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1.
One endopolygalacturonase from Fusarium moniliforme was purified from the culture broth of a transformed strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Its kinetic parameters and mode of action were studied on galacturonic acid oligomers and homogalacturonan. The dimer was not a substrate for the enzyme. The enzyme was shown to follow Michaelis–Menten behaviour towards the other substrates tested. Affinity and maximum rate of hydrolysis increased with increasing chain length, up to the hexamer or heptamer, for which Vmax was in the same range as with homogalacturonan. The enzyme was demonstrated to have a multi-chain attack mode of action and its active site included five subsites ranging from −3 to +2. The final products of hydrolysis of homogalacturonan were the monomer and the dimer of galacturonic acid.  相似文献   

2.
The mode of action of the endopolygalacturonase from Fusarium moniliforme was studied towards a series of pectins with different amounts and distribution patterns of methyl-ester groups. The enzyme hydrolysed the linkages between two galacturonic acid residues according to a multi-chain attack mechanism, at least at the early stage of the reaction. The final percentage of hydrolysis decreased with increasing the degree of methylation. The distribution pattern of the methyl groups affected the rate of hydrolysis as well as the final percentage of hydrolysis, a blockwise distribution being more favourable than a random one. The final products, as analysed by mass spectrometry, included methyl-esterified oligogalacturonates. The detailed analysis of the structure of the oligomers showed that the enzyme was able to accommodate methylated galacturonic acid in its active site, but that methyl-esterification negatively affected the affinity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Two exo-polygalacturonases (EC 3.2.1.67) were purified from a commercial Aspergillus niger enzyme preparation by ammonium sulfate precipitation, preparative electrofocusing, anion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatographies. The enzymes had molar masses of 82 kDa (exo-PG1) and 56 kDa (exo-PG2). Exo-PG1 was stable over wider pH and temperature ranges than exo-PG2. Addition of 0.01 mM HgCl(2) increased the exo-PG2 activity 3.4 times but did not affect exo-PG1. Analysis of the reaction products of (reduced) pentagalacturonate by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography revealed that both enzymes split the substrate from the non-reducing end in a multi-chain attack mode. Exo-PG1 had a broad specificity towards oligogalacturonates with different degrees of polymerisation, while digalacturonate was the most favorable substrate for exo-PG2. Both enzymes degraded xylogalacturonan from pea hull in an exo manner to produce galacturonic acid and Xyl-GalA disaccharide, as identified by electrospray ionization-ion trap mass spectrometry (ESI-ITMS). Moreover, exo-PGs split acetylated homogalacturonan in an exo manner, producing galacturonic acid and acetylated galacturonic acid, as shown by ESI-ITMS.  相似文献   

4.
Some properties of the endo-polygalacturonase from Trichosporon penicillatum were investigated. The enzyme showed the highest activity around pH 5.0 and was stable at this pH up to 50°C. The enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of galacturonic acid oligomers as well as its polymer. The pentamer was degraded to a trimer and a dimer, the tetramer to a trimer and a monomer, and the trimer to a dimer and a monomer, respectively, whereas the dimer was not degraded. The kinetic constant Vmax and Km values changed with the substrate chain-length; the Km values tended to decrease, whereas the Vmax values tended to increase with increasing chain-length of the substrate. The amino acid residue participating in the active site of the enzyme was studied and it was found to be histidine.  相似文献   

5.
Endopolygalacturonase from Fusarium moniliforme was used to degrade acetylated homogalacturonan previously prepared from sugar beet pulp. The initial velocity and the final percentage of hydrolysis decreased very rapidly with increasing degree of acetylation, showing that acetyl substitution markedly affected the enzymatic activity. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry was used to analyse the reaction products and to show acetyl groups on the oligogalacturonates. The results demonstrated that the enzyme was able to accommodate acetyl groups in its active site cleft. The influence of acetyl groups on the mode of action of the enzyme was discussed and compared to the influence of methyl groups.  相似文献   

6.
A novel rhamnogalacturonase (RGase) acting on an acetylated substrate was detected in the commercial preparation Driselase, an enzymatic mixture derived from the basidiomycete Irpex lacteus. The activity was isolated by hydrophobic interaction chromatography, gel filtration, and preparative isoelectric focusing, resulting in the isolation of five different rhamnogalacturonan hydrolases exhibiting various isoelectric points from 6.2 to 7.7. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry analyses after trypsin cleavage of the five fractions revealed that the five rhamnogalacturonases have a molar mass of 55 kDa without any divergences in the identified peptides. The RGase with a pI of 7.2 exhibited a pH optimum between 4.5 and 5 and a temperature optimum between 40°C and 50°C. Its mode of action was analyzed by mass spectrometry of the oligosaccharides produced after hydrolysis of acetylated and nonacetylated rhamnogalacturonan. Oligomers esterified by an acetyl group on the reducing galacturonic acid residue or fully acetylated were detected in the hydrolysate showing that the novel enzyme is able to bind acetylated galacturonic acid in its active site.  相似文献   

7.
A membrane preparation from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cells contains at least one enzyme that is capable of transferring the methyl group from S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM) to the C6 carboxyl of homogalacturonan present in the membranes. This enzyme is named homogalacturonan-methyltransferase (HGA-MT) to distinguish it from methyltransferases that catalyze methyletherification of the pectic polysaccharides rhamnogalacturonan I or rhamnogalacturonan II. A trichloroacetic acid precipitation assay was used to measure HGA-MT activity, because published procedures to recover pectic polysaccharides via ethanol or chloroform:methanol precipitation lead to high and variable background radioactivity in the product pellet. Attempts to reduce the incorporation of the 14C-methyl group from SAM into pectin by the addition of the alternative methyl donor 5-methyltetrahydrofolate were unsuccessful, supporting the role of SAM as the authentic methyl donor for HGA-MT. The pH optimum for HGA-MT in membranes was 7.8, the apparent Michaelis constant for SAM was 38 μm, and the maximum initial velocity was 0.81 pkat mg−1 protein. At least 59% of the radiolabeled product was judged to be methylesterified homogalacturonan, based on the release of radioactivity from the product after a mild base treatment and via enzymatic hydrolysis by a purified pectin methylesterase. The released radioactivity eluted with a retention time identical to that of methanol upon fractionation over an organic acid column. Cleavage of the radiolabeled product by endopolygalacturonase into fragments that migrated as small oligomers of HGA during thin-layer chromatography, and the fact that HGA-MT activity in the membranes is stimulated by uridine 5′-diphosphate galacturonic acid, a substrate for HGA synthesis, confirms that the bulk of the product recovered from tobacco membranes incubated with SAM is methylesterified HGA.  相似文献   

8.
A method to determine the amount of galacturonic acid in blocksequence (BS) in pectin homogalacturonan (HG) is described. The method is based on a combination of endopolygalacturonase II (endo-PG II) and exopolygalacturonase (exo-PG) digestion followed by quantification of the liberated galacturonic acid monomer. The amount of monomers released is directly related to the amount of non-esterified galacturonic acid units located between two other non-esterified galacturonic acids units on the HG chain. The amount released for exo-PG digestion only corresponds to the BS located at the non-reducing end of the polymer. The difference between total- and exo-BS was calculated to be the amount of endo-BS located either within or on the reducing end of the HG. Three series of model pectins obtained by de-esterification of a high-ester pectin with either plant pectin methyl-esterase (p-PME, P-series), fungal pectin methyl-esterase (f-PME, F-series) and chemical de-esterification using base (B-series) were analysed and compared with a fully de-esterified pectic acid sample obtained from the same raw material. Clear differences for the increase of the amounts of blocksequence could be seen between de-esterification of the P- and F-series samples supporting a blockwise and a homogenous de-esterification mechanism, respectively. f-PME and base treatment showed only minor differences in the increase of galacturonic acid units in BS, despite differences seen in their methyl-esterification pattern. Differences between the amounts of galacturonic acid located in exo- and endo-BS, provided evidence for the need of a certain start side or blocklength for p-PME to de-esterify blockwise.  相似文献   

9.
Carrot arabinogalactan proteins are interlinked with pectins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Cell wall extracts from a carrot cell culture and tap roots were obtained by sequential extraction with water, EDTA buffer solution and cold sodium hydroxide solution. Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) were isolated from the extracts and from the medium of the cell culture and analysed for their molecular weight distribution and carbohydrate composition. Copper ions were used to separate the Yariv positive fractions into AGP fractions with a high and a low level of galacturonic acid (GalA). The GalA rich AGP fractions were incubated with pectin methylesterase and polygalacturonase. This enzyme incubation released GalA fragments from the AGP fractions as monitored by HPAEC and MALDI-TOF MS. At least part of carrot AGPs from the medium and cell walls may be covalently linked to pectin containing a homogalacturonan structural element.  相似文献   

10.
《Fungal biology》2014,118(5-6):507-515
Lignocellulose is the major component of plant cell walls and it represents a great source of renewable organic matter. One of lignocellulose constituents is pectin. Pectin is composed of two basic structures: a ‘smooth’ region and a ‘hairy’ region. The ‘smooth’ region (homogalacturonan) is a linear polymer of galacturonic acid residues with α-(1→4) linkages, substituted by methyl and acetyl residues. The ‘hairy’ region is more complex, containing xylogalacturonan and rhamnogalacturonans I and II. Among the enzymes which degrade pectin (pectinases) is pectin lyase (E.C. 4.2.2.10). This enzyme acts on highly esterified homogalacturonan, catalysing the cleavage of α-(1→4) glycosidic bonds between methoxylated residues of galacturonic acid by means of β-elimination, with the formation of 4,5-unsaturated products. In this work, the gene and cDNA of a pectin lyase from Penicillium purpurogenum have been sequenced, and the cDNA has been expressed in Pichia pastoris. The gene is 1334 pb long, has three introns and codes for a protein of 376 amino acid residues. The recombinant enzyme was purified to homogeneity and characterized. Pectin lyase has a molecular mass of 45 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE. It is active on highly esterified pectin, and decreases 40 % the viscosity of pectin with a degree of esterification ≥85 %. The enzyme showed no activity on polygalacturonic acid and pectin from citrus fruit 8 % esterified. The optimum pH and temperature for the recombinant enzyme are 6.0 and 50 °C, respectively, and it is stable up to 50 °C when exposed for 3 h. A purified pectin lyase may be useful in biotechnological applications such as the food industry where the liberation of toxic methanol in pectin degradation should be avoided.  相似文献   

11.
The hemibiotrophic basidiomycete fungus Moniliophthora perniciosa, the causal agent of Witches’ broom disease (WBD) in cacao, is able to grow on methanol as the sole carbon source. In plants, one of the main sources of methanol is the pectin present in the structure of cell walls. Pectin is composed of highly methylesterified chains of galacturonic acid. The hydrolysis between the methyl radicals and galacturonic acid in esterified pectin, mediated by a pectin methylesterase (PME), releases methanol, which may be decomposed by a methanol oxidase (MOX). The analysis of the M. pernciosa genome revealed putative mox and pme genes. Real-time quantitative RT-PCR performed with RNA from mycelia grown in the presence of methanol or pectin as the sole carbon source and with RNA from infected cacao seedlings in different stages of the progression of WBD indicate that the two genes are coregulated, suggesting that the fungus may be metabolizing the methanol released from pectin. Moreover, immunolocalization of homogalacturonan, the main pectic domain that constitutes the primary cell wall matrix, shows a reduction in the level of pectin methyl esterification in infected cacao seedlings. Although MOX has been classically classified as a peroxisomal enzyme, M. perniciosa presents an extracellular methanol oxidase. Its activity was detected in the fungus culture supernatants, and mass spectrometry analysis indicated the presence of this enzyme in the fungus secretome. Because M. pernciosa possesses all genes classically related to methanol metabolism, we propose a peroxisome-independent model for the utilization of methanol by this fungus, which begins with the extracellular oxidation of methanol derived from the demethylation of pectin and finishes in the cytosol.  相似文献   

12.
A new enzyme, rhamnogalacturonan (RG) α-d-galactopyranosyluronohydrolase (RG-galacturonohydrolase), able to release a galacturonic acid residue from the nonreducing end of RG chains but not from homogalacturonan, was purified from an Aspergillus aculeatus enzyme preparation. RG-galacturonohydrolase acted with inversion of anomeric configuration, initially releasing β-d-galactopyranosyluronic acid. The enzyme cleaved smaller RG substrates with the highest catalytic efficiency. A Michaelis constant of 85 μm and a maximum reaction rate of 160 units mg−1 was found toward a linear RG fragment with a degree of polymerization of 6. RG-galacturonohydrolase had a molecular mass of 66 kD, an isoelectric point of 5.12, a pH optimum of 4.0, and a temperature optimum of 50°C. The enzyme was most stable between pH 3.0 and 6.0 (for 24 h at 40°C) and up to 60°C (for 3 h).  相似文献   

13.
Uptake of [14C]galacturonic acid in Erwinia chrysanthemi was found to be stimulated during growth on pectin and its degradation products, saturated digalacturonic acid and galacturonic acid. Cells isolated from macerated potato tissue also showed increased levels of uptake activity for this molecule compared with those showed by glycerol-grown cells. Uptake was found to be an active process, and it displayed saturation kinetics. An Escherichia coli galacturonic acid transport mutant harboring the E. chrysanthemi exuT gene(s) for galacturonic acid uptake was able to transport galacturonic acid but unable to take up the dimer [3H]digalacturonic acid.  相似文献   

14.
Polygalacturonate 4-α-galacturonosyltransferase (PGA-GalAT), the glycosyltransferase that synthesizes the plant cell wall pectic polysaccharide homogalacturonan, has previously been identified and partially characterized in tobacco membranes. Membrane bound PGA-GalAT catalyzes the transfer of galacturonic acid from UDP-galacturonic acid (UDP-GalA) onto an endogenous acceptor to produce polymeric homogalacturonan ( Doong et al. (1995) Plant Physiol. 109, 141 –152). It is shown here that a galacturonosyltransferase is solubilized from tobacco membranes with a HEPES buffer, pH 6.8, containing 40 mM CHAPS and 2 mM EDTA. The solubilized galacturonosyltransferase was identified as putative PGA-GalAT because it transfered [14C]GalA from UDP-[14C]GalA onto exogenous homogalacturonan acceptors with degrees of polymerization (DP) of ≥ 10. Maximal solubilized PGA-GalAT activity in the presence of 0.9 μM UDP-[14C]GalA required approximately 125 μM exogenous homogalacturonan acceptor [e.g. oligogalacturonide (OGA) of DP 15]. Solubilized PGA-GalAT was active over a broad pH range of 6.3–7.8, and had an apparent Km for UDP-GalA of 37 μM and a Vmax of 290 pmol min–1 mg–1 protein. Approximately 44% of the PGA-GalAT activity in detergent-dispersed membranes, corresponding to 21% of the PGA-GalAT activity in intact membranes, was solubilized. PGA-GalAT solubilized with 40 mM CHAPS was shown, by exopolygalacturonase treatment in combination with size exclusion and high performance anion exchange chromatographies, to add a single α-1,4-linked galacturonic acid residue onto an OGA exogenous acceptor of DP 15 to yield an OGA product of DP 16. The significance of the apparent lack of processivity of the solubilized PGA-GalAT is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Production of polygalacturonases and pectinases from Sclerotinia sclerotiorum was induced in vitro by galacturonic acid. The inductive effect of galacturonic acid was abolished by the presence of glucose, leading to a basal enzyme production. Zymograms of extracellular enzymes showed that galacturonic acid induced the synthesis of six polygalacturonase and one pectin-methylesterase isoforms. Immunoblotting revealed that an exo-polygalacturonase and an exo-polymethylgalacturonase were secreted in all conditions. They are not glucose repressed and not regulated by galacturonic acid. These constitutive enzymes provide the pathogen with the inherent ability to release galacturonic acid from plant cell walls and to trigger inducible enzyme synthesis. Received: 1 December 1995 / Accepted: 3 January 1996  相似文献   

16.
Okra pods are commonly used in Asia as a vegetable, food ingredient, as well as a traditional medicine for many different purposes; for example, as diuretic agent, for treatment of dental diseases and to reduce/prevent gastric irritations. The healthy properties are suggested to originate from the high polysaccharide content of okra pods, resulting in a highly viscous solution with a slimy appearance when okra is extracted with water. In this study, we present a structural characterisation of all major cell wall polysaccharides originating from okra pods. The sequential extraction of okra cell wall material yielded fractions of soluble solids extractable using hot buffer (HBSS), chelating agent (CHSS), dilute alkaline (DASS) and concentrated alkaline (CASS). The HBSS fraction was shown to be rich in galactose, rhamnose and galacturonic acid in the ratio 1.3:1:1.3. The degree of acetylation is relatively high (DA = 58) while the degree of methyl esterification is relatively low (DM = 24). The CHSS fraction contained much higher levels of methyl esterified galacturonic acid residues (63% galacturonic acid; DM = 48) in addition to minor amounts of rhamnose and galactose. The ratio of galactose to rhamnose to galacturonic acid was 1.3:1.0:1.3 and 4.5:1.0:1.2 for HBSS and CHSS, respectively. These results indicated that the HBSS and CHSS fractions contain rhamnogalacturonan type I next to homogalacturonan, while the latter is more prevailing in CHSS. Also the DASS fraction is characterised by high amounts of rhamnose, galactose, galacturonic acid and some arabinose, indicating that rhamnogalacturonan I elements with longer arabinose- and galactose-rich side chains were part of this fraction. Partial digestion of HBSS and CHSS by pectin methyl esterase and polygalacturonase resulted in a fraction with a lower Mw and lower viscosity in solution. These samples were subjected to NMR analysis, which indicated that, in contrast to known RG I structure, the acetyl groups in HBSS are not located on the galacturonic acid residues, while for CHSS only part of the acetyl groups are located on the RG I galacturonic acid residues. The CASS fraction consisted of XXXG-type xyloglucan and 4-methylglucuronoxylan as shown by their sugar (linkage) composition and enzymatic digestion.  相似文献   

17.
Individual pectin polymers and complexes, isolated from the pericarp of unripe tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum var. Rutgers), were subjected to a mild acid hydrolysis and visualised and characterised by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The AFM images confirm earlier studies showing that individual pectic polysaccharides often possess long branches. The AFM data have been used to construct size and molecular weight distributions for the single molecules and complexes, from which the calculated number-average and weight-average molecular weights can then be compared directly with the published literature data on the rheology of bulk samples. Loss of the neutral sugars arabinose, galactose and rhamnose from the pectin samples does not significantly alter either the size or the branching density of the individual polymers, but is reflected in a breakdown of the complexes. Significant loss of galacturonic acid at long hydrolysis times was found to be accompanied by changes in the size and branching of the single polymers and further breakdown of the complexes. The results suggest that rhamnose, arabinose and galactose are not the major components of the individual polymers but are, instead, confined to the complexes. The polysaccharides represent a previously unrecognised branched homogalacturonan with a minimum mean size some three times larger than that previously reported. The complexes consist of homogalacturonans (HGs) held together by rhamnogalacturonan I (RG-I) regions. Comparison of the rate of depolymerisation of the homogalacturonans and complexes with the published data on changes in the intrinsic viscosity of bulk pectin samples, subjected to similar acid hydrolysis, suggests that the different rates of depolymerisation of RG-I and HG contribute separately to the observed changes in intrinsic viscosity during acid hydrolysis. Thus data obtained using a single molecule microscopy technique provides new insights into the behaviour in the bulk.  相似文献   

18.
A washed carrot substrate, prepared with high yields and easy handling properties, was found to be a suitable substrate for studying cellulolytic and pectinolytic degradation processes. A cellulase from Trichoderma reesei, and Rohament P, a macerating enzyme from Aspergillus alleaceus in endopolygalacturonase, degraded the washed carrot substrate to an extent of 60%. With the combined action of both enzymes, degradation was more than 80%. Simultaneous action of both enzymes was more efficient than their sequential use. The effect of temperature, pH, incubation time, enzyme concentration, and substrate concentration on the degradation by the single enzymes and their mixture were studied. Gas chromatographic sugar analysis revealed that Rohament P liberated glucose, arabinose, and galactose in the low-molecular-weight fraction obtained by ultrafiltration, in addition to high amounts of galacturonic acid. These carbohydrates were also found in the high-molecular-weight fraction (retentate) together with rhamnose and mannose. Cellulase BC released mainly glucose, although galacturonic acid, arabinose, xylose, and mannose were also detected both in the ultrafiltrate and retentate. Morphologically, during Rohament P degradation of the washed carrot substrate, damaged tissues and disintegrated cells were seen, whereas on cellulase BC action mainly disintegrated cell walls were observed.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism of action of purified apple pectin methylesterase on pectin (degree of methoxylation: DM 75) and methoxylated homogalacturonans (DM 70 and 90) was studied at pH 7.0 (optimal pH of the enzyme) and at pH 4.5 (close to the pH of apple juice). Different interchain distributions of the free carboxyl groups were obtained at pH 7.0 and 4.5: high-performance ion exchange chromatography indicated a typical single chain mechanism at pH 7.0, but a mechanism differing from the single and multiple chain ones at pH 4.5. However, the same intrachain distribution of the newly demethoxylated galacturonic acid residues was observed for both pHs by 1H NMR. The high content of consecutive de-esterified or consecutive esterified galacturonic acid residues suggested that apple PME acted with a multiple attack mechanism on the pectic substrate. The degree of multiple attack of the enzyme was greater than or equal to 10-11.  相似文献   

20.
A bacterium identified as Pseudomonas sp. was found to be a better source of oligogalacturonide transeliminase (OGTE) than Erwinia aroideae.

The OGTE of Pseudomonas sp. differed from that of Erwinia aroideae in the following respects: (1) The activity was maximal with tetramer and followed by trimer, dimer and polymers. (2) The OGTE of Pseudomonas sp. degraded the saturated uronides as rapidly as, or a little more rapidly than, the corresponding unsaturated uronides. (3) Calcium ion stimulated considerably the OGTE activity.

Both oxidized and reduced acid-soluble pectic acids were resistant to the action of the OGTE.

With the purified enzyme preparation, 4-deoxy-5-keto-d-glucuronic acid was the end product of the OGTE action on oligo- and polygalacturonides. 4,5-Unsaturated galacturonic acid is probably the intermediate in the formation of 4-deoxy-5-keto-d-glucuronic acid.  相似文献   

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