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1.
Electroenzymatic oxidation of veratryl alcohol by lignin peroxidase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
This paper reports the formation of veratraldehyde by electroenzymatic oxidation of veratryl alcohol (3,4-dimethoxybenzyl alcohol) hybridizing both electrochemical and enzymatic reactions and using lignin peroxidase. The novel electroenzymatic method was found to be effective for replacement of hydrogen peroxide by an electrochemical reactor, which is essential for enzyme activity of lignin peroxidase. The effects of operating parameters such as enzyme dosage, pH, and electric potential were investigated. Further, the kinetics of veratryl alcohol oxidation in an electrochemical reactor were compared to oxidation when hydrogen peroxide was supplied externally.  相似文献   

2.
Phanerochaete chrysosporium decolorized several polyaromatic azo dyes in ligninolytic culture. The oxidation rates of individual dyes depended on their structures. Veratryl alcohol stimulated azo dye oxidation by pure lignin peroxidase (ligninase, LiP) in vitro. Accumulation of compound II of lignin peroxidase, an oxidized form of the enzyme, was observed after short incubations with these azo substrates. When veratryl alcohol was also present, only the native form of lignin peroxidase was observed. Azo dyes acted as inhibitors of veratryl alcohol oxidation. After an azo dye had been degraded, the oxidation rates of veratryl alcohol recovered, confirming that these two compounds competed for ligninase during the catalytic cycle. Veratryl alcohol acts as a third substrate (with H2O2 and the azo dye) in the lignin peroxidase cycle during oxidations of azo dyes.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The effects of various parameters on Phanerochaete chrysosporium lignin peroxidase activity as obtained in ligninase assay based on the oxidation of veratryl alcohol were investigated. Marked differences in the ligninase activity were observed when the temperature and pH were varied within the ranges of 23 to 37°C and 2.5 to 4.0, respectively, reported to have been used by various research groups. Further, both veratryl alcohol, and hydrogen peroxide concentration had a significant effect on ligninase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Horseradish peroxidase has been shown to catalyze the oxidation of veratryl alcohol (3,4-dimethoxybenzyl alcohol) and benzyl alcohol to the respective aldehydes in the presence of reduced glutathione, MnCl2, and an organic acid metal chelator such as lactate. The oxidation is most likely the result of hydrogen abstraction from the benzylic carbon of the substrate alcohol leading to eventual disproportionation to the aldehyde product. An aromatic cation radical intermediate, as would be formed during the oxidation of veratryl alcohol in the lignin peroxidase-H2O2 system, is not formed during the horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed reaction. In addition to glutathione, dithiothreitol, L-cysteine, and beta-mercaptoethanol are capable of promoting veratryl alcohol oxidation. Non-thiol reductants, such as ascorbate or dihydroxyfumarate (known substrates of horseradish peroxidase), do not support oxidation of veratryl alcohol. Spectral evidence indicates that horseradish peroxidase compound II is formed during the oxidation reaction. Furthermore, electron spin resonance studies indicate that glutathione is oxidized to the thiyl radical. However, in the absence of Mn2+, the thiyl radical is unable to promote the oxidation of veratryl alcohol. In addition, Mn3+ is unable to promote the oxidation of veratryl alcohol in the absence of glutathione. These results suggest that the ultimate oxidant of veratryl alcohol is a Mn(3+)-GSH or Mn(2+)-GS. complex (where GS. is the glutathiyl radical).  相似文献   

5.
Laccases play an important role in the biological break down of lignin and have great potential in the deconstruction of lignocellulosic feedstocks. We examined 16 laccases, both commercially prepared and crude extracts, for their ability to oxidize veratryl alcohol in the presence of various solvents and mediators. Screening revealed complete conversion of veratryl alcohol to veratraldehyde catalyzed by a crude preparation of the laccase from Trametes versicolor ATCC 11235 and the mediator TEMPO in 20 % (v/v) tert-butanol.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Several bacteria, yeast and fungi selectively isolated from paper-mill waste-water grew on veratryl alcohol, a key intermediate of lignin metabolism. Penicillium simplicissimum oxidized veratryl alcohol via a NAD(P)+-dependent veratryl alcohol dehydrogenase to veratraldehyde, which was further oxidized to veratric acid in a NAD(P)+-dependent reaction. Veratric-acid-grown cells contained NAD(P)H-dependent O-demethylase activity for veratrate, vanillate and isovanillate. Protocatechuate was cleaved by a protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase. Offprint requests to: E. de Jong  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of decay of veratryl alcohol radical cation, generated by cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate induced oxidation of veratryl alcohol, have been followed spectrophotometrically in a stopped-flow apparatus. In acidic aqueous acetonitrile the radical cation was found to decay by a first-order process, due to deprotonation from the alpha-carbon leading to an alpha-hydroxybenzyl radical with the rate constant of 17.1+/-0.5 s(-1). This value is in full agreement with those obtained by pulse radiolysis studies but much lower than the value (1.2x10(3) s(-1)) indirectly determined by EPR experiments. The implications of these results with respect to the possible role of veratryl alcohol as a mediator in the oxidative biodegradation of lignin catalysed by lignin peroxidase are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
《Journal of biotechnology》1995,39(2):175-179
The degradation pathway of vanillyl and veratryl alcohol by Lentinus edodes extracellular enzymes was studied. In both cases several products of side chain oxidation and aromatic ring cleavage were isolated and characterized. We have observed that the products from veratryl alcohol degradation by Lentinus edodes are quite different from those isolated from incubations with other white-rot fungi which have veraraldehyde as the major product, in fact, this compound is not produced as final metabolite in L. edodes incubations. This behaviour could explain the apparent absence of lignin peroxidase and veratryl alcohol oxidase activities in L. edodes cultures, since such activities are usually measured by monitoring veratraldehyde formation during the veratryl alcohol oxidation; thus, it is suggested that additional assay methods should be developed, with preferably direct observation of aromatic ring oxidation products.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism of lignin peroxidase (LiP) was examined using bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase) as a polymeric lignin model substrate. SDS/PAGE analysis demonstrates that an RNase dimer is the major product of the LiP-catalyzed oxidation of this protein. Fluorescence spectroscopy and amino acid analyses indicate that RNase dimer formation is due to the LiP-catalyzed oxidation of Tyr residues to Tyr radicals, followed by intermolecular radical coupling. The LiP-catalyzed polymerization of RNase in strictly dependent on the presence of veratryl alcohol (VA). In the presence of 100 microM H2O2, relatively low concentrations of RNase and VA, together but not individually, can protect LiP from H2O2 inactivation. The presence of RNase strongly inhibits VA oxidation to veratraldehyde by LiP; whereas the presence of VA does not inhibit RNase oxidation by LiP. Stopped-flow and rapid-scan spectroscopy demonstrate that the reduction of LiP compound I (LiPI) to the native enzyme by RNase occurs via two single-electron steps. At pH 3.0, the reduction of LiPI by RNase obeys second-order kinetics with a rate constant of 4.7 x 10(4) M-1.s-1, compared to the second-order VA oxidation rate constant of 3.7 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. The reduction of LiP compound II (LiPII) by RNase also follows second-order kinetics with a rate constant of 1.1 x 10(4) M-1.s-1, compared to the first-order rate constant for LiPII reduction by VA. When the reductions of LiPI and LiPIi are conducted in the presence of both VA and RNase, the rate constants are essentially identical to those obtained with VA alone. These results suggest that VA is oxidized by LiP to its cation radical which, while still in its binding site, oxidizes RNase.  相似文献   

10.
N Masuoka  H A Itano 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3672-3680
Iron(III) oxyoctaethylporphyrin was isolated and purified as a dimer. The addition of tosylmethyl isocyanide to a solution of the dimer produced a monomer species, which was isolated and identified as bis(tosylmethyl isocyanide)iron(II) 5-oxyoctaethylporphyrin pi-neutral radical. The product of dissociation of the dimer by imidazole was bis(imidazole)iron(III) 5-oxyoctaethylporphyrin. The spectral properties of the product of dissociation of the dimer by pyridine and published data on bis(pyridine)oxymesoheme and bis(pyridine)oxyprotoheme were consistent with its identification as bis(pyridine)iron(II) 5-oxyoctaethylporphyrin pi-neutral radical. When this product was exposed to oxygen, a weak radical signal appeared in its electron spin resonance spectrum, which was attributed to the displacement of one of its pyridine ligands by O2 to form (pyridine)(dioxygen)iron(II) 5-oxyoctaethylporphyrin pi-neutral radical. The pyridine oxygen radical converted spontaneously to octaethylverdohemochrome, which was purified and identified as bis-(tosylmethyl isocyanide)iron(II) octaethylverdohemochrome hydroxide. The yield of verdohemochrome from iron oxyporphyrin was increased by the addition of phenylhydrazine or ascorbate. A scheme for the oxidation of iron(III) oxyporphyrin to iron(II) verdoheme by O2 that proposes a mechanism for the expulsion of CO and the replacement of a methene bridge of the porphyrin ring by an oxa bridge is presented.  相似文献   

11.
Sixteen phenolic compounds, 14 of which naturally occurring, were compared to the synthetic 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt (ABTS) and violuric acid (VA) in terms of their ability to act as mediators/enhancers in: (1) laccase oxidation of veratryl alcohol as a lignin model compound, and (2) electrochemical oxidation of kraft and flax lignins. HPLC analysis revealed that the syringyl-type phenols methyl syringate and acetosyringone were the most efficient natural enhancers in the laccase oxidation of veratryl alcohol. Both compounds, though far from the performance of ABTS were able to generate veratraldehyde in amount similar to that obtained with VA. By contrast, the best performing phenolic enhancers for the electrochemical oxidation of lignins were sinapinaldehyde, vanillin, acetovanillone, and syringic acid. Catalytic efficiencies close to those achieved with ABTS and VA were calculated for these phenolic compounds.  相似文献   

12.
Veratryl alcohol (VA) at higher concentration stimulated the lignin peroxidase (LiP)-catalyzed oxidation of phenolic compounds remarkably. This novel phenomenon was due to its competition with the phenols for the active site of the enzyme and to the high reactivity of the formed cation radical of VA (VA+*) which resulted in an additional oxidation of the phenols. The influence of the nonionic surfactant Tween 80 on the VA-enhanced LiP-catalyzed oxidation of phenols depended on its concentration. At lower concentration it had a small synergetic effect but at higher concentration it decreased the initial rate. Studies of the capillary electrophoretic behavior of LiP in the presence of Tween 80 showed that this effect was caused by the surfactant aggregation on LiP which, at higher surfactant concentrations, might impede the access of VA to its binding site on LiP and, consequently, the VA+* formation.  相似文献   

13.
A number of peroxidases, such as lignin peroxidase and manganese peroxidase have proved to be useful for industrial applications. Some studies on the effects of temperature and pH stability have been carried out. It is known that veratryl alcohol increases their stability in the range 28-50 degrees C and is oxidized, leading to veratryl aldehyde formation. Similar results with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in the presence of cofactors were found, but the oxidation of veratryl alcohol in the absence of cofactors was extremely labile at acid pH and inactivated in a few minutes. Considering the growing industrial application of HRP, knowledge of its stability and denaturation kinetics is required. In this study, horseradish peroxidase pool (HRP-VI) and its isoenzymes HRP-VIII (acid) and HRP-IX (basic) have been shown to catalyze the oxidation of veratryl alcohol to veratryl aldehyde in the presence of hydrogen peroxide at pH 5.8 in the 35-45 degrees C range and in the absence of any cofactors. Heat and pH denaturation experiments in the presence and absence of veratryl alcohol incubation were conducted with HRP-VI and HRP-IX isoenzymes. HRP-IX was the most active isoenzyme acting on veratryl alcohol but HRP-VI was the most stable for the temperature range tested. At 35 degrees C the HRP pool presented decay constant (Kd) values of 5.5 x 10(-2) h(-1) and 1.4 10(-2) h(-1) in the absence and presence of veratryl alcohol, respectively, with an effective ratio of 3.9. These results present a new feature of peroxidases that opens one more interesting application of HRP to industrial processes.  相似文献   

14.
Several aromatic compounds increased initial lignin degradation rates in cultures of Phanerochaete chrysosporium. This activation was connected to increased H2O2 production and glucose oxidation rates. Veratryl alcohol, a natural secondary metabolite of P. chrysosporium, also activated the lignin-degrading system. In the presence of added veratryl alcohol the ligninolytic system appeared 6–8 h earlier than in reference cultures. This effect was only seen when lignin was added after the primary growth was completed because lignin itself also caused earlier appearance of the degradative system. In cultures which received no added lignin or veratryl alcohol the ligninolytic activity only appeared once the alcohol started to accumulate. The degradation patterns of veratryl alcohol and lignin were similar. The activity levels of lignin degradation and glucose oxidation could be regulated by veratryl alcohol concentration. It is suggested that either veratryl alcohol itself or a metabolite derived from it is actually responsible for the low levels of ligninolytic activity in glucose grown cultures.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: The mechanism of oxidation of veratryl alcohol and β-0–4 dimeric lignin models is reviewed. Veratryl alcohol radicals are intermediates in both oxidation pathways. The possible role of the veratryl alcohol radical cation as a mediator is discussed. The lignin peroxidase (LIP) redox cycle is analyzed in terms of the Marcus theory of electron transfer. Reduction of both LiP-Compound I (LiP-I) and LiP-Compound II (LiP-II) by veratryl alcohol occurs in the endergonic region of the driving force. The reduction of LiP-II has a higher reorganization energy due to the change in spin state and the accompanying conformational change in the protein. It is suggested that a reversible nucleophilic addition of a carbohydrate residue located at the entrance of the active site channel plays a key role in the LiP redox cycle. Moreover. (polymeric) hydroxysubstituted benzyl radicals may reduce LiP-II via long-range electron transfer.  相似文献   

16.
ten Have R  Franssen MC 《FEBS letters》2001,487(3):313-317
The O2-dependent formation of side products during the oxidation of veratryl alcohol (VA) by lignin peroxidase has previously been proposed to start with the attack of H2O on the VA radical cation (VA*+). This initial reaction is unlikely since it would also lead to side product formation in the absence of O2, which is not the case. In the current mechanism VA* reacts first with O2, whereafter H2O attacks. Furthermore, this paper describes an alternative explanation for the inhibitory effect of Mn2+ on VA side product formation. It is proposed that Mn2+ reduces reactive intermediates back to VA.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochromes P450cam and P450BM3 oxidize alpha- and beta-thujone into multiple products, including 7-hydroxy-alpha-(or beta-)thujone, 7,8-dehydro-alpha-(or beta-)thujone, 4-hydroxy-alpha-(or beta-)thujone, 2-hydroxy-alpha-(or beta-)thujone, 5-hydroxy-5-isopropyl-2-methyl-2-cyclohexen-1-one, 4,10-dehydrothujone, and carvacrol. Quantitative analysis of the 4-hydroxylated isomers and the ring-opened product indicates that the hydroxylation proceeds via a radical mechanism with a radical recombination rate ranging from 0.7 +/- 0.3 x 10(10) s(-1) to 12.5 +/- 3 x 10(10) s(-1) for the trapping of the carbon radical by the iron-bound hydroxyl radical equivalent. 7-[2H]-alpha-Thujone has been synthesized and used to amplify C-4 hydroxylation in situations where uninformative C-7 hydroxylation is the dominant reaction. The involvement of a carbon radical intermediate is confirmed by the observation of inversion of stereochemistry of the methyl-substituted C-4 carbon during the hydroxylation. With an L244A mutation that slightly increases the P450(cam) active-site volume, this inversion is observed in up to 40% of the C-4 hydroxylated products. The oxidation of alpha-thujone by human CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, CYP2E1, and CYP3A4 occurs with up to 80% C-4 methyl inversion, in agreement with a dominant radical hydroxylation mechanism. Three minor desaturation products are produced, with at least one of them via a cationic pathway. The cation involved is proposed to form by electron abstraction from a radical intermediate. The absence of a solvent deuterium isotope effect on product distribution in the P450cam reaction precludes a significant role for the P450 ferric hydroperoxide intermediate in substrate hydroxylation. The results indicate that carbon hydroxylation is catalyzed exclusively by a P450 ferryl species via radical intermediates whose detailed properties are substrate- and enzyme-dependent.  相似文献   

18.
Catalysis of the H2O2-dependent oxidation of 3,4-dimethoxybenzyl (veratryl) alcohol by the hemoprotein ligninase isolated from wood-decaying fungus, Phanerochaete chrysosporium Burds, is characterized. The reaction yields veratraldehyde and exhibits a stoichiometry of one H2O2 consumed per aldehyde formed. Ping-pong steady-state kinetics are observed for H2O2 (KM = 29 microM) and veratryl alcohol (KM = 72 microM) at pH 3.5. The magnitude of the turnover number varies from 2 to 3 s-1 at this pH, depending on the preparation of the enzyme. Each preparation of enzyme consists of a mixture of active and inactive enzyme. Extensive steady-state kinetic studies of several different preparations of enzyme, suggest a mechanism in which H2O2 reacts with enzyme to form an intermediate that subsequently reacts with the alcohol to return the enzyme to the resting state. The pH dependence of the overall reaction indicates that an ionization occurs having an apparent pK alpha approximately 3.1. The activity is, thus, nearly zero at pH 5 and increases to a maximum near pH approximately 2. However, the enzyme is unstable at this low pH. Transient-state kinetic studies reveal that, upon reaction of ligninase with H2O2, spectral changes occur in the Soret region, which, by analogy to previous studies of horseradish peroxidase, are consistent with formation of Compounds I and II. The active form of the enzyme appears to react rapidly with H2O2; we observed a positive correlation between the turnover number of the enzyme preparation and the extent of a rapid reaction between H2O2 and ligninase to form Compound I. Free radical cations derived from veratryl alcohol do not appear to be released from the enzyme during catalysis; however, other substrates are known to be converted to cation radicals (Kersten, P., Tien, M., Kalyanaraman, B., and Kirk, T.K. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 2609-2612). Our results are generally consistent with a classical peroxidase mechanism for the action of ligninase on lignin-like substrates.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Manganese peroxidase and lignin peroxidase are ligninolytic heme-containing enzymes secreted by the white-rot fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium. Despite structural similarity, these peroxidases oxidize different substrates. Veratryl alcohol is a typical substrate for lignin peroxidase, while manganese peroxidase oxidizes chelated Mn2+. By a single mutation, S168W, we have added veratryl alcohol oxidase activity to recombinant manganese peroxidase expressed in Escherichia coli. The kcat for veratryl alcohol oxidation was 11 s-1, Km for veratryl alcohol approximately 0.49 mM, and Km for hydrogen peroxide approximately 25 microM at pH 2.3. The Km for veratryl alcohol was higher and Km for hydrogen peroxide was lower for this manganese peroxidase mutant compared to two recombinant lignin peroxidase isoenzymes. The mutant retained full manganese peroxidase activity and the kcat was approximately 2.6 x 10(2) s-1 at pH 4.3. Consistent with relative activities with respect to these substrates, Mn2+ strongly inhibited veratryl alcohol oxidation. The single productive mutation in manganese peroxidase suggested that this surface tryptophan residue (W171) in lignin peroxidase is involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

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