malate and NAD+ were used as substrates and was not detected with NADP+. A phylogenetic tree of 31 archaeal MDHs shows that they fall into 5 distinct groups separated largely along taxonomic lines suggesting minimal lateral mdh transfer between Archaea.  相似文献   

3.
Mannitol biosynthesis in Candida magnoliae HH-01 (KCCM-10252), a yeast strain that is currently used for the industrial production of mannitol, is catalyzed by mannitol dehydrogenase (MDH) (EC 1.1.1.138). In this study, NAD(P)H-dependent MDH was purified to homogeneity from C. magnoliae HH-01 by ion-exchange chromatography, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, and affinity chromatography. The relative molecular masses of C. magnoliae MDH, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size-exclusion chromatography, were 35 and 142 kDa, respectively, indicating that the enzyme is a tetramer. This enzyme catalyzed both fructose reduction and mannitol oxidation. The pH and temperature optima for fructose reduction and mannitol oxidation were 7.5 and 37°C and 10.0 and 40°C, respectively. C. magnoliae MDH showed high substrate specificity and high catalytic efficiency (kcat = 823 s−1, Km = 28.0 mM, and kcat/Km = 29.4 mM−1 s−1) for fructose, which may explain the high mannitol production observed in this strain. Initial velocity and product inhibition studies suggest that the reaction proceeds via a sequential ordered Bi Bi mechanism, and C. magnoliae MDH is specific for transferring the 4-pro-S hydrogen of NADPH, which is typical of a short-chain dehydrogenase reductase (SDR). The internal amino acid sequences of C. magnoliae MDH showed a significant homology with SDRs from various sources, indicating that the C. magnoliae MDH is an NAD(P)H-dependent tetrameric SDR. Although MDHs have been purified and characterized from several other sources, C. magnoliae MDH is distinguished from other MDHs by its high substrate specificity and catalytic efficiency for fructose only, which makes C. magnoliae MDH the ideal choice for industrial applications, including enzymatic synthesis of mannitol and salt-tolerant plants.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The kinetic and stability characteristics of crude extract nitrile hydratase fromBrevibacterium R-312 were studied for the hydration of 3-cyanopyridine to nicotinamide. The enzyme was substrate and product inhibited and had the following kinetic constants:K m =28 mM;K p =36 mM;K s =155 mM;V m =5.8 mol/min/mg protein (25°C). Itsmaximum temperature and pH (phosphate buffer) were 35°C and 8.0, respectively and it had half-lives of 50 days, 10 days and 1 day at 4°C, 10°C and 25°C, respectively. The crude extract also exhibited amidase activity on nicotinamide, but it became significant only at nicotinamide concentrations greater than 300 mM. Mathematical models for batch and fed-batch hydrations were developed to account for substrate and product inhibitions and for enzyme decay. They predicted to within 10% experimental results for initial substrate and final product concentrations up to 300 mM; the accuracies decreased at higher concentrations primarily because of the relatively rapid hydrolysis of nicotinamide.  相似文献   

5.
D-mannitol is a kind of hexitols widely applied in the food and medicinal fields due to its numerous benefits. Mannitol 2-dehydrogenase (MDH, EC 1.1.1.67) is a kind of oxidoreductase playing a pivotal part in the production of d-mannitol from d-fructose. In this work, we identified a highly thermostable d-mannitol-producing MDH from a thermo-tolerant bacterium, Caldicellulosiruptor morganii Rt8.B8. When using d-fructose as the substrate, the recombinant MDH was activated obviously in the presence of Mn2+ with an optimal pH as 8.0 and temperature at 75 °C. The specific activity, Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) and catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) for d-fructose were determined as 115 U mg−1, 18 mM and 8.5 s-1 mM−1. Moreover, the half-life (t1/2) of recombinant MDH at 75, 85 and 95 °C was 19 h, 3.5 h and 1.62 h respectively, which was much higher than that of most MDHs. The optimal condition for the production of d-mannitol was determined to be pH at 7.5, the temperature at 70 °C, and 2:1 ratio of C. morganii MDH and Ogataea parapolymorpha formate dehydrogenase (FDH, EC 1.2.1.2). Meanwhile, approximately 80 % d-mannitol was generated by two enzymes after a 50 h reaction from 400 mM d-fructose, indicating a great potentiality in the industrial preparation of d-mannitol.  相似文献   

6.
The succinate dehydrogenase from the thermohalophilic bacterium Rhodothermus marinus is a member of the succinate:menaquinone oxidoreductases family. It is constituted by three subunits with apparent molecular masses of 70, 32, and 18 kDa. The optimum temperature for succinate dehydrogenase activity is 80°C, higher than the optimum growth temperature of R. marinus, 65°C. The enzyme shows a high affinity for both succinate (K m = 0.165 mM) and fumarate (K m = 0.10 mM). It contains the canonical iron–sulfur centers S1, S2, and S3, as well as two B-type hemes. In contrast to other succinate dehydrogenases, the S3 center has an unusually high reduction potential of +130 mV and is present in two different conformations, one of which presents an unusual EPR signal with g values at 2.035, 2.009, and 2.001. The apparent midpoint reduction potentials of the hemes, +75 and –65 mV at pH 7.5, are also higher than those reported for other enzymes. The heme with the lower potential (heme bL) presents a considerable dependence of the reduction potential with pH (redox–Bohr effect), having a pK a OX = 6.5 and a pK a red = 8.7. This behavior is consistent with the proposal that in these enzymes menaquinone reduction occurs close to heme bL, near to the periplasmic side of the membrane, and involving dissipation of the proton transmembrane gradient.  相似文献   

7.
Candidatus Methylomirabilis oxyfera” is a newly discovered anaerobic methanotroph that, surprisingly, oxidizes methane through an aerobic methane oxidation pathway. The second step in this aerobic pathway is the oxidation of methanol. In Gram-negative bacteria, the reaction is catalyzed by pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent methanol dehydrogenase (MDH). The genome of “Ca. Methylomirabilis oxyfera” putatively encodes three different MDHs that are localized in one large gene cluster: one so-called MxaFI-type MDH and two XoxF-type MDHs (XoxF1 and XoxF2). MxaFI MDHs represent the canonical enzymes, which are composed of two PQQ-containing large (α) subunits (MxaF) and two small (β) subunits (MxaI). XoxF MDHs are novel, ecologically widespread, but poorly investigated types of MDHs that can be phylogenetically divided into at least five different clades. The XoxF MDHs described thus far are homodimeric proteins containing a large subunit only. Here, we purified a heterotetrameric MDH from “Ca. Methylomirabilis oxyfera” that consisted of two XoxF and two MxaI subunits. The enzyme was localized in the periplasm of “Ca. Methylomirabilis oxyfera” cells and catalyzed methanol oxidation with appreciable specific activity and affinity (Vmax of 10 μmol min−1 mg−1 protein, Km of 17 μM). PQQ was present as the prosthetic group, which has to be taken up from the environment since the known gene inventory required for the synthesis of this cofactor is lacking. The MDH from “Ca. Methylomirabilis oxyfera” is the first representative of type 1 XoxF proteins to be described.  相似文献   

8.
Two serine carboxypeptidases, MpiCP-1 and MpiCP-2, were purified to homogeneity from Monascus pilosus IFO 4480. MpiCP-1 is a homodimer with a native molecular mass of 125 kDa composed of two identical subunits of 61 kDa, while MpiCP-2 is a high mass homooligomer with a native molecular mass of 2,263 kDa composed of about 38 identical subunits of 59 kDa. This is unique among carboxypeptidases and distinguishes MpiCP-2 as the largest known carboxypeptidase. The two purified enzymes were both acidic glycoproteins. MpiCP-1 has an isoelectric point of 3.7 and a carbohydrate content of 11%, while for MpiCP-2 these values were 4.0 and 33%, respectively. The optimum pH and temperature were around 4.0 and 50°C for MpiCP-1, and 3.5 and 50°C for MpiCP-2. MpiCP-1 was stable over a broad range of pH between 2.0 and 8.0 at 37°C for 1 h, and up to 55°C for 15 min at pH 6.0, but MpiCP-2 was stable in a narrow range of pH between 5.5 and 6.5, and up to 50°C for 15 min at pH 6.0. Phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride strongly inhibited MpiCP-1 and completely inhibited MpiCP-2, suggesting that they are both serine carboxypeptidases. Of the substrates tested, benzyloxycarbonyl-l-tyrosyl-l-glutamic acid (Z-Tyr-Glu) was the best for both enzymes. The Km, Vmax, Kcat and Kcat/Km values of MpiCP-1 for Z-Tyr-Glu at pH 4.0 and 37°C were 1.33 mM, 1.49 mM min–1, 723 s–1 and 545 mM–1 s–1, and those of MpiCP-2 at pH 3.5 and 37°C were 1.55 mM, 1.54 mM min–1, 2,039 s–1 and 1,318 mM–1 s–1, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
We identified and characterized a malate dehydrogenase from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) (ScMDH). The molecular mass of ScMDH was 73,353.5 Da with two 36,675.0 Da subunits as analyzed by matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization–time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS). The detailed kinetic parameters of recombinant ScMDH are reported here. Heat inactivation studies showed that ScMDH was more thermostable than most MDHs from other organisms, except for a few extremely thermophile bacteria. Recombinant ScMDH was highly NAD+-specific and displayed about 400-fold (k cat) and 1,050-fold (k cat?K m) preferences for oxaloacetate reduction over malate oxidation. Substrate inhibition studies showed that ScMDH activity was inhibited by excess oxaloacetate (K i=5.8 mM) and excess L-malate (K i=12.8 mM). Moreover, ScMDH activity was not affected by most metal ions, but was strongly inhibited by Fe2+ and Zn2+. Taken together, our findings indicate that ScMDH is significantly thermostable and presents a remarkably high catalytic efficiency for malate synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Archaeoglobus fulgidus is a hyperthermophilic sulfate-reducing archaeon. In this communication we describe the purification and properties of pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase from this organism. The catabolic enzyme was purified 250-fold to apparent homogeneity with a yield of 16%. The native enzyme had an apparent molecular mass of 120 kDa and was composed of four different subunits of apparent molecular masses of 45, 33, 25, and 13 kDa, indicating and structure. Per mol, the enzyme contained 0.8 mol thiamine pyrophosphate, 9 mol non-heme iron, and 8 mol acid-labile sulfur. FAD, FMN, lipoic acid, and copper were not found. The purified enzyme showed an apparent K m for coenzyme A of 0.02 mM, for pyruvate of 0.3 mM, and for clostridial ferredoxin of 0.01 mM, an apparent V max of 64 U/mg (at 65°C) with a pH optimum near 7.5 and an Arrhenius activation energy of 75 kJ/mol (between 30 and 70°C). The temperature optimum was above 90°C. At 90°C, the enzyme lost 50% activity within 60 min in the presence of 2 M KCl. The enzyme did not catalyze the oxidation of 2-oxoglutarate, indolepyruvate, phenylpyruvate, glyoxylate, and hydroxypyruvate. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the four subunits were determined. The sequence of the -subunit had similarities to the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the -subunit of the heterotetrameric pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase from Pyrococcus furiosus and from Thermotoga maritima, and unexpectedly, to the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the homodimeric pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase from proteobacteria and from cyanobacteria. No sequence similarities were found, however, between the -subunits of the enzyme from A. fulgidus and the heterodimeric pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase from Halobacterium halobium.Abbreviations CoASH Coenzyme A - F 420 Coenzyme F420  相似文献   

11.
Carboxypeptidase produced by Monascus purpureus IFO 4478 was purified to homogeneity. The purified enzyme is a heterodimer with a molecular mass of 132 kDa and consists of two subunits of 64 and 67 kDa. It is an acidic glycoprotein with an isoelectric point of 3.67 and 17.0% carbohydrate content. The optimum pH and temperature were 4.0 and 40 °C, respectively. The enzyme was stable between pH 2.0 and 8.0 at 37 °C for 1 h, and up to 50 °C at pH 5.0 for 15 min. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by piperastatin A, diisopropylfluoride phosphate (DFP), phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (PMSF), and chymostatin, suggesting that it is a chymotrypsin-like serine carboxypeptidase. Monascus purpureus carboxypeptidase was also strongly inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoic acid (PCMB) but not by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and 1,10-phenanthroline, indicating that it requires cysteine residue but not metal ions for activity. Benzyloxycarbonyl-l-tyrosyl-l-glutamic acid (Z-Tyr-Glu), among the substrates tested, was the best substrate of the enzyme. The Km, Vmax, Kcat, and Kcat/Km values of the enzyme for Z-Tyr-Glu at pH 4.0 and 37 °C were 0.86 mM, 0.917 mM min–1, 291 s–1, and 339 mM–1 s–1, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Summary. Branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase was purified by several column chromatographies from Helicobacter pylori NCTC 11637, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was analyzed. The enzyme gene was sequenced based on a putative branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase gene, ilvE of H. pylori 26695, and the whole amino acid sequence was deduced from the nucleotide sequence. The enzyme existed in a homodimer with a calculated subunit molecular weight (MW) of 37,539 and an isoelectric point (pI) of 6.47. The enzyme showed high affinity to 2-oxoglutarate (K m = 0.085 mM) and L-isoleucine (K m = 0.34 mM), and V max was 27.3 μmol/min/mg. The best substrate was found to be L-isoleucine followed by L-leucine and L-valine. No activity was shown toward the D-enantiomers of these amino acids. The optimal pH and temperature were pH 8.0 and 37 °C, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
An NAD+-dependent xylitol dehydrogenase (XDH) from Fusarium oxysporum, a key enzyme in the conversion of xylose to ethanol, was purified to homogeneity and characterised. It was homodimeric with a subunit of M r 48 000, and pI 3.6. It was optimally active at 45 °C and pH 9–10. It was fully stable at pH 6–7 for 24 h and 30 °C. K m values for d-xylitol and NAD+ were 94 mM and 0.14 mM, respectively. Mn2+ at 10 mM increased XDH activity 2-fold and Cu2+ at 10 mM inhibited activity completely.  相似文献   

14.
Bacterial 2,3-butanediol dehydrogenases   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Enterobacter aerogenes, Aeromonas hydrophila, Serratia marcescens and Staphylococcus aureus possessing L(+)-butanediol dehydrogenase produced mainly meso-butanediol and small amounts of optically active butanediol; Acetobacter suboxydans, Bacillus polymyxa and Erwinia carotovora containing D(-)-butanediol dehydrogenase produced more optically active butanediol than meso-butanediol. Resting and growing cells of these organisms oxidized only one enantiomer of racemic butanediol. The D(-)-butanediol dehydrogenase from Bacillus polymyxa was partially purified (30-fold) with a specific activity of 24.5. Except NAD and NADH no other cofactors were required. Optimum pH-values for oxidation and reduction were pH 9 and pH 7, respectively. The optimum temperature was about 60°C. The molecular weight was 100000 to 107000. The K m-values were 3.3 mM for D(-)-butanediol, 6.25 mM for meso-butanediol, 0.53 mM for acetoin, 0.2 mM for NAD, 0.1 mM for NADH, 87 mM for diacetyl, 38 mM for 1,2-propanediol; 2,3-pentanedion was not a substrate for this enzyme. The L(+)-butanediol dehydrogenase from Serratia marcescens was purified 57-fold (specific activity 22.3). Besides NAD or NADH no cofactors were required. The optimum value for oxidation was about pH 9 and for reduction pH 4.5. The optimum temperature was 32–36°C. The molecular weight was 100000 to 107000. The K m-values were 5 mM for meso-butanediol, 10 mM for racemic butanediol, 6.45 for acetoin, 1 mM for NAD, 0.25 mM for NADH, 2.08 mM for diacetyl, 16.7 mM for 2,3-pentanedion and 11.8 mM for 1,2-propanediol.Abbreviations Bud 2,3-butanediol - DH dehydrogenase  相似文献   

15.
The levels of cyclic 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (cDPG) in methanogenic bacteria are governed by the antagonistic activities of cDPG synthetase and cDPG hydrolase. In this paper we focus on the synthetase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. The cytoplasmic 150 kDa enzyme catalyzed cDPG synthesis from 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (apparent Km=21 mM), Mg2+ (Km=3.1 mM) and ATP (Km=1–2 mM). In batch-fed cultures, the enzyme was constitutively present (6–6.5 nmol per min per mg protein) during the different growth phases. In continuous cultures, activity decreased in response to phosphate limitation. The synthetase reaction proceeded with maximal rate at pH 6 and at 65° C and was specifically dependent on high (>0.3M) K+ concentrations. The reaction conditions remarkably contrasted to those of cDPG degradation catalyzed by the previously described membrane-bound cDPG hydrolase.Abbreviations cDPG Cyclic 2,3-diphosphoglycerate - 2,3-DPG 2,3-Diphosphoglycerate - 2-PG 2-Phosphoglycerate - 3-PG 3-Phosphoglycerate  相似文献   

16.
Desulfobacter postgatei is an acetate-oxidizing, sulfate-reducing bacterium that metabolizes acetate via the citric acid cycle. The organism has been reported to contain a si-citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7) which is activated by AMP and inorganic phosphate. It is show now, that the enzyme mediating citrate formation is an ATP-citrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.8) rather than a citrate synthase. Cell extracts (160,000xg supernatant) catalyzed the conversion of oxaloacetate (apparent K m=0.2 mM), acetyl-CoA (app. K m=0.1 mM), ADP (app. K m=0.06 mM) and phosphate (app. K m=0.7 mM) to citrate, CoA and ATP with a specific activity of 0.3 mol·min-1·mg-1 protein. Per mol citrate formed 1 mol of ATP was generated. Cleavage of citrate (app. K m=0.05 mM; V max=1.2 mol · min-1 · mg-1 protein) was dependent on ATP (app. K m=0.4 mM) and CoA (app. K m=0.05 mM) and yielded oxaloacetate, acetyl-CoA, ADP, and phosphate as products in a stoichiometry of citrate:CoA:oxaloacetate:ADP=1:1:1:1. The use of an ATP-citrate lyase in the citric acid cycle enables D. postgatei to couple the oxidation of acetate to 2 CO2 with the net synthesis of ATP via substrate level phosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
Trehalose-6-phosphate synthase, catalyzing the reaction between UDP-glucose and glucose 6-phosphate and forming trehalose 6-phosphate, was isolated and partially purified (30-fold) from the phototrophic, haloalkaliphilic bacteriumEctothiorhodospira halochloris. The activity is stabilized by 20mM MgCl2, 50mM NaCe and 2M glycine betaine. The molecular weight was 63000.The enriched enzyme had a MgCl2 optimum at 3–6mM, a pH optimum at 7.5 (in Tris-HCl buffer) and a temperature optimum at 50°C. The Km-values were 1.5×10–3M for UDP-glucose and 2×10–3M for glucose 6-phosphate. The enzyme showed a salinity dependence with optimal concentrations between 100 and 300mM salt. Higher concentrations of salt resulted in a decrease in activity. In the presence of inhibitory salt concentrations the compatible solute glycine betaine had a protective effect with a maximum between 0.5 and 2.0M.  相似文献   

18.
The hyperthermophilic sulfate-reducing archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain 7324 has been shown to degrade starch via glucose using a modified Embden-Meyerhof pathway. The first enzyme of this pathway, ADP-dependent glucokinase, was purified 600-fold to homogeneity. The enzyme is a monomeric protein with an apparent molecular mass of 50 kDa. It had a temperature optimum at 83 °C and showed a significant thermostability up to 100 °C. The enzyme was highly specific for ADP and glucose as substrates; it did not use ATP, CDP, UDP, or GDP as phosphoryl donors, or mannose, fructose and fructose 6-phosphate as phosphoryl acceptors (at 80 °C). Only glucosamine was phosphorylated at significant rates. The apparent Km values for ADP and glucose (at 50 °C) were 0.07 mM and 0.78 mM, respectively; the apparent Vmax value was about 50 U/mg at 50 °C and 350 U/mg at 80 °C. Divalent cations were required for maximal activity; Mn2+, Mg2+ and Ca2+, which were most effective, could be replaced partially by Cu2+, Ni2+, Co2+ and Zn2+. The N-terminal amino acid sequence (42 amino acids) of ADP-dependent glucokinase was almost identical to that of ADP-dependent glucokinase from Thermococcus litoralis. In the genome of the closely related Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain VC16 a homologous gene for ADP-dependent glucokinase could not be identified.  相似文献   

19.
l-Alanine dehydrogenase was found in extracts of the antibiotic producer Streptomyces clavuligerus. The enzyme was induced by ammonia, and the level of induction was dependend on the extracellular concentration. l-Alanine was the only amino acid able to induce alanine dehydrogenase. The enzyme was characterized from a 38-fold purified preparation. Pyruvate (K m =1.1 mM), ammonia (K m =20 mM) and NADH (K m =0.14 mM) were required for the reductive amination, and l-alanine (K m =9.1 mM) and NAD (K m =0.5 mM) for the oxidative deaminating reaction. The aminating reaction was inhibited by alanine, serine and NADPH. Alanine inhibited uncompetitively with respect to NADH (K i =1.6 mM) and noncompetitively with respect to ammonia (K i =2.0 mM) and pyruvate (K i =3.0 mM). In the aminating reaction 3-hydroxypyruvate, glyoxylate and 2-oxobutyrate could partially (6–7%) substitute pyruvate. Alanine dehydrogenase from S. clavuligerus differed with respect to its molecular weight (92000) and its kinetic properties from those described for other microorganisms.Abbreviation Alanine-DH l-alanine:NAD oxidoreductase  相似文献   

20.
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