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1.
alpha-D-Glucosylglycerol (GG) was found for the first time in sake (Japanese rice wine) in an amount of about 0.5%. GG was also found in miso and mirin which had been brewed by using koji. GG was hydrolyzed into glucose and glycerol in an equimolar ratio with maltase (EC 3.2.1.20, alpha-glucosidase from yeast), but not with emulsin (EC 3.2.1.21, beta-glucosidase from almond). The retention times and mass spectra of trimethylsilyl derivatives by a GC-MS analysis of GG in sake were comparable to those of various GG samples synthesized by glycol cleavage. It was proven that GG in sake consisted of three components, viz., 2-O-alpha-D-glucosyl-glycerol (GG-II), (2R)-1-O-alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (R-GG-I) and (2S)-1-O-alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (S-GG-I). The ratio of the three components in GG was 6:66:28 for sake. It is considered that GG was formed by transglucosylation of the glucosyl groups to glycerol by alpha-glucosidase from koji in the sake mash.  相似文献   

2.
Alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (GG) is a mixture of 2-O-alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (GG-II), (2R)-1-O-alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (R-GG-I) and (2S)-1-O-alpha-D-glucosylglycerol (S-GG-I). GG has been found to be slightly hydrolyzed in vitro only by rat intestinal enzymes, but hardly at all by other digestive juices. GG suppressed the hydrolysis of maltose, sucrose and isomaltose by rat intestinal enzymes because the amount of glucose in the digestion of a mixture of GG and disaccharide was less than the sum of that in each individual digestion. The consumption of GG was suppressed by isomaltose, but promoted by maltose, with the hydrolysis of GG being suppressed. Sucrose appeared to suppress only the consumption of S-GG-I, suggesting that S-GG-I was hydrolyzed by the active site of sucrase in a sucrase-isomaltase complex. Transglucosylation seems to have occurred more frequently in the individual digestion of maltose and isomaltose than in that of GG and sucrose. GG seemed to promote transglucosylation in the presence of maltose, to suppress it with sucrose, and to delay it with isomaltose.  相似文献   

3.
A large amount of lysosomal acid hydrolases was released into the medium by Tetrahymena pyriformis strain W during growth. An extracellular lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase has been purified 500-fold with a 41% yield to homogeneity, as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It was found to be a glycoprotein and to consist of a single 110,000-dalton polypeptide chain. The carbohydrate content of the alpha-glucosidase was equivalent to 2.8% of the total protein content, and the oligosaccharide moiety was composed of mannose and N-acetylglucosamine in a molar ratio of 6.7:2. The optimal pHs for hydrolysis of maltose and p-nitrophenyl-alpha-glucopyranoside, maltose, isomaltose, and glycogen were 1.1 mM, 2.5 mM, 33.0 mM, and 18.5 mg/ml, respectively. This purified enzyme appears to have alpha-1,6-glucosidase as well as alpha-1,4-glucosidase activity. Turanose has a noncompetitive inhibitory effect on the hydrolysis of maltose. The antibody raised against Tetrahymena acid alpha-glucosidase inhibited the hydrolysis of all substrates tested. These properties of Tetrahymena acid alpha-glucosidase were found to be similar to those of the human liver lysosomal alpha-glucosidase.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Syzygium cumini seed kernel extracts were evaluated for the inhibition of alpha-glucosidase from mammalian (rat intestine), bacterial (Bacillus stearothermophilus), and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, baker's yeast). In vitro studies using the mammalian alpha-glucosidase from rat intestine showed the extracts to be more effective in inhibiting maltase when compared to the acarbose control. Since acarbose is inactive against both the bacterial and the yeast enzymes, the extracts were compared to 1-deoxynojirimycin. We found all extracts to be more potent against alpha-glucosidase derived from B. stearothermophilus than that against the enzymes from either baker's yeast or rat intestine. In an in vivo study using Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats, the acetone extract was found to be a potent inhibitor of alpha-glucosidase hydrolysis of maltose when compared to untreated control animals. Therefore, these results point to the inhibition of alpha-glucosidase as a possible mechanism by which this herb acts as an anti-diabetic agent.  相似文献   

6.
Recombinant barley high pI alpha-glucosidase was produced by high cell-density fermentation of Pichia pastoris expressing the cloned full-length gene. The gene was amplified from a genomic clone and exons (coding regions) were assembled by overlap PCR. The resulting cDNA was expressed under control of the alcohol oxidase 1 promoter using methanol induction of P. pastoris fermentation in a Biostat B 5 L reactor. Forty-two milligrams alpha-glucosidase was purified from 3.5 L culture in four steps applying an N-terminal hexa-histidine tag. The apparent molecular mass of the recombinant alpha-glucosidase was 100 kDa compared to 92 kDa of the native barley enzyme. The secreted recombinant enzyme was highly stabile during the 5-day fermentation and had significantly superior specific activity of the enzyme purified previously from barley malt. The kinetic parameters Km, Vmax, and kcat were determined to 1.7 mM, 139 nM x s(-1), and 85 s(-1) using maltose as substrate. This work presents the first production of fully active recombinant alpha-glucosidase of glycoside hydrolase family 31 from higher plants.  相似文献   

7.
The alpha-amylase (1, 4-alpha-d-glucanohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.1) and alpha-glucosidase (alpha-d-glucoside glucohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.20) secreted by Geobacillus thermodenitrificans HRO10 were purified to homogeneity (13.6-fold; 11.5% yield and 25.4-fold; 32.0% yield, respectively) through a series of steps. The molecular weight of alpha-amylase was 58kDa, as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The alpha-amylase activity on potato starch was optimal at pH 5.5 and 80 degrees Celsius. In the presence of Ca(2+), the alpha-amylase had residual activity of more than 92% after 1h of incubation at 70 degrees Celsius. The alpha-amylase did not lose any activity in the presence of phytate (a selective alpha-amylase inhibitor) at concentrations as high as 10mM, rather it retained 90% maximal activity after 1h of incubation at 70 degrees Celsius. EGTA and EDTA were strong inhibitory substances of the enzyme. The alpha-amylase hydrolyzed soluble starch at 80 degrees Celsius, with a K(m) of 3.05mgml(-1) and a V(max) of 7.35Uml(-1). The molecular weight of alpha-glucosidase was approximately 45kDa, as determined by SDS-PAGE. The enzyme activity was optimal at pH 6.5-7.5 and 55 degrees Celsius. Phytate did not inhibit G. thermodenitrificans HRO10 alpha-glucosidase activity, whereas pCMB was a potent inhibitor of the enzyme. The alpha-glucosidase exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics with maltose at 55 degrees Celsius (K(m): 17mM; V(max): 23micromolmin(-1)mg(-1)). Thin-layer chromatography studies with G. thermodenitrificans HRO10 alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase showed an excellent synergistic action and did not reveal any transglycosylation catalyzed reaction by the alpha-glucosidase.  相似文献   

8.
Aspergillus nidulans possessed an alpha-glucosidase with strong transglycosylation activity. The enzyme, designated alpha-glucosidase B (AgdB), was purified and characterized. AgdB was a heterodimeric protein comprising 74- and 55-kDa subunits and catalyzed hydrolysis of maltose along with formation of isomaltose and panose. Approximately 50% of maltose was converted to isomaltose, panose, and other minor transglycosylation products by AgdB, even at low maltose concentrations. The agdB gene was cloned and sequenced. The gene comprised 3,055 bp, interrupted by three short introns, and encoded a polypeptide of 955 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence contained the chemically determined N-terminal and internal amino acid sequences of the 74- and 55-kDa subunits. This implies that AgdB is synthesized as a single polypeptide precursor. AgdB showed low but overall sequence homology to alpha-glucosidases of glycosyl hydrolase family 31. However, AgdB was phylogenetically distinct from any other alpha-glucosidases. We propose here that AgdB is a novel alpha-glucosidase with unusually strong transglycosylation activity.  相似文献   

9.
W Klein  W Boos 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(6):1682-1686
Trehalose transport in Escherichia coli after growth at low osmolarity is mediated by enzyme IITre of the phosphotransferase system (W. Boos, U. Ehmann, H. Forkl, W. Klein, M. Rimmele, and P. Postma, J. Bacteriol. 172:3450-3461, 1990). The apparent Km (16 microM) of trehalose uptake is low. Since trehalose is a good source of carbon and the apparent affinity of the uptake system is high, it was surprising that the disaccharide trehalose [O-alpha-D-glucosyl(1-1)-alpha-D-glucoside] has no problems diffusing through the outer membrane at high enough rates to allow full growth, particularly at low substrate concentrations. Here we show that induction of the maltose regulon is required for efficient utilization of trehalose. malT mutants that lack expression of all maltose genes, as well as lamB mutants that lack only the lambda receptor (maltoporin), still grow on trehalose at the usual high (10 mM) trehalose concentrations in agar plates, but they exhibit the half-maximal rate of trehalose uptake at concentrations that are 50-fold higher than in the wild-type (malT+) strain. The maltose system is induced by trehalose to about 30% of the fully induced level reached when grown in the presence of maltose in a malT+ strain or when grown on glycerol in a maltose-constitutive strain [malT(Con)]. The 30% level of maximal expression is sufficient for maximal trehalose utilization, since there is no difference in the concentration of trehalose required for the half-maximal rate of uptake in trehalose-grown strains with the wild-type gene (malT+) or with strains constitutive for the maltose system [malT(Con)]. In contrast, when the expression of the lambda receptor is reduced to less than 20% of the maximal level, trehalose uptake becomes less efficient. Induction of the maltose system by trehalose requires metabolism of trehalose. Mutants lacking amylotrehalase, the key enzyme in trehalose utilization, accumulate trehalose but do not induce the maltose system.  相似文献   

10.
alpha-Glucosidases (EC 3.2.1.20) are recognized as important in starch degradation during cereal seed germination. A barley (Hordeum vulgare) alpha-glucosidase expressed in Pichia pastoris was cultured in flasks; however, the yield was low necessitating the use of multiple batches. Problems arose because of significant variation between batches. We solved these problems by switching to a fermentation system producing a sufficient quantity of a uniform sample. Here we present the expression and purification of a recombinant alpha-glucosidase grown under fermentation conditions. We also present the results of experiments to characterize the thermostability, pH optimum, and substrate specificity of the recombinant enzyme. The optimal pH for the hydrolysis of maltose by recombinant alpha-glucosidase is between 3.5 and 4.5. The thermostability of recombinant alpha-glucosidase was determined at pH 4, where activity is optimal, and at pH 5 and 6, which better mimic the conditions used to convert barley starch to fermentable sugars during industrial processing. The results indicate the enzyme is most thermolabile at pH 4. However, the enzyme is protected from heat inactivation at pH 4 by high concentrations of sucrose. The purified enzyme hydrolyzed maltose three times more rapidly than nigerose and 20 times more rapidly than trehalose and isomaltose. Concentrations of maltose greater than 20 mM inhibited maltose hydrolysis. This is the first report of substrate inhibition for any alpha-glucosidase. The results indicate that the only significant difference between the recombinant enzyme and the previously characterized barley isoforms was the V(max) for maltose hydrolysis.  相似文献   

11.
J P Chambers  J C Williams 《Enzyme》1983,29(2):109-119
An alpha-glucosidase maximally active at acid pH has been purified from human heart some 2,600-fold and its properties compared to a purified alpha-glucosidase from human liver. Molecular weight was evaluated using three different analytical procedures. The effect of various cations was determined. Thermal lability was evaluated using three different substrates. Affinity and hydrolysis velocity constants for maltose, glycogen and 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-D-glucose were determined for both preparations at optimal hydrogen ion concentration. Inhibition studies were carried out using the disaccharide turanose. From this study, we conclude there are no significant differences in molecular weight or kinetic properties between the cardiac and hepatic alpha-glucosidase enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
The microbial production of alpha-amylase from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens was investigated. The microorganism was grown using media containing glucose or maltose at 37 degrees C and under aerobic conditions in a 16-L fermentor. The alpha-amylase synthesis from maltose was not found to be inducible but was found to be subject to catabolite repression. The maltose uptake rate was observed to be the rate-limiting step compared to the conversion rate of maltose to glucose by intracellular alpha-glucosidase. The alpha-amylase activity achieved with maltose as a substrate was higher than that achieved with glucose. A slower growth rate and a higher cell density were obtained with maltose. The enzyme production pattern depended upon the nutrient composition of the medium.  相似文献   

13.
Conduritol B epoxide is an active-site-directed inhibitor of some glucosidases. The inactivation of alpha-glucosidase (alpha-D-glucoside glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.20) from Monascus ruber by conduritol B epoxide is irreversible and first-order with respect to time and inhibitor concentration. The inactivation is prevented by the presence of the substrate maltose. The pH-dependence of Vmax for maltose indicated the participation of two dissociating groups with pK values of 4.1 and 5.8 in the enzyme-substrate complex. Modification of the alpha-glucosidase with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide hydrochloride led to loss of activity, which suggests that a carboxyl group(s) is located at the active site of alpha-glucosidase.  相似文献   

14.
1. Albumin activates human liver acid alpha-glucosidase (alpha-D-glucoside hydrolase, EC 3.2.1.20). From the Arrhenius plot, pH-dependence and Lineweaver-Burk plots it can be concluded that this activation is not only due to stabilisation of the enzyme, but also influences the enzymatic activity. It is proposed that for optimal functioning human liver acid alpha-glucosidase needs a protein environment. 2. Glycogen has a competitive inhibitory effect on the hydrolysis of 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside, in contrast to maltose which exhibits a non-competitive type of inhibition. It is concluded that two catalytic sites exist, one for glycogen and one for maltose, while both sites influence each other. With glycogen as substrate a break in the Arrhenius plot is found. This is not the case when maltose is used as substrate. 3. The effect of antibody raised against human liver acid alpha-glucosidase on the activity of human liver acid alpha-glucosidase is studied. No corss-reacting material could be demonstrated in the liver of a patient with glycogen storage disease Type II (M. Pompe, acid alpha-glucosidase deficiency).  相似文献   

15.
The substrate specificity of acid α-glucosidase from rabbit muscle   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. Acid alpha-glucosidase was purified 3500-fold from rabbit muscle. 2. The enzyme was activated by cations, the degree of activation varying with the substrate. Enzyme action on glycogen was most strongly activated and activation was apparently of a non-competitive type. With rabbit liver glycogen as substrate, the relative V(max.) increased 15-fold, accompanied by an increase in K(m) from 8.3 to 68.6mm-chain end over the cation range 2-200mm-Na(+) at pH4.5. Action on maltose was only moderately activated (1.3-fold, non-competitively) and action on maltotriose was marginally and competitively inhibited. 3. The pH optimum at 2mm-Na(+) was 4.5 (maltose) and 5.1 (glycogen). Cation activation of enzyme action on glycogen was markedly pH-dependent. At 200mm-Na(+), the pH optimum was 4.8 and activity was maximally stimulated in the range pH4.5-3.3. 4. Glucosidase action on maltosaccharides was associated with pronounced substrate inhibition at concentrations exceeding 5mm. Of the maltosaccharides tested, the enzyme showed a preference for p-nitrophenyl alpha-maltoside (K(m) 1.2mm) and maltotriose (K(m) 1.8mm). The extrapolated K(m) for enzyme action on maltose was 3.7mm. 5. The macromolecular polysaccharide substrate glycogen differed from linear maltosaccharide substrates in the kinetics of its interaction with the enzyme. Activity was markedly dependent on pH, cation concentration and polysaccharide structure. There was no substrate inhibition. 6. The enzyme exhibited constitutive alpha-1,6-glucanohydrolase activity. The K(m) for panose was 20mm. 7. The enzyme catalysed the total conversion of glycogen into glucose. The hydrolysis of alpha-1,6-linkages was apparently rate-limiting during the hydrolysis of glycogen. 8. Enzyme action on glycogen and maltose released the alpha-anomer of d-glucose. 9. The results are discussed in terms of the physiological role of acid alpha-glucosidase in lysosomal glycogen catabolism.  相似文献   

16.
17.
We have previously partially purified, characterized, and chromosomally mapped a human isozyme of alpha-glucosidase which is active at neutral pH. This isozyme appears as a doublet of enzyme activity on native gel electrophoresis and was termed neutral alpha-glucosidase AB. We now report genetic and biochemical evidence that neutral alpha-glucosidase AB is synonymous with the glycoprotein processing enzyme glucosidase II. We have found that a mutant mouse lymphoma line which is deficient in glucosidase II is also deficient in neutral alpha-glucosidase AB, as defined electrophoretically and quantitatively (less than 0.5% of parental). In contrast, both mutant and parental cell lines exhibited several lysosomal hydrolases which are processed by glucosidase II. We have also further purified the human neutral alpha-glucosidase A component of neutral alpha-glucosidase AB 740-fold from placenta in order to compare its biochemical properties with those described for rat liver and pig kidney glucosidase II. Both glucosidase II and neutral alpha-glucosidase AB are high-molecular mass (greater than 200,000 dalton) anionic glycoproteins which bind to concanavalin A, have a broad pH optima (5.5-8.5), and have a similar Km for maltose (4.8 versus 2.1 mM) and the artificial substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (35 versus 19 microM). Similar to human neutral alpha-glucosidase AB, purified rat glucosidase II migrates as a doublet of enzyme activity on native gel electrophoresis. Although rat glucosidase II has been reported to have a subunit size of 67 kDa, pig glucosidase II has been found to have a subunit size of 100 kDa, like the 98-kDa major protein in purified human neutral alpha-glucosidase A. Although we have not demonstrated that neutral alpha-glucosidase AB is microsomal nor that it hydrolyzes the natural substrate of glucosidase II, we believe that the genetic evidence is compelling for and the biochemical data consistent with the hypothesis that neutral alpha-glucosidase AB and glucosidase II are synonymous. These and previous results would localize glucosidase II to the long arm of human chromosome II.  相似文献   

18.
K B Li  K Y Chan 《Applied microbiology》1983,46(6):1380-1387
Lactobacillus acidophilus IFO 3532 was found to produce only intracellular alpha-glucosidase (alpha-D-glucoside glucohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.20). Maximum enzyme production was obtained in a medium containing 2% maltose as inducer at 37 degrees C and at an initial pH of 6.5. The enzyme was formed in the cytoplasm and accumulated as a large pool during the logarithmic growth phase. Enzyme production was strongly inhibited by 4 microM CuSO4, 40 microM CoCl2, and beef extract; MnSO4 and the presence of proteose peptone and yeast extract in the medium greatly enhanced enzyme production. A 16.6-fold purification of alpha-glucosidase was achieved by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The enzyme showed high specificity for maltose. The Km for alpha-p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside was 11.5 mM, and the Vmax for alpha-p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside hydrolysis was 12.99 mumol/min per mg of protein. The optimal pH and temperature for enzyme activity were 5.0 and 37 degrees C, respectively. The enzyme activity was inhibited by Hg2+, Cu2+, Ni2+, Zn2+, Ca2+, Co2+, urea, rose bengal, and 2-iodoacetamide, whereas Mn2+, Mg2+, L-cysteine, L-histidine, Tris, and EDTA stimulated enzyme activity. Transglucosylase activity was present in the partially purified enzyme, and isomaltose was the only glucosyltransferase product. Amylase activity in the purified preparation was relatively weak, and no isomaltase activity was detected.  相似文献   

19.
Maltose metabolism of Pseudomonas fluorescens.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Pseudomonas fluorescens W uses maltose exclusively by hydrolyzing it to glucose via an inducible alpha-glucosidase (alpha-D-glucoside glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.20). No evidence for phosphorolytic cleavage or oxidation to maltobionic acid was found in this organism. The alpha-glucosidase was totally intracellular and was most active at pH of 7.0. Induction occurred when cells were incubated with maltotriose or maltose. Induction was rapid and easily detectable within the first 5 min after the addition of the inducer. Glucose and its derivatives did not repress induction. Cells growing on DL-alanine or succinate plus maltose exhibited lower levels of alpha-glucosidase than those grown on maltose alone or maltose plus glucose. Induction required both messenger ribonucleic acid and protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The synthesis of the glycoprotein enzymes, invertase and acid phosphatase, by protoplasts of Saccharomyces mutant 1016, is inhibited by 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-dG) after a 20- to 30-min lag period under conditions (external sugar to 2-dG ratio of 40:1) which cause only a slight decrease in total protein synthesis. Formation of one intracellular enzyme, alpha-glucosidase, is also sensitive, but production of another, alkaline phosphatase, is unaffected. A nonmetabolized glucose analogue, 6-deoxy-d-glucose, had no inhibitory effect. The total uptake of external fructose and maltose was decreased by 2-dG after a lag period of about the same duration as that before the inhibition of synthesis of enzymes or of mannan and glucan; during this time 2-dG was taken up by the protoplasts and accumulated primarily as 2-dG-6-phosphate (2-dG-6-P). Studies in vitro showed that 2-dG-6-P inhibits both yeast phosphoglucose isomerase and phosphomannose isomerase. The intracellular levels of the 6-phosphates of glucose, fructose, and mannose did not increase in the presence of 2-dG. We suggest that the high internal level of 2-dG-6-P blocks synthesis of the cell wall polysaccharides and glycoproteins in two ways. It directly inhibits the conversion of fructose-6-P to glucose-6-P and to mannose-6-P. At the same time, it restricts the transport of fructose and maltose into the cell; however, the continuing limited uptake of the sugars still provides sufficient energy for protein synthesis. The cessation of alpha-glucosidase synthesis is probably a result of depletion of the internal pool of maltose (the inducer). Our findings support the suggestion that restriction of synthesis of the carbohydrate moiety of glycoproteins reduces formation of the active enzyme.  相似文献   

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