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1.
Summary Many of the potential technical applications of alcohol oxidase (MOX; EC 1.1.3.13) are limited by the presence of high activities of catalase in the enzyme preparations. In order to circumvent laborious and costly purification or inactivation procedures, the induction of MOX in a catalase-negative mutant of Hansenula polymorpha has been studied. Emphasis was laid on the induction of activities of MOX and the dissimilatory enzymes in continuous cultures grown on various mixtures of formate/glucose and formaldehyde/glucose. In continuous cultures of the catalase-negative mutant grown on these mixtures, MOX can be induced efficiently. To obtain a stable and productive process, the ratio of the substrates is of critical importance. The optimal ratios of the mixtures for the catalase-negative strain for formate/glucose and formaldehyde/glucose were 3:1 and 1–2:1, respectively. Under identical cultivation conditions the wild-type strain showed similar induction patterns for MOX and the dissimilatory enzymes formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FaDH) and formate dehydrogenase (FoDH). The MOX levels in the catalase-negative strain were approx. 50% of those in the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

2.
Catalase functioned exclusively to degrade hydrogen peroxide in a reaction mixture containing methanol and hydrogen peroxide, while, when the enzyme was coupled with glucose oxidase, successful conversion of methanol to formaldehyde occurred at the optimized ratio of glucose oxidase to catalase: activity, 1.0 × 10 -3; number of molecules, 1.3; protein content, 1. These values in the coupled system were very similar to the ratio of alcohol oxidase to catalase in peroxisomes, one of the subcellular organelles from a methanol-assimilating yeast, Kloeckera sp. 2201, in which these enzymes were coupled to metabolize methanol efficiently. The presence of the optimum ratio in the coupled system in vitro was confirmed by the kinetic analysis of the expression of the peroxidatic activity of catalase coupled with glucose oxidase. Construction of the immobilized system of the coupled enzymes at the optimum ratio demonstrated that the oxidation of methanol through the peroxidatic function of catalase could be continuously and stably operated, the results indicating the usefulness of the system as a model of yeast peroxisomes. Thus, the coupled reaction with glucose oxidase brought out the latent function of catalase, which could not be expected in the system including only catalase.  相似文献   

3.
The oxidation of methanol and formaldehyde was investigated by using some combination systems of alcohol oxidase, catalase, which were purified from Candida N-16, and hydrogen peroxide. The activity of alcohol oxidase was irreversibly inhibited when the enzyme was incubated with 2.5 mm hydrogen peroxide for 15 min. However, the oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde by alcohol oxidase in the presence of catalase was extremely promoted by the addition of 30 mm hydrogen peroxide. Alcohol oxidase could oxidize not only methanol but also formaldehyde as follows: HCHO + 02 + H2O→HCOOH + H2O2. The formaldehyde oxidizing activity was inhibited by hydrogen peroxide. The system containing alcohol oxidase and catalase appears to be the entity of the oxygen-dependent oxidation system of formaldehyde previously found in the cell-free extract of the yeast.  相似文献   

4.
Catalase functioned exclusively to degrade hydrogen peroxide in a reaction mixture containing methanol and hydrogen peroxide, while, when the enzyme was coupled with glucose oxidase, successful conversion of methanol to formaldehyde occurred at the optimized ratio of glucose oxidase to catalase: activity, 1.0 × 10 ?3; number of molecules, 1.3; protein content, 1. These values in the coupled system were very similar to the ratio of alcohol oxidase to catalase in peroxisomes, one of the subcellular organelles from a methanol-assimilating yeast, Kloeckera sp. 2201, in which these enzymes were coupled to metabolize methanol efficiently. The presence of the optimum ratio in the coupled system in vitro was confirmed by the kinetic analysis of the expression of the peroxidatic activity of catalase coupled with glucose oxidase. Construction of the immobilized system of the coupled enzymes at the optimum ratio demonstrated that the oxidation of methanol through the peroxidatic function of catalase could be continuously and stably operated, the results indicating the usefulness of the system as a model of yeast peroxisomes. Thus, the coupled reaction with glucose oxidase brought out the latent function of catalase, which could not be expected in the system including only catalase.  相似文献   

5.
Hydrogen Peroxide Metabolism in Yeasts   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A catalase-negative mutant of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha consumed methanol in the presence of glucose when the organism was grown in carbon-limited chemostat cultures. The organism was apparently able to decompose the H2O2 generated in the oxidation of methanol by alcohol oxidase. Not only H2O2 generated intracellularly but also H2O2 added extracellularly was effectively destroyed by the catalase-negative mutant. From the rate of H2O2 consumption during growth in chemostat cultures on mixtures of glucose and H2O2, it appeared that the mutant was capable of decomposing H2O2 at a rate as high as 8 mmol · g of cells−1 · h−1. Glutathione peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.9) was absent under all growth conditions. However, cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP; EC 1.11.1.5) increased to very high levels in cells which decomposed H2O2. When wild-type H. polymorpha was grown on mixtures of glucose and methanol, the CCP level was independent of the rate of methanol utilization, whereas the level of catalase increased with increasing amounts of methanol in the substrate feed. Also, the wild type decomposed H2O2 at a high rate when cells were grown on mixtures of glucose and H2O2. In this case, an increase of both CCP and catalase was observed. When Saccharomyces cerevisiae was grown on mixtures of glucose and H2O2, the level of catalase remained low, but CCP increased with increasing rates of H2O2 utilization. From these observations and an analysis of cell yields under the various conditions, two conclusions can be drawn. (i) CCP is a key enzyme of H2O2 detoxification in yeasts. (ii) Catalase can effectively compete with mitochondrial CCP for hydrogen peroxide only if hydrogen peroxide is generated at the site where catalase is located, namely in the peroxisomes.  相似文献   

6.
The toxicity of activated oxygen species towards adult Haemonchus contortus nematodes was examined in in vitro assays using ingestion of [3H]inulin to assess nematode viability. Both glucose/glucose oxidase (generation of hydrogen peroxide) and xanthine/xanthine oxidase (generation of superoxide anion) systems showed concentration-dependant toxicity to the nematodes. Both adult and larval Haemonchus contortus enzyme preparations showed significant catalase activities. Adult nematodes exposed to aminotriazole for 24 h showed catalase activities reduced to less than 20% of controls. Aminotriazole-treated nematodes exposed to a glucose/glucose oxidase system were significantly more susceptible to the toxic effects of the oxidant-generating system than controls (no aminotriazole pre-treatment). The concentration of glucose oxidase required to inhibit feeding by 50% was decreased 33-fold in aminotriazole-treated nematodes compared with controls. The effect of aminotriazole pre-treatment implicates hydrogen peroxide as a significant toxic agent in the glucose/glucose oxidase system. It is apparent that inhibition of Haemonchus contortus catalase increases the susceptibility of the parasite to the toxic effects of hydrogen peroxide, demonstrating a protective role for this enzyme. This suggests that catalase has the potential to play a significant role in the defence of this parasite against hydrogen peroxide produced as part of the respiratory burst of activated phagocytes within the host during its response to nematode infection.  相似文献   

7.
The regulation of the synthesis of alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase was investigated in the methanol-utilizing yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The organism was found to synthesize immunologically identical alcohol oxidases during growth on glycerol and methanol. Growth on glycerol, however, was not dependent on the alcohol oxidase, as was shown with a mutant without alcohol oxidase protein. Similarly it was shown with a catalase activity negative mutant that high catalase activity during growth on glycerol was not a prerequisite for the utilization of this substrate, though absolutely required for growth on methanol.Experiments were conducted with mixed substrates to study the influence of methanol on alcohol oxidase synthesis. In batch cultures, growth on ribose plus methanol resulted in an enhanced rate of alcohol oxidase synthesis as compared to ribose alone. In continuous cultures, (D=0.1 h-1) addition of methanol to glycerol-, glucose-, or sorbose-limited cultures gave rise to increased alcohol oxidase activity of up to 20 U/mg, which is about by 2 times higher than the specific activity used for growth on methanol alone. The increase in specific activity of the dissimilatory enzymes on the mixed substrates is partly due to methanol per se, as was shown by a mutant unable to dissimilate or assimilate methanol.  相似文献   

8.
1. The oxidation of methanol to carbon dioxide by Candida N–16 grown on methanol was investigated. The presence of enzymes which catalyze the following reaction was found in the cell-free extract of the yeast employed; CH3OH→HCHO→HCOOH→CO2. 2. Methanol was oxidized to formaldehyde by an alcohol oxidase. The reaction was as follows; CH3OH+O2→HCHO+H2O2. The alcohol oxidase was crystallized after purification by ammonium sulfate-precipitation and column chromatography using DEAE-Sephadex A-50. A prosthetic group of the enzyme was proved to be FAD. The enzyme possessed a broad specificity for alcohols such as methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, n-butanol and n-amylalcohol. The enzyme was inducibly formed only by the addition of methanol. 3. The oxidation of formaldehyde to formate was catalyzed by a NAD-linked dehydrogenase dependent on GSH. 4. Formate was oxidized by a NAD-linked dehydrogenase. 5. Catalase was also found in the extract, and methanol was chemically oxidized by the reaction of catalase and hydrogen peroxide which was generated by the alcohol oxidase system. 6. The oxidation pathway from methanol to carbon dioxide was also found in other methanol-utilizing yeasts such as Candida N-17, Saccharomyces H-1 and Torulopsis M-1.  相似文献   

9.
The production of gluconic acid, extracellular glucose oxidase and catalase in submerged culture by a number of biochemical mutants has been evaluated. Optimization of stirrer speed, time cultivation and buffering action of some chemicals on glucose oxidase, catalase and gluconic acid production by the most active mutant, AM-11, grown in a 3-L glass bioreactor was investigated. Three hundred rpm appeared to be optimum to ensure good growth and best glucose oxidase production, but gluconic acid or catalase activity obtained maximal value at 500 or 900 rpm, respectively. Significant increase of dissolved oxygen concentration in culture (16-21%) and extracellular catalase activity were obtained when the traditional aeration was employed together with automatic dosed hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

10.
Glucose oxidase (beta-D-glucose:oxygen 1-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.3.4) was immobilized in a crosslinked matrix of bovine serum albumin, catalase, glucose oxidase and glutaraldehyde on platinum foil. When placed in glucose solution, this enzyme-electrode elicited a potentiometric response that varied with the changes in glucose concentration. The immobilized glucose oxidase was present at 7.4-10.1 micrograms enzyme protein/ml of matrix, as determined with 125I-labelled enzyme. The coupled enzyme activity was stable over 120 h; however, the apparent activity of the immobilized glucose oxidase was markedly less than that for the same amount of enzyme free in solution. This indicated a significant level of diffusional resistance within the enzyme-matrix. The potentiometric response to glucose increased significantly as either the thickness of the enzyme-matrix or the glutaraldehyde content was reduced; this also was attributed to diffusional effects. Several enzyme-electrodes, constructed without exogenous catalase and with different amounts of glucose oxidase, showed greater sensitivity in potentiometric response at low glucose oxidase loadings. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the potentiometric response arises from an interfacial reaction involving a hydrogen peroxide redox couple at a platinum surface. The data also suggest that an optimum range of hydrogen peroxide concentration exists for maximum electrode sensitivity.  相似文献   

11.
A facultative methylotrophic bacterium was isolated from enrichment cultures containing methylamine as the sole carbon source. It was tentatively identified as an Arthrobacter species. Extracts of cells grown on methylamine or ethylamine contained high levels of amine oxidase (E.C. 1.4.3.) activity. Glucose- or choline-grown cells lacked this enzyme. Oxidation of primary amines by the enzyme resulted in the formation of H2O2; as a consequence high levels of catalase were present in methylamine-and ethylamine-grown cells. The significance of catalase in vivo was demonstrated by addition of 20 mM aminotriazole (a catalase inhibitor) to exponentially growing cells. This completely blocked growth on methylamine whereas growth on glucose was hardly affected. Cytochemical studies showed that methylamine-dependent H2O2 production mainly occurred on invaginations of the cytoplasmic membrane. Assimilation of formaldehyde which is generated during methylamine oxidation was by the FBP variant of the RuMP cycle of formaldehyde fixation. The absence of NAD-dependent formaldehyde and formate dehydrogenases indicated the operation of a non-linear oxidation sequence for formal-dehyde via hexulose phosphate synthase. Enzyme profiles of the organism grown on various substrates suggested that the synthesis of amine oxidase, catalase and the enzymes of the RuMP cycle is not under coordinate control.  相似文献   

12.
Growth of Hansenula polymorpha in shake flasks and chemostat cultures in the presence of methanol as the sole source of carbon and methylamine as the sole source of nitrogen was associated with the development of peroxisomes in the cells. The organelles were involved in the concurrent oxidation of these two compounds, since they contained both alcohol oxidase and amine oxidase, which are key enzymes in methanol and methylamine metabolism, respectively. In addition catalase was present. Peroxisomes with a completely crystalline substructure were observed in methanol-limited chemostat-grown cells. Amine oxidase probably formed an integral part of these crystalloids, whereas catalase was present in a freely diffusable form. Transfer of cells, grown in a methanol-limited chemostat in the presence of methylamine into glucose/ammonium sulphate media resulted in the loss of both alcohol oxidase and amine oxidase activity from the cells. This process was associated with degradation of the crystalline peroxisomes. However, when cells were transferred into glucose/methylamine media, amine oxidase activity only declined during 2 h after the transfer and thereafter increased again. This subsequent rise in amine oxidase activity was associated with the development of new peroxisomes in the cells in which degradation of the crystalline peroxisomes, originally present, continued. These newly formed organelles probably originated from peroxisomes which had not been affected by degradation. When in the methanollimited chemostat methylamine was replaced by ammonium sulphate, repression of the synthesis of amine oxidase was observed. However, inactivation of this enzyme or degradation of peroxisomes was not detected. The decrease of amine oxidase activity in the culture was accounted for by dilution of enzyme as a result of growth and washout.  相似文献   

13.
A formate oxidase activity was found in the crude extract of a formaldehyde-resistant fungus isolated from soil. The fungus was classified and designated as Aspergillus nomius IRI013, which could grow on a medium containing up to 0.45% formaldehyde and consumed formaldehyde completely. The specific activity of formate oxidase in the extract of the fungus grown on formaldehyde was found to be considerably higher than that in the extracts of the fungus grown on formate and methanol. Formate oxidase from the fungus grown on formaldehyde was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme had a relative molecular mass of 100000 and was composed of two apparently identical subunits that had a relative molecular mass of 59000. The enzyme showed the highest activity using formate as substrate. Hydrogen peroxide was formed during the oxidation of formate. The Michaelis constant for formate was 15.9 mM; highest enzyme activity was found at pH 4.5-5.0. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by NaN(3), p-chloromercuribenzoate and HgCl(2).  相似文献   

14.
The localization of methanol oxidase activity in cells of methanol-limited chemostat cultures of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha has been studied with different cytochemical staining techniques. The methods were based on enzymatic or chemical trapping of the hydrogen peroxide produced by the enzyme during aerobic incubations of whole cells in methanol-containing media. The results showed that methanol-dependent hydrogen peroxide production in either fixed or unfixed cells exclusively occurred in peroxisomes, which characteristically develop during growth of this yeast on methanol. Apart from methanol oxidase and catalase, the typical peroxisomal enzymes d-aminoacid oxidase and l--hydroxyacid oxidase were also found to be located in the peroxisomes. Urate oxidase was not detected in these organelles. Phase-contrast microscopy of living cells revealed the occurrence of peroxisomes which were cubic of form. This unusual shape was also observed in thin sections examined by electron microscopy. The contents of the peroxisomes showed, after various fixation procedures, a completely crystalline or striated substructure. It is suggested that this substructure might represent the in vivo organization structure of the peroxisomal enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
The risk of developing breast cancer increases after long term use of oestrogen and progestagen, and carcinogenesis in the breast is partly due to oxidative damage to DNA bases. Therefore, we studied the effects of 17 β-oestradiol and progesterone on the antioxidative status and the vulnerability to oxidative stress exhibited by normal human breast epithelial cells in culture. After exposure to hydrogen peroxide, cells grown with oestradiol alone or with both oestradiol and progesterone showed significantly decreased viability compared to cells grown in medium without added hormones. There was, however, no difference in hydrogen peroxide degradation rate between controls and hormone treated cultures. When desferrioxamine was added, the viability increased and the hydrogen peroxide degradation rate decreased. The levels of several antioxidants were altered in cells grown in the presence of oestradiol and progesterone: the concentrations of glutathione reductase and catalase decreased significantly while the levels of glutathione peroxidase and reduced glutathione did not change. The alterations in enzyme activity and cell vulnerability were more pronounced in cultures treated with a combination of oestradiol and progesterone.

We conclude that the redox balance in the cultured normal human breast epithelial cells was altered by treatment with oestradiol and progesterone, and that this change led to the increased death of cells subsequently exposed to hydrogen peroxide. This effect may have implications for sex hormone dependent diseases of the breast.  相似文献   

16.
Hansenula polymorpha CBS 4732 was studied during cultivation on methanol and different glucose concentrations. Activities of Cu/Zn and Mn superoxide dismutase, catalase and methanol oxidase were investigated. During cultivation on methanol, increased superoxide dismutase and catalase activities and an induced methanol oxidase were achieved. Transfer of a methanol grown culture to medium with a high glucose concentration caused growth inhibition, low consumption of carbon, nitrogen and phosphate substrates, methanol oxidase inactivation as well as decrease of catalase activity (21.8 +/- 0.61 deltaE240 x min(-1) x mg protein(-1)). At the same time, a high value for superoxide dismutase enzyme was found (42.9 +/- 0.98 U x mg protein(-1), 25% of which was represented by Mn superoxide dismutase and 75% - by the Cu/Zn type). During derepression methanol oxidase was negligible (0.005 +/- 0.0001 U x mg protein(-1)), catalase tended to be the same as in the repressed culture, while superoxide dismutase activity increased considerably (63.67 +/- 1.72 U x mg protein(-1), 69% belonging to the Cu/Zn containing enzyme). Apparently, the cycle of growth inhibition and reactivation of Hansenula polymorpha CBS 4732 cells is strongly connected with the activity of the enzyme superoxide dismutase.  相似文献   

17.
The production of gluconic acid was carried out with high catalase containing Aspergillus niger mutant. This osmofil strain enables to convert the concentrated solutions of D-glucose (300g/l) to D-gluconic acid without gasing using hydrogen peroxide as oxygen source. A controlled addition of hydrogen peroxide based on the pO2 measurement was performed. The conversion of 300g/l glucose solution was achieved with 7 hours and triple conversion (with biomass recycling) within 27 hours with yield with regard to the substrate over 98%. Kinetics of inactivation of glucose oxidasecatalase complex as a whole was examined. Some general factors influencing the inactivation of glucose oxidase and catalase in mycelium are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
A comparative study was made of the regulation of the synthesis of methanol dissimilating enzymes inkloeckera sp. 2201 andHansenula polymorpha using chemostat and batch growth conditions and methanol or glucose as carbon sources. During growth in methanol-limited chemostat cultures similar enzyme patterns for alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase in the two yeasts were found. When growing in batch culture with glucoseH. polymorpha, but notKloeckera sp. 2201, was found to produce ethanol which might affect the synthesis of these enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Microglia are resident brain macrophages that become activated and proliferate following brain damage or stimulation by immune mediators, such as IL-1beta or TNF-alpha. We investigated the mechanisms by which microglial proliferation is regulated in primary cultures of rat glia. We found that basal proliferation of microglia was stimulated by proinflammatory cytokines IL-1beta or TNF-alpha, and this proliferation was completely inhibited by catalase, implicating hydrogen peroxide as a mediator of proliferation. In addition, inhibitors of NADPH oxidase (diphenylene iodonium or apocynin) also prevented microglia proliferation, suggesting that this may be the source of hydrogen peroxide. IL-1beta and TNF-alpha rapidly stimulated the rate of hydrogen peroxide produced by isolated microglia, and this was inhibited by diphenylene iodonium, implying that the cytokines were acting directly on microglia to stimulate the NADPH oxidase. Low concentrations of PMA or arachidonic acid (known activators of NADPH oxidase) or xanthine/xanthine oxidase or glucose oxidase (generating hydrogen peroxide) also increased microglia proliferation and this was blocked by catalase, showing that NADPH oxidase activation or hydrogen peroxide was sufficient to stimulate microglia proliferation. In contrast to microglia, the proliferation of astrocytes was unaffected by the presence of catalase. In conclusion, these findings indicate that microglial proliferation in response to IL-1beta or TNF-alpha is mediated by hydrogen peroxide from NADPH oxidase.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of nitrogen limitation on the regulation of the methanol oxidizing enzymes alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase in the two methylotrophic yeastsHansenula polymorpha andKloeckera sp. 2201 was studied in continuous culture. When shifted from carbon-limited growth conditions (with a mixture of glucose and methanol as carbon sources) to a nitrogen-limited environment both cultures were found to go through a transition phase where neither enhanced residual concentrations of the nitrogen source nor of one of the two carbon sources could be detected in the supernatant. As soon as nitrogen became a limiting substrate an immediate reorganisation of the cell composition was initiated: protein content of the cells dropped to approximately 40% of its initial value, glycogen was synthesized and the enzyme composition of the cells was changed. The peroxisomal enzymes alcohol oxidase and catalase in both organisms and the two dehydrogenases for formaldehyde and formate in cells ofKloeckera sp. 2201 were subject to degradation (catabolite inactivation). The measured rates of inactivation indicated that in cells ofH. polymorpha this process might be limited to peroxisomes, whereas inKloeckera sp. 2201 the degradation was found to affect peroxisomal as well as cytoplasmic enzymes. In contrast to methanol dissimilating enzymes the net rate of synthesis of hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase was not affected by this process but those enzymes were synthesized with increased rates.  相似文献   

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