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1.
Activities of the key enzymes of ethanol metabolism were assayed in ethanol-grown cells of an Acinetobacter sp. mutant strain unable to synthesize exopolysaccharides (EPS). The original EPS-producing strain could not be used for enzyme analysis because its cells could not to be separated from the extremely viscous EPS with a high molecular weight. In Acinetobacter sp., ethanol oxidation to acetaldehyde proved to be catalyzed by the NAD(+)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1.). Both NAD+ and NADP+ could be electron accepters in the acetaldehyde dehydrogenase reaction. Acetate is implicated in the Acinetobacter sp. metabolism via the reaction catalyzed by acetyl-CoA-synthetase (EC 6.2.1.1.). Isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1.) activity was also detected, indicating that the glyoxylate cycle is the anaplerotic mechanism that replenishes the pool of C4-dicarboxylic acids in Acinetobacter sp. cells. In ethanol metabolism by Acinetobacter sp., the reactions involving acetate are the bottleneck, as evidenced by the inhibitory effect of sodium ions on both acetate oxidation in the intact cells and on acetyl-CoA-synthetase activity in the cell-free extracts, as well as by the limitation of the C2-metabolism by coenzyme A. The results obtained may be helpful in developing a new biotechnological procedure for obtaining ethanol-derived exopolysaccharide ethapolan.  相似文献   

2.
Eight representative strains of Alcaligenes eutrophus, two strains of Alcaligenes hydrogenophilus and three strains of Paracoccus denitrificans were examined for their ability to use different alcohols and acetoin as a carbon source for growth. A. eutrophus strains N9A, H16 and derivative strains were unable to grow on ethanol or on 2,3-butanediol. Alcohol-utilizing mutants derived from these strains, isolated in this study, can be categorized into two major groups: Type I-mutants represented by strain AS1 occurred even spontaneously and were able to grow on 2,3-butanediol (t d=2.7–6.4 h) and on ethanol (t d=15–50 h). The fermentative alcohol dehydrogenase was present on all substrates tested, indicating that this enzyme in vivo is able to oxidize 2,3-butanediol to acetoin which is a good substrate for wild type strains. Type II-mutants represented by strain AS4 utilize ethanol as a carbon source for growth (t d=3–9 h) but do not grow on butanediol. In these mutants the fermentative alcohol dehydrogenase is only present in cells cultivated under conditions of restricted oxygen supply, but a different NAD-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase is present in ethanol grown cells. Cells grown on ethanol, acetoin or 2,3-butanediol synthesized in addition two proteins exhibiting NAD-dependent acetaldehyde dehydrogenase activity and acetate thiokinase. An acylating acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.10) was not detectable. Applying the colistin- and pin point-technique for mutant selection to strain AS1, mutants, which lack the fermentative alcohol dehydrogenase even if cultivated under conditions of restricted oxygen supply, were isolated; the growth pattern served as a readily identifiable phenotypic marker for the presence or absence of this enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Zhang GL  Wang CW  Li C 《Biotechnology letters》2012,34(8):1519-1523
The budC gene encoding the meso-2,3-BDH from Klebsiella pneumoniae XJ-Li was expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) pLys. Hypothetical amino acid sequence alignments revealed that the enzyme belongs to the short chain dehydrogenase/reductase family. After purification and refolding, the recombinant enzyme had activities of 218 U/mg for reduction of acetoin and 66 U/mg for oxidation of meso-2,3-butanediol. Highest activities were at pH 8.0 and 9.0 respectively. These are higher than other meso-2,3-butanediol dehydrogenases from K. pneumoniae. The low K (m) value (0.65 mM) for acetoin indicated that the enzyme can easily reduce acetoin to meso-2,3-butanediol. There were no significant activities towards 2R,3R-2,3-butanediol, 1,4-butanediol and 2S,3S-2,3-butanediol, suggesting that the enzyme has a high stereospecificity for the meso-dihydric alcohol.  相似文献   

4.
Vinyl acetate is subject to microbial degradation in the environment and by pure cultures. It was hydrolyzed by samples of soil, sludge, and sewage at rates of up to 6.38 and 1 mmol/h per g (dry weight) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, respectively. Four yeasts and thirteen bacteria that feed aerobically on vinyl acetate were isolated. The pathway of vinyl acetate degradation was studied in bacterium V2. Vinyl acetate was degraded to acetate as follows: vinyl acetate + NAD(P)+----2 acetate + NAD(P)H + H+. The acetate was then converted to acetyl coenzyme A and oxidized through the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the glyoxylate bypass. The key enzyme of the pathway is vinyl acetate esterase, which hydrolyzed the ester to acetate and vinyl alcohol. The latter isomerized spontaneously to acetaldehyde and was then converted to acetate. The acetaldehyde was disproportionated into ethanol and acetate. The enzymes involved in the metabolism of vinyl acetate were studied in extracts. Vinyl acetate esterase (Km = 6.13 mM) was also active with indoxyl acetate (Km = 0.98 mM), providing the basis for a convenient spectrophotometric test. Substrates of aldehyde dehydrogenase were formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, propionaldehyde, and butyraldehyde. The enzyme was equally active with NAD+ or NADP+. Alcohol dehydrogenase was active with ethanol (Km = 0.24 mM), 1-propanol (Km = 0.34 mM), and 1-butanol (Km = 0.16 mM) and was linked to NAD+. The molecular sizes of aldehyde dehydrogenase and alcohol dehydrogenase were 145 and 215 kilodaltons, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
M Nieder  B Sunarko    O Meyer 《Applied microbiology》1990,56(10):3023-3028
Vinyl acetate is subject to microbial degradation in the environment and by pure cultures. It was hydrolyzed by samples of soil, sludge, and sewage at rates of up to 6.38 and 1 mmol/h per g (dry weight) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, respectively. Four yeasts and thirteen bacteria that feed aerobically on vinyl acetate were isolated. The pathway of vinyl acetate degradation was studied in bacterium V2. Vinyl acetate was degraded to acetate as follows: vinyl acetate + NAD(P)+----2 acetate + NAD(P)H + H+. The acetate was then converted to acetyl coenzyme A and oxidized through the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the glyoxylate bypass. The key enzyme of the pathway is vinyl acetate esterase, which hydrolyzed the ester to acetate and vinyl alcohol. The latter isomerized spontaneously to acetaldehyde and was then converted to acetate. The acetaldehyde was disproportionated into ethanol and acetate. The enzymes involved in the metabolism of vinyl acetate were studied in extracts. Vinyl acetate esterase (Km = 6.13 mM) was also active with indoxyl acetate (Km = 0.98 mM), providing the basis for a convenient spectrophotometric test. Substrates of aldehyde dehydrogenase were formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, propionaldehyde, and butyraldehyde. The enzyme was equally active with NAD+ or NADP+. Alcohol dehydrogenase was active with ethanol (Km = 0.24 mM), 1-propanol (Km = 0.34 mM), and 1-butanol (Km = 0.16 mM) and was linked to NAD+. The molecular sizes of aldehyde dehydrogenase and alcohol dehydrogenase were 145 and 215 kilodaltons, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
The existence of three different proteins exhibiting NAD-dependent acetaldehyde dehydrogenase activity was confirmed in Alicaligenes eutrophus. The fermentative alcohol dehydrogenase, which also exhibits acetaldehyde dehydrogenase activity, is one of these proteins. The other two proteins were purified from A. eutrophus N9A mutant AS4 grown on ethanol applying chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and triazine-dye affinity media. Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase II, which amounts to about 14% of the total soluble protein in cells grown on ethanol, was purified to homogeneity. The relative molecular masses of the native enzyme and of the subunits were 195,000 or 56,000, respectively. This enzyme exhibits a high affinity for acetaldehyde (Km = 4 microM). Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase I amounts only to less than 1% of the total soluble protein. The relative molecular masses of the native enzyme and of the subunits were 185,000 and 52,000, respectively. This enzyme exhibits a low affinity for acetaldehyde (Km = 2.6 mM). Antibodies raised against acetaldehyde dehydrogenase II did not react with acetaldehyde dehydrogenase I. Two different strains, A. eutrophus N9A mutant AS1, which represents a different mutant type and can utilize both ethanol or 2,3-butanediol, and the type strain of A. eutrophus (TF93), which can utilize ethanol, form two acetaldehyde dehydrogenases during growth on ethanol, too. As in AS4, one of these enzymes from each strain amounted to a substantial portion of the total soluble protein in the cells. These major acetaldehyde dehydrogenases were purified from both strains; they resemble acetaldehyde dehydrogenase II isolated from AS4 in all relevant properties. Antibodies against the enzyme isolated from AS4 gave identical cross-reactions with the enzymes isolated from AS1 and TF93.  相似文献   

7.
The NAD-dependent oxidation of ethanol, 2,3-butanediol, and other primary and secondary alcohols, catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenases derived from Penicillium charlesii, was investigated. Alcohol dehydrogenase, ADH-I, was purified to homogeneity in a yield of 54%. The enzyme utilizes several primary alcohols as substrates, with Km values of the order of 10?4m. A Km value of 60 mm was obtained for R,R,-2,3-butanediol. The stereospecificity of the oxidation of 2-butanol was investigated, and S-(+)-2-butanol was found to be oxidized 2.4 times faster than was R-(?)-2-butanol. The reduction of 2-butanone was shown to produce S-(+)-2-butanol and R-(?)-butanol in a ratio of 7:3. ADH-I is the primary isozyme of alcohol dehydrogenase present in cultures utilizing glucose as the sole carbon source. The level of alcohol dehydrogenase activity increased 7.6-fold in mycelia from cultures grown with glucose and 2,3-butanediol (0.5%) as carbon sources compared with the activity in cultures grown on only glucose. Two additional forms of alcohol dehydrogenase, ADH-II and ADH-III, were present in the cultures supplemented with 2,3-butanediol. These forms of alcohol dehydrogenase catalyze the oxidation of ethanol and 2,3-butanediol. These data suggest that P. charlesii carries out an oxidation of 2,3-butanediol which may constitute the first reaction in the degradation of 2,3-butanediol as well as the last reaction in the mixed-acid fermentation. Alcohol dehydrogenase activities in P. charlesii may be encoded by multiple genes, one which is expressed constitutively and others whose expression is inducible by 2,3-butanediol.  相似文献   

8.
Four isoenzymes of aldehyde dehydrogenase were partially purified from rat liver mitochondria by hydroxylapatite chromatography and gel filtration. While three forms display low affinity for acetaldehyde, the fourth is active at extremely low aldehyde concentrations (Km less than or equal to 2 microM) and allows the oxidation of the acetaldehyde formed by catalysis of alcohol dehydrogenase at pH 7.4. Different models of alcohol dehydrogenase have been examined by analysis of progress curves of ethanol oxidation obtained in the presence of low-km aldehyde dehydrogenase. According to the only acceptable model, when the acetaldehyde concentration is kept low by the action of aldehyde dehydrogenase, NADH no longer binds to alcohol dehydrogenase, but acetaldehyde still competes with ethanol for the active site of the enzyme. The seven kinetic parameters of the two enzymes (four for alcohol dehydrogenase and three for aldehyde dehydrogenase) and the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenase have been determined by applying a new fitting procedure here described.  相似文献   

9.
An assay for the determination of NAD has been developed utilizing the coupled oxidoreductase activity of liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The coupled reaction between ethanol and lactaldehyde is driven by the removal of one of the products, acetaldehyde, into a semicarbazide solution. Under the stated conditions, a linear relationship exists between the absorbance of acetaldehyde semicarbazone and NAD concentration in the reaction mixture. The principal advantages of this method are speed and simplicity. NAD+ and NADH are assayed by the same procedure, which is also used to measure NADP+ and NADPH after these nucleotides have been converted to NAD+ and NADH, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
An acetaldehyde dehydrogenase from germinating seeds   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
An acetaldehyde dehydrogenase from germinating peanut cotyledons has been purified and its properties have been studied. At the highest purification achieved the preparation is free of alcohol dehydrogenase activity.

The enzyme is specific toward diphosphopyridine nucleotide, and can oxidize a variety of aldehydes. The highest reaction rate is obtained with acetaldehyde, which is oxidized to acetate. All the attempts to demonstrate the formation of an energy-rich acetyl derivative during the course of the reaction failed. The enzyme is inhibited by aldol; it is sensitive toward sulfhydryl reagents, including arsenite. Reduced glutathione stabilizes the enzyme, while cysteine, mercaptoethanol, and coenzyme A are inhibitory.

Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase is activated by phosphate and inhibited by fatty acyl-CoA derivatives. It appears to be activated by the substrate, as was deduced from the shape of the plot of reaction velocity against acetaldehyde. These properties suggest that the enzyme is an allosteric protein.

The plot of reaction velocity against substrate concentration is anomalous. The shape of this plot seems to reflect the presence of 2 different enzymatic activities, one with extremely high apparent affinity for acetaldehyde. The 2 activities may reflect 2 conformational states of a single enzyme or 2 separate enzymes.

Experiments with tissue slices indicate that the reaction catalyzed by this enzyme is a step in the oxidation of ethanol to acetyl-CoA. This enzyme may also participate in the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA in certain tissues.

  相似文献   

11.
A simple rate equation for alcohol dehydrogenase was obtained by assuming independent binding sites for ethanol and NAD+ and fully competitive inhibition by the products of the reaction, acetaldehyde and NADH. A random binding order was also assumed. The rate equation is described by six parameters: four association constants (two for the substrates and two for the products of the reaction), Vf for the forward direction, and the equilibrium constant of the reaction. The six parameters were determined at pH 7.4 by numerical analysis of progress curves of reactions started with different concentrations of ethanol and NAD+. The parameters for alcohol dehydrogenase partially purified from rat liver were: Km for ethanol = 0.746 mM, Km for NAD+ = 0.0563 mM, Km for acetaldehyde = 7.07 microM, Km for NADH = 4.77 microM and Keq = 2.36 X 10(-4). The computed values allowed a very good simulation of the experimental progress curves and little variation was observed in the kinetic parameters when the reactions were started in the presence of either NADH or acetaldehyde.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract Pelobacter carbinolicus strain GraBd1 fermented methylacetoin, which is a good carbon source for growth ( μ = 0.16 h−1) of this strict anaerobic bacterium, to acetone, acetate and ethanol (main products), acetoin, 2,3-butanediol and methylbutanediol (minor products). During growth on 2,3-butanediol, acetoin and methyl-acetoin the formation of a protein exhibiting acetoin: DCPIP oxidoreductase activity is induced. This enzyme amounts to a substantial portion of the soluble proteins. In vitro, it cleaves acetoin into acetate and acetaldehyde but reacts also with diacetyl or methylacetoin. We discussed four different models for the degradation of acetoin in the cells and came to the conclusion that in vivo the oxidative-thiolytic acetoin cleavage model is most probably realized in P. carbinolicus .  相似文献   

13.
Potato tubers are shown to contain at least 3 alcohol dehydrogenases, one active with NAD and aliphatic alcohols, one active with NADP and terpene alcohols and one active with NADP and aromatic alcohols. The purification of the aliphatic alcohol dehydrogenase is described and its activity with a wide range of substrates is reported. On the basis of substrate specificity, the enzyme is shown to resemble yeast alcohol dehydrogenase rather than liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The enzyme shows high activity with and high affinity for ethanol, activity and affinity decline as the chain length is increased from ethanol to butanol, but a further increase in chain length leads to increased affinity for the alcohol. The physiological significance of the results is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Pirog  T. P.  Sokolov  I.G.  Kuz'minskaya  Yu. V.  Malashenko  Yu. R. 《Microbiology》2002,71(2):189-196
Activities of the key enzymes of ethanol metabolism were assayed in ethanol-grown cells of an Acinetobacter sp. mutant strain unable to synthesize exopolysaccharides (EPS). The original EPS-producing strain could not be used for enzyme analysis because its cells could not to be separated from the extremely viscous EPS with a high molecular weight. In Acinetobacter sp., ethanol oxidation to acetaldehyde proved to be catalyzed by the NAD+-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1.). Both NAD+ and NADP+ could be electron accepters in the acetaldehyde dehydrogenase reaction. Acetate is implicated in the Acinetobacter sp. metabolism via the reaction catalyzed by acetyl-CoA-synthetase (EC 6.2.1.1.). Isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1.) activity was also detected, indicating that the glyoxylate cycle is the anaplerotic mechanism that replenishes the pool of C4-dicarboxylic acids in Acinetobacter sp. cells. In ethanol metabolism by Acinetobacter sp., the reactions involving acetate are the bottleneck, as evidenced by the inhibitory effect of sodium ions on both acetate oxidation in the intact cells and on acetyl-CoA-synthetase activity in the cell-free extracts, as well as by the limitation of the C2-metabolism by coenzyme A. The results obtained may be helpful in developing a new biotechnological procedure for obtaining ethanol-derived exopolysaccharide ethapolan.  相似文献   

15.
A new form of alcohol dehydrogenase, designated mu-alcohol dehydrogenase, was identified in surgical human stomach mucosa by isoelectric focusing and kinetic determinations. This enzyme was anodic to class I (alpha, beta, gamma) and class II (pi) alcohol dehydrogenases on agarose isoelectric focusing gels. The partially purified mu-alcohol dehydrogenase, specifically using NAD+ as cofactor, catalyzed the oxidation of aliphatic and aromatic alcohols with long chain alcohols being better substrates, indicating a barrel-shape hydrophobic binding pocket for substrate. mu-Alcohol dehydrogenase stood out in high Km values for both ethanol (18 mM) and NAD+ (340 microM) as well as in high Ki value (320 microM) for 4-methylpyrazole, a competitive inhibitor for ethanol. mu-Alcohol dehydrogenase may account for up to 50% of total stomach alcohol dehydrogenase activity and appeared to play a significant role in first-pass metabolism of ethanol in human.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteroides xylanolyticus X5-1 was grown in pure culture and in mixed culture with Methanospirillum hungatei JF-1 under xylose limitation in the chemostat. In the pure culture, ethanol, acetate, CO(2), and hydrogen were the products. In the mixed culture, acetate, CO(2), and presumably hydrogen were the only products formed by B. xylanolyticus X5-1. The biomass yield of B. xylanolyticus X5-1 increased because of cocultivation. In cell extracts of the pure culture, both NAD- and NADP-dependent acetaldehyde dehydrogenase and ethanol dehydrogenase activities were found. In cell extracts of the mixed culture, activities of these enzymes were not detected. Inhibition of methanogenesis in the mixed culture by the addition of bromoethanosulfonic acid (BES) resulted in an accumulation of H(2), ethanol, and formate. Immediately after the addition of BES, NAD-dependent acetaldehyde dehydrogenase and ethanol dehydrogenase activities were detected. After a short lag phase, a NADP-dependent ethanol dehydrogenase was also detectable. The induction of acetaldehyde dehydrogenase and ethanol dehydrogenase was inhibited by chloramphenicol, suggesting de novo synthesis of these enzymes. These results are consistent with a model in which the shift in product formation caused by interspecies electron transfer is regulated at the level of enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
LeBrun LA  Park DH  Ramaswamy S  Plapp BV 《Biochemistry》2004,43(11):3014-3026
Histidine-51 in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) is part of a hydrogen-bonded system that appears to facilitate deprotonation of the hydroxyl group of water or alcohol ligated to the catalytic zinc. The contribution of His-51 to catalysis was studied by characterizing ADH with His-51 substituted with Gln (H51Q). The steady-state kinetic constants for ethanol oxidation and acetaldehyde reduction at pH 8 are similar for wild-type and H51Q enzymes. In contrast, the H51Q substitution significantly shifts the pH dependencies for steady-state and transient reactions and decreases by 11-fold the rate constant for the transient oxidation of ethanol at pH 8. Modest substrate deuterium isotope effects indicate that hydride transfer only partially limits the transient oxidation and turnover. Transient data show that the H51Q substitution significantly decreases the rate of isomerization of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex and becomes a limiting step for ethanol oxidation. Isomerization of the enzyme-NAD(+) complex is rate limiting for acetaldehyde reduction catalyzed by the wild-type enzyme, but release of alcohol is limiting for the H51Q enzyme. X-ray crystallography of doubly substituted His51Gln:Lys228Arg ADH complexed with NAD(+) and 2,3- or 2,4-difluorobenzyl alcohol shows that Gln-51 isosterically replaces histidine in interactions with the nicotinamide ribose of the coenzyme and that Arg-228 interacts with the adenosine monophosphate of the coenzyme without affecting the protein conformation. The difluorobenzyl alcohols bind in one conformation. His-51 participates in, but is not essential for, proton transfers in the mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Ethanol or acetaldehyde orally administered (15% and 2% respectively in drinking water) to male Wistar rats for three months induced alterations in the main liver enzymes responsible for ethanol metabolism, aspartate and alanine aminotransferases and NAD glutamate dehydrogenase. Ethanol produced a significant decrease in the activity of soluble alcohol dehydrogenase, while acetaldehyde induced alterations both in soluble and mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenases: soluble activity was significantly higher than in the control and ethanol-treated groups, and mitochondrial activity was significantly diminished. Both soluble aspartate and alanine aminotransferases showed pronounced increases by the chronic effect of acetaldehyde, while mitochondrial activities were practically unchanged by the effect of ethanol or acetaldehyde. Mitochondrial NAD glutamate dehydrogenase showed a rise in its activity both by the effect of chronic ethanol and acetaldehyde consumption. The level of metabolites assayed in liver extracts showed marked differences between ethanol and acetaldehyde treatment which indicates that ethanol produced a remarkable increase in glutamate, aspartate and free ammonia together with marked decrease in pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate concentrations. Acetaldehyde consumption induced a significant decrease in 2-oxoglutarate and pyruvate concentrations. These observations suggest that ethanol has an important effect on the urea cycle enzymes, while the effect of acetaldehyde contributes to the impairment of the citric acid cycle.  相似文献   

19.
The activity of NAD+ and NADP+-linked aldehyde dehydrogenases has been investigated in yeast cells grown under different conditions. As occurs in other dehydrogenase reactions the NAD(P)+-linked enzyme was strongly repressed in all hypoxic conditions; nervetheless, the NADP+-linked enzyme was active. The results suggest that the NAD(P)+ aldehyde dehydrogenase is involved in the oxidation of ethanol to acetyl-CoA, and that when the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is repressed the NADP+-linked aldehyde dehydrogenase is operative as an alternative pathway from pyruvate to acetyl-CoA: pyruvate leads to acetaldehyde leads to acetate leads to acetyl-Coa. In these conditions the supply of NADPH is advantageous to the cellular economy for biosynthetic purposes. Short term adaptation experiments suggest that the regulation of the levels of the aldehyde dehydrogenase-NAD(P)+ takes place by the de novo synthesis of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Anaerobically, Brochothrix thermosphacta fermented glucose primarily to l-lactate, acetate, formate, and ethanol. The ratio of these end products varied with growth conditions. Both the presence of acetate and formate and a pH below about 6 increased l-lactate production from glucose. Small amounts of butane-2,3-diol were also produced when the pH of the culture was low (相似文献   

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