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1.
An aromatic amino acid aminotransferase (aromAT) was purified over 33 000-fold from the shoots and primary leaves of mung beans (Vigna radiata L. Wilczek). The enzyme was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration and anion exchange followed by fast protein liquid chromatography using Mono Q and Phenylsuperose. The relative amino transferase activities using the most active amino acid substrates were: tryptophan 100, tyrosine 83 and phenylalanine 75, withK m values of 0.095, 0.08 and 0.07 mM, respectively. The enzyme was able to use 2-oxoglutarate, oxaloacetate and pyruvate as oxo acid substrates at relative activities of 100, 128 and 116 andK m values of 0.65, 0.25 and 0.24 mM, respectively. In addition to the aromatic amino acids the enzyme was able to transaminate alanine, arginine, aspartate, leucine and lysine to a lesser extent. The reverse reactions between glutamate and the oxo acids indolepyruvate and hydroxyphenylpyruvate occurred at 30 and 40% of the forward reactions of tryptophan and tyrosine, withK m, values of 0.1 and 0.8 mM, respectively. The enzyme was not inhibited by indoleacetic acid, although -naphthaleneacetic acid did inhibit slightly. Addition of the cofactor pyridoxal phosphate only slightly increased the activity of the purified enzyme. The aromAT had a molecular weight of 55–59 kDa. The possible role of the aromAT in the biosynthesis of indoleacetic acid is discussed.Abbreviations AAT aspartate aminotransferase - aromAT aromatic amino acid aminotransferase - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography - IPyA indolepyruvate - OHPhPy hydroxyphenylpyruvate - PLP pyridoxal phosphate - TAT tryptophan aminotransferase  相似文献   

2.
The thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzyme indolepyruvate decarboxylase catalyses the formation of indoleacetaldehyde from indolepyruvate, one step in the indolepyruvate pathway of biosynthesis of the plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid. The crystal structure of this enzyme from Enterobacter cloacae has been determined at 2.65 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 20.5% (Rfree 23.6%). The subunit of indolepyruvate decarboxylase contains three domains of open alpha/beta topology, which are similar in structure to that of pyruvate decarboxylase. The tetramer has pseudo 222 symmetry and can be described as a dimer of dimers. It resembles the tetramer of pyruvate decarboxylase from Zymomonas mobilis, but with a relative difference of 20 degrees in the angle between the two dimers. Active site residues are highly conserved in indolepyruvate/pyruvate decarboxylase, suggesting that the interactions with the cofactor thiamin diphosphate and the catalytic mechanisms are very similar. The substrate binding site in indolepyruvate decarboxylase contains a large hydrophobic pocket which can accommodate the bulky indole moiety of the substrate. In pyruvate decarboxylases this pocket is smaller in size and allows discrimination of larger vs. smaller substrates. In most pyruvate decarboxylases, restriction of cavity size is due to replacement of residues at three positions by large, hydrophobic amino acids such as tyrosine or tryptophan.  相似文献   

3.
Sobrado P  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13826-13832
The flavoprotein tryptophan 2-monooxygenase catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of tryptophan to indoleacetamide. We have previously identified tryptophan 2-monooxygenase as a homologue of L-amino acid oxidase [Sobrado, P., and Fitzpatrick, P. F. (2002) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 402, 24-30]. On the basis of the sequence comparisons of the different LAAO family members, Arg98 of tryptophan 2-monooxygenase can be identified as an active site residue which interacts with the carboxylate of the amino acid substrate. The catalytic properties of R98K and R98A tryptophan 2-monooxygenase have been characterized to evaluate the role of this residue. Mutation of Arg98 to lysine decreases the first-order rate constant for flavin reduction by 180-fold and the second-order rate constant for flavin oxidation by 26-fold, has no significant effect on the K(d) value for tryptophan or the K(i) value for the competitive inhibitor indoleacetamide, and increases the K(i) value for indolepyruvate less than 2-fold. Mutation of this residue to alanine decreases the rate constants for reduction and oxidation an additional 5- and 2-fold, respectively, and increases the K(d) value for tryptophan and the K(i) value for indolepyruvate by 31- and 17-fold, respectively, while having an only 2-fold effect on the K(i) value for indoleacetamide. Both mutations increase the value of the primary deuterium isotope effect with tryptophan as a substrate, consistent with a later transition state. Both mutant enzymes catalyze a simple oxidase reaction, producing indolepyruvate and hydrogen peroxide. The pH dependences of the V/K(trp) values for the mutant enzymes show that the anionic form of the substrate is preferred but that the zwitterionic form is a substrate. The results are consistent with the interaction between Arg98 and the carboxylate of the amino acid substrate being critical for correct positioning of the substrate in the active site for efficient catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Intraruminal doses of L-tryptophan cause acute pulmonary edema and emphysema in cattle. The D and L isomers of tryptophan and 22 related indolic compounds were incubated with ruminal microorganisms in vitro. Incubation of L-[U-benzene ring-(14)C]tryptophan with ruminal microorganisms for 24 h resulted in 39% of the added radioactivity being incorporated into skatole, 7% into indole, and 4% into indoleacetate (IAA). D-Tryptophan was not degraded to any of these metabolites. The major pathway of skatole formation from L-tryptophan appeared to be by the decarboxylation of IAA. Incubation of [2-(14)C]IAA with ruminal microorganisms for 24 h resulted in 38% incorporation into skatole. L-[5-Hydroxy]tryptophan was degraded to 5-hydroxyskatole and 5-hydroxyindole, whereas 5-hydroxyindoleacetate was degraded to only 5-hydroxyskatole. Incubation of indolepyruvate, indolelactate, and indolealdehyde with ruminal microorganisms resulted in the formation of both skatole and indole. Under similar conditions, indoleacetaldehyde was converted to IAA and tryptophol. The addition of increasing concentrations of glucose (0 to 110 mM) reduced the formation of both skatole and indole from L-tryptophan and resulted in the accumulation of IAA. Antibiotics reduced the degradation of L-tryptophan to skatole and indole, with kanamycin and neomycin particularly effective in reducing the decarboxylation of IAA to skatole.  相似文献   

6.
For the first time for methylotrophic bacteria an enzyme of phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) biosynthesis, indole-3-pyruvate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.74), has been found. An open reading frame (ORF) was identified in the genome of facultative methylotroph Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 using BLAST. This ORF encodes thiamine diphosphate-dependent 2-keto acid decarboxylase and has similarity with indole-3-pyruvate decarboxylases, which are key enzymes of IAA biosynthesis. The ORF of the gene, named ipdC, was cloned into overexpression vector pET-22b(+). Recombinant enzyme IpdC was purified from Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) and characterized. The enzyme showed the highest k cat value for benzoylformate, albeit the indolepyruvate was decarboxylated with the highest catalytic efficiency (k cat/K m). The molecular mass of the holoenzyme determined using gel-permeation chromatography corresponds to a 245-kDa homotetramer. An ipdC-knockout mutant of M. extorquens grown in the presence of tryptophan had decreased IAA level (46% of wild type strain). Complementation of the mutation resulted in 6.3-fold increase of IAA concentration in the culture medium compared to that of the mutant strain. Thus involvement of IpdC in IAA biosynthesis in M. extorquens was shown.  相似文献   

7.
Tryptophan is a precursor for many biologically active secondary metabolites. We have investigated the origin of indole pigments first described in the pityriasis versicolor-associated fungus Malassezia furfur . Some of the identified indole pigments have properties potentially explaining characteristics of the disease. As M. furfur is not amenable to genetic manipulation, we used Ustilago maydis to investigate the pathway leading to pigment production from tryptophan. We show by high-performance liquid chromatography, mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance analysis that the compounds produced by U. maydis include those putatively involved in the etiology of pityriasis versicolor. Using a reverse genetics approach, we demonstrate that the tryptophan aminotransferase Tam1 catalyses pigment biosynthesis by conversion of tryptophan into indolepyruvate. A forward genetics approach led to the identification of mutants incapable of producing the pigments. These mutants were affected in the sir1 gene, presumably encoding a sulphite reductase. In vitro experiments with purified Tam1 showed that 2-oxo 4-methylthio butanoate serves as a substrate linking tryptophan deamination to sulphur metabolism. We provide the first direct evidence that these indole pigments form spontaneously from indolepyruvate and tryptophan without any enzymatic activity. This suggests that compounds with a proposed function in M. furfur -associated disease consist of indolepyruvate-derived spontaneously generated metabolic by-products.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract— The transamination between amino acids and aliphatic and aromatic keto acids has been investigated in homogenates of human and rat brain. Tryptophan, phenylalanine and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) at concentrations of 3.6 min and below trans-aminated aromatic keto acids more rapidly than α-ketoglutarate; lower Km values were found for tryptophan and phenylalanine in the presence of the aromatic keto acid. Rat brain and liver arninotransferases exhibited similar affinities for tryptophan in the presence of different keto acids. Branched chain keto acids were also acceptors of the amino groups of tryptophan and DOPA. In brain homogenates α-ketoglutarate and p -hydroxyphenyl-pyruvate were transaminated by tyrosine and 5-hydroxytryptophan at about equal rates, whereas a-ketoglutarate was transaminated more rapidly with aliphatic amino acids. At concentrations of 1.6 m DOPA and 0.8 mM p -hydroxyphenylpyruvate, transamination was 6-fold greater than the rate of formation of dopamine. The dihydroxyphenylpyruvate formed during arninotransfer from DOPA by brain tissue was not readily decarboxylated, whereas 65–70 per cent of the indolepyruvate formed from tryptophan was decarboxylated. We suggest that an increased rate or degree of transamination between tryptophan and aromatic and branched chain keto acids may explain the increased excretion of non-hydroxylated indolic acids in phenylketonuria and'maple syrup urine'disease, respectively. Increased aminotransfers from tryptophan and DOPA may reduce the amounts of precursors available for the synthesis of serotonin and catecholamines, both of which are at low levels in the sera of untreated phenylketonurics.  相似文献   

9.
Klebsiella aerogenes utilized aromatic amino acids as sole sources of nitrogen but not as sole sources of carbon. K. aerogenes abstracted the alpha-amino group of these compounds by transamination and excreted the arylpyruvate portions into the medium. When tryptophan was utilized as the sole source of nitrogen by K. aerogenes, indolepyruvate was excreted into the medium, where it polymerized non-enzymatically to form a brick red pigment. At least four separate aromatic aminotransferase activities were found in K. aerogenes. One activity (aromatic aminotransferase I) appeared to be solely responsible for the aminotransferase reaction necessary for the growth of K. aerogenes when tryptophan was the source of nitrogen; the loss of this activity by mutation (tut) prevented the growth of cells on media containing this and other aromatic amino acids. None of the other aminotransferase activities in the cells could substitute for aromatic aminotransferase in this regard. Tryptophan-dependent pigment formation in K. aerogenes was positively controlled by the intracellular level of glutamine synthetase. Nevertheless, the aromatic aminotransferase activity in cells varied less than 2-fold in response to 10-fold or greater changes in the levels of glutamine synthetase. Glutamine synthetase affected the ability of the cells to take up tryptophan from the medium.  相似文献   

10.
Summary By screening 15,000 mutants, tyrosine auxotrophs T6, T7, and tryptophan auxotrophs P6, P8, were obtained. After primary production test, mutant P6 was chosen for further investigation. Fractional factorial design(FFD) and steepest ascent method(SAM) were used to optimize the medium component Mutant P6 had 17.1 g/l L-phenylalanine production when 0.44 g/l tryptophan was added. When Corynebacterium glutamicum P6 was cultivated in the optimum medium, L-phenylaianine production increased 22% as compared with the parent strain CCRC 18335, and the interference of tryptophan during the purification process was removed.  相似文献   

11.
Bacterial indoleacetic acid (IAA) production, which has been proposed to play a role in the Rhizobium-legume symbiosis, is a poorly understood process. Previous data have suggested that IAA biosynthesis in Rhizobium meliloti can occur through an indolepyruvate intermediate derived from tryptophan by an aminotransferase activity. To further examine this biosynthetic pathway, the aromatic aminotransferase (AAT) activity of Rhizobium meliloti 102F34 (F34) was characterized. At least four proteins were detected on nondenaturing gels of F34 protein extracts that exhibited AAT activity. All four of these AATs were constitutively produced and utilized the aromatic amino acids tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine as amino substrates. Two AATs were also capable of using aspartate. Plasmids from an F34 gene bank were identified that coded for the synthesis of at least three of these proteins, and the respective gene sequences were localized by transposon mutagenesis. Selected transposon insertions were recombined into the F34 genome to produce strains defective in two of these proteins (AAT1 and AAT2). Characterization of the mutants revealed that neither was essential for the biosynthesis of IAA in the absence of exogenous tryptophan, but that both contributed to IAA biosynthesis when high levels of exogenous tryptophan were present. AAT1 and AAT2 were also not required for the production of a minimal level of aromatic amino acids, but both were able to scavenge nitrogen from the aromatic amino acids during nitrogen deprivation. Neither AAT1 nor AAT2 was essential for symbiosis with alfalfa.  相似文献   

12.
Sobrado P  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13833-13838
The flavoenzyme tryptophan 2-monooxygenase catalyzes the oxidation of tryptophan to indoleacetamide, carbon dioxide, and water. The enzyme is a homologue of l-amino acid oxidase. In the structure of l-amino acid oxidase complexed with aminobenzoate, Tyr372 hydrogen bonds with the carboxylate of the inhibitor in the active site. All 10 conserved tyrosine residues in tryptophan 2-monooxygenase were mutated to phenylalanine; steady state kinetic characterization of the purified proteins identified Tyr413 as the residue homologous to Tyr372 of l-amino acid oxidase. Y413F and Y413A tryptophan 2-monooxygenase were characterized more completely with tryptophan as the substrate to probe the contribution of this residue to catalysis. Mutation of Tyr413 to phenylalanine results in a decrease in the value of the first-order rate constant for reduction of 35-fold and a decrease in the rate constant for oxidation of 11-fold. Mutation to alanine decreases the rate constant for reduction by 200-fold and that for oxidation by 33-fold. Both mutations increase the K(d) value for tryptophan and the K(i) values for the competitive inhibitors indoleacetamide and indole pyruvate by 5-10-fold. Both mutations convert the enzyme to an oxidase, in that the products of the catalytic reactions of both are indolepyruvate and hydrogen peroxide. The V/K(trp)-pH profiles for the Tyr413 mutant enzymes no longer show the pK(a) value of 9.9 seen in that for the wild-type enzyme, allowing identification of Tyr413 as the active site residue in the wild-type enzyme which must be protonated for catalysis. Substitution of Tyr413 abolishes the formation of the long wavelength charge transfer species observed in the wild-type enzyme. The data are consistent with the main role of Tyr413 being to maintain the correct orientation of tryptophan for effective hydride transfer and imino acid decarboxylation.  相似文献   

13.
The product of the ARO10 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was initially identified as a thiamine diphosphate-dependent phenylpyruvate decarboxylase with a broad substrate specificity. It was suggested that the enzyme could be responsible for the catabolism of aromatic and branched-chain amino acids, as well as methionine. In the present study, we report the overexpression of the ARO10 gene product in Escherichia coli and the first detailed in vitro characterization of this enzyme. The enzyme is shown to be an efficient aromatic 2-keto acid decarboxylase, consistent with it playing a major in vivo role in phenylalanine, tryptophan and possibly also tyrosine catabolism. However, its substrate spectrum suggests that it is unlikely to play any significant role in the catabolism of the branched-chain amino acids or of methionine. A homology model was used to identify residues likely to be involved in substrate specificity. Site-directed mutagenesis on those residues confirmed previous studies indicating that mutation of single residues is unlikely to produce the immediate conversion of an aromatic into an aliphatic 2-keto acid decarboxylase. In addition, the enzyme was compared with the phenylpyruvate decarboxylase from Azospirillum brasilense and the indolepyruvate decarboxylase from Enterobacter cloacae. We show that the properties of the two phenylpyruvate decarboxylases are similar in some respects yet quite different in others, and that the properties of both are distinct from those of the indolepyruvate decarboxylase. Finally, we demonstrate that it is unlikely that replacement of a glutamic acid by leucine leads to discrimination between phenylpyruvate and indolepyruvate, although, in this case, it did lead to unexpected allosteric activation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary In anEscherichia coli K-12 strain (trpA trpE tnaA) cultured in LB broth without selective pressure, a pBR322 derivative containing the gene for tryptophan synthase (pBR322-trpBA) was found to be unstable. After 70 cell-number doublings, only 50% of the host cells retained the gene for ampicillin resistance (Apr). Insertion of the mini-F fragment of F factor DNA into this plasmid could effectively reduce the plasmid loss. Partial derepression of the tryptophan promotor-operator by 3-indopleacrylic acid further decreased the stability of the pBR322-trpBA but not that of the mini-F inserted plasmid (pBR322F-trpBA) The vector pBR322F-trpBA could be maintained at high copy number in the culture after 100 generations of growth; the culture was able to overproduce tryptophan synthase in the presence of 3-indoleacrylic acid.l-Tryptophan was produced from indole andl-serine using andE. coli host transformed with.pBR322F-trpBA DNA. After 8 h of incubation, the expression level was approximately 180 g/l.  相似文献   

15.
Tryptophan role in microbial biosynthesis of Indole Acetic Acid (IAA) is very distinct. In present study IAA producing bacteria Pseudomonas moraviensis was applied on wheat for improving growth and physiology; in the presence or absence of L-tryptophan in saline sodic field. Aqueous solution of tryptophan was added to the rhizosphere soil at 10?mg L?1 with irrigated water. The survival efficiency of P. moraviensis measured in the presence of NaCl and mixture of salts. P. moraviensis increased P, NO3–N and K contents in soil by 18–35% and further 12–15% increase was recorded in the presence of tryptophan. There were 40–80% increases in indole acetic acid (IAA), abscisic acid (ABA) and gibberellic acid (GA) contents of rhizosphere soil, and 40–45% increase in leaves when tryptophan was added with P. moraviensis. In the second phase, IAA deficient mutants of P. moraviensis were constructed and tested for the conversion of tryptophan to IAA. In transposon mutagenesis, 1800 trans-conjugants were generated and tested for tryptophan conversion. Among these, 11 mutants were selected and inoculated into wheat to compare their growth responses to the wild type. P. moraviensis wild type served as PGPR under salinity, but IAA- deficient mutants of P. moraviensis were unable to produce IAA and halted plant growth.  相似文献   

16.
In order to determine the effect of dietary tryptophan level on plasma and brain tryptophan, brain serotonin, and brain 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels, juvenile rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) were raised for 16 weeks on semipurified diets containing 0.06%, 0.16%, 0.21%, 0.26%, 0.39%, or 0.59% tryptophan. After 14 weeks, feed intake was depressed in fish fed the diets containing 0.06% or 0.16% tryptophan. No further differences in feed intake were noted between the remaining treatments. In addition, body weight was lower in fish fed diets containing 0.06%, 0.16%, or 0.21% tryptophan compared with fish fed higher levels. After 16 weeks of feeding the test diets, plasma tryptophan levels were found to be directly related to dietary tryptophan levels. Similarly, increased dietary levels of tryptophan resulted in increased brain levels of tryptophan, serotonin, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. These results demonstrate that in rainbow trout, as in mammals, altered dietary levels of tryptophan result in alterations in plasma and brain tryptophan, brain serotonin, and brain 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract— The activity of tryptophan hydroxylase was measured in whole homogenates of midbrain and forebrain areas of the rat brain. A significant elevation of tryptophan hydroxylase in midbrain and forebrain was found within 1 h after injection of corticosterone hemisuccinate Na salt (10mg/kg) into normal rats. A further elevation of tryptophan hydroxylase at 4 h after injection occurred only in the midbrain region. A rapid alteration of tryptophan hydroxylase was also observed following intracistemal injection of a protein synthesis inhibitor, cydoheximide. A significant depression of 50% of normal levels occurred both in midbrain and forebrain regions within 1 h. However. 4 h after injection only the midbrain tryptophan hydroxylase level was depressed, and this depression was 16% of normal levels. This temporal and spatial pattern following cydoheximide injection was not the result of changes in the ability of cydoheximide to inhibit in vivo protein synthesis since [3H]valine incorporation into protein was shown to be equally depressed at both 1 and 5 h in both the midbrain and forebrain. Puromycin blocked [3H]valine incorporation into proteins in the midbrain and forebrain. but only caused a depression of 16% of tryptophan hydroxylase in the midbrain at 4 h. The aminonucleoside derivative of puromycin has no effect on protein synthesis or on tryptophan hydroxylase. Cydoheximide had no effect on tryptophan hydroxylase in vitro. The data suggest that cydoheximide and corticosterone produce an early (1 h) effect on tryptophan hydroxylase unrelated to de novo protein synthesis in regions known to contain perikaryon (midbrain) and axon terminals (forebrain) of 5-HT-containing neurons. The later (4h) effects of these two compounds and puromycin on tryptophan hydroxylase in the perikaryon (midbrain) region of 5-HT-containing neurons probably result from alteration in de novo protein synthesis. The half time of tryptophan hydroxylase in midbrain region is calculated to be 12 h.  相似文献   

18.
Erwinia herbicola 299R synthesizes indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) primarily by the indole-3-pyruvic acid pathway. A gene involved in the biosynthesis of IAA was cloned from strain 299R. This gene (ipdC) conferred the synthesis of indole-3-acetaldehyde and tryptophol upon Escherichia coli DH5 alpha in cultures supplemented with L-tryptophan. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene product has high similarity to that of the indolepyruvate decarboxylase of Enterobacter cloacae. Regions within pyruvate decarboxylases of various fungal and plant species also exhibited considerable homology to portions of this gene. This gene therefore presumably encodes an indolepyruvate decarboxylase (IpdC) which catalyzes the conversion of indole-3-pyruvic acid to indole-3-acetaldehyde. Insertions of Tn3-spice within ipdC abolished the ability of strain 299R to synthesize indole-3-acetaldehyde and tryptophol and reduced its IAA production in tryptophan-supplemented minimal medium by approximately 10-fold, thus providing genetic evidence for the role of the indolepyruvate pathway in IAA synthesis in this strain. An ipdC probe hybridized strongly with the genomic DNA of all E. herbicola strains tested in Southern hybridization studies, suggesting that the indolepyruvate pathway is common in this species. Maximum parsimony analysis revealed that the ipdC gene is highly conserved within this group and that strains of diverse geographic origin were very similar with respect to ipdC.  相似文献   

19.
The gene of tryptophan 7-halogenase was isolated from the Pseudomonas aureofaciens ACN strain producing pyrrolnitrin, a chlorocontaining antibiotic, and sequenced. A high homology degree (over 95%) was established for the genes and the corresponding halogenases from P. aureofaciens ACN and P. fluorescens BL915. The tryptophan 7-halogenase gene was amplified by PCR, and the corresponding enzyme was expressed in Escherichia coli cells using the pBSII SK+ vector.  相似文献   

20.
Sergeeva E  Liaimer A  Bergman B 《Planta》2002,215(2):229-238
The ability of cyanobacteria to produce the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) was demonstrated. A colorimetric (Salkowski) screening of 34 free-living and symbiotically competent cyanobacteria, that represent all morphotypes from the unicellular to the highly differentiated, showed that auxin-like compounds were released by about 38% of the free-living as compared to 83% of the symbiotic isolates. The endogenous accumulation and release of IAA were confirmed immunologically (ELISA) using an anti-IAA antibody on 10 of the Salkowski-positive strains, and the chemical authenticity of IAA was further verified by chemical characterization using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in Nostoc PCC 9229 (isolated from the angiosperm Gunnera) and in Nostoc 268 (free-living). Addition of the putative IAA precursor tryptophan enhanced IAA accumulation in cell extracts and supernatants. As the genome of the symbiotically competent Nostoc PCC 73102 contains homologues of key enzymes of the indole-3-pyruvic acid pathway, a transaminase and indolepyruvate decarboxylase (IpdC), the putative ipdC gene from this cyanobacterium was cloned and used in Southern blot analysis. Out of 11 cyanobacterial strains responding positively in the Salkowski/ELISA test, ipdC homologues were found in 4. A constitutive and possibly tryptophan-dependent production of IAA via the indole-3-pyruvic acid pathway is therefore suggested. The possible role of IAA in cyanobacteria in general and in their interactions with plants is discussed.  相似文献   

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