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1.
The effect of the lyotropic series of anions on the stability and renaturation of tetrameric 20 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17,20 beta,21-trihydroxysteroid:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.53) was investigated. The variations in enzymatic activity were correlated with the changes in protein fluorescence, circular dichroism, reactivity of histidine residues and molecular weight. High concentrations of salting-out anions (phosphate, citrate, sulphate) were found to stabilize the enzyme markedly and increase the renaturation yield of the urea-denatured enzyme. Phosphate, for instance, induced the highest stabilization at about 1.2 M and the maximum reactivation (66%) at 0.5 M. At low anion concentration (0.01 M), the reactivation was only 7%. The renaturation property of salting-out anions seems to be due to their stabilizing effect on the end-product, i.e., the assembled tetramer. Salting-in anions (perchlorate, thiocyanate, iodide) inactivated the enzyme. At moderate anion concentrations (no greater than 0.25 M) the activation, which occurred slowly, without tetramer dissociation and with minor modifications of enzyme conformation, was fully reversed by concentrated phosphate or by saturating concentrations of NADH. In contrast, the inactivation induced by high anion concentrations (1-2 M) was rapid, irreversible and linked to considerable modifications of enzyme conformation.  相似文献   

2.
Stabilization of immobilized D-amino-acid oxidase was achieved as follows. Yeast Trigonopsis variabilis producing D-amino-acid oxidase was used to deaminate cephalosporin C to glutaryl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid. Permeabilized cells were co-immobilized with manganese dioxide by entrapment in (poly)acrylamide gel so that hydrogen peroxide, liberated in the reaction, could be partially deactivated and both the enzyme and the substrate could be stabilized. Activity of entrapped cells was determined by HPLC and enzyme flow microcalorimetry. The process was evaluated in terms of activity, immobilization yield, storage stability and oxo-product formation by immobilized preparations. The storage stability of immobilized biocatalysts with MnO2 was nearly doubled and production of 2-oxoadipyl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid was 2-3-fold higher than by entrapped cells without MnO2. Glutaryl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid can be easily obtained from the resulting oxo-product by a non-enzymic reaction via externally added hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

3.
Glucoamylase II (GA II) immobilized to Eupergit C and CIZ as a porous and nonporous matrix shows enzymatic characteristics indistinguishable from those of the free enzyme, except for reduced specific activity. Since this decrease is equally observed for both matrices, it has to be ascribed to nonproductive fixation of the enzyme or steric hindrance rather that perturbations caused by "inner diffusion" effects. Authenticity refers to the optimum pH for catalytic activity, Michaelis constants for starch and maltoheptaose, as well as identical stability toward temperature, pH, and guanidinium chloride (GdmCl). On the basis of these data, the two-state mechanism observed for the equilibrium transitions of the free enzyme may be assumed to hold also for the immobilized enzyme. Renaturation after preceding denaturation in 6.4 and 7 M GdmCl leads to widely differing yields depending on the conditions. Shifting the denaturant concentration stepwise back to nondenaturing GdmCl concentrations leads to a broad range of "hysteresis" accompanied by aggregation. Rapid dilution of the free and immobilized enzymes at pH greater than 6 and sufficiently low protein concentration leads to reactivation yields of 80 and 45%, respectively. For the free enzyme, reconstitution at lower pH is determined by the kinetic competition of folding and aggregation. In the case of the immobilized enzyme, "entangling" of the matrix with the unfolded polypeptide chain competes with renaturation.  相似文献   

4.
G S Greaney  G N Somero 《Biochemistry》1979,18(24):5322-5332
The effect of anions on the thermodynamic activation functions for a model enzyme, calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1), have been studied in order to examine the role of protein hydration changes in establishing the energetics of enzyme catalysis. The influences of these anions on the activation volume (delta V) and activation free energy (delta G) reflected clear Hofmeister (lyotropic) series effects, in the order F- greater than Cl- greater than Br- greater than I- (order of increasing salting-out potential). A pronounced covariation was observed between the influences of these anions on Vmax, which is proportional to delta G, and on the negative activation volume of the reaction. Fluoride was able to counteract the influences of Br- and I- on both Vmax and delta V when combinations of these anions were employed. The effects of Br- and I- on Vmax and delta V were more pronounced at lower temperatures. The control delta V was increasingly negative at reduced temperatures. The effects of the neutral salts and propanol on delta V and delta G, as well as the effects of salting-in anions on the activation enthalpy and the negative activation entropy of the reaction, are consistent with a model which proposes that peptide groups or polar side chains on the native enzyme exergonically increase their exposure to solvent during the catalytic activation event. These conclusions are in accord with the known free energy, enthalpy, entropy, and volume changes which occur when model peptide groups are transferred between water and concentrated salt solutions. Consistent with the kinetic results, the fluorescence emission wavelength maximum of alkaline phosphatase increased in the presence of anions in the order F- greater than Cl- greater than Br- greater than I-. The salting-out ion (F-) and the salting-in ions (Br- and I-) shifted lambda max in different directions, and these lambda max shifts could be counterbalanced by using equimolar combinations of salting-in and salting-out anions. Control experiments with a model compound, N-acetyltryptophanamide, showed that the spectra shifts caused by the salts did not result solely from differential quenching by the anions of the solvent-exposed tryptophan(s) on the enzyme. Hofmeister additivity phenomena indicated that the solvent is at the basis of these salt-induced enzyme structural changes. It is concluded that changes in protein solvation during enzymic reactions contribute significantly to the thermodynamic activation parameters in both the native and the salt-perturbed enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Immunochemical properties of D-amino-acid oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Antiserum against homogeneous hog kidney D-amino-acid oxidase (D-amino-acid: oxygen oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.3) was elicited in rabbits, and monospecific antibodies were prepared by affinity chromatography. The antibodies inhibited up to 90% of hog D-amino-acid oxidase activity, and 100% of the enzyme could be immunoprecipitated. The antibodies inhibited both holoenzyme and reconstituted apoprotein to a similar degree, indicating that they did not interfere with the FAD-binding site of the protein. The antibodies inhibited D-amino-acid oxidase activity from other mammalian species to a similar degree, while the enzyme activities from birds, amphibians, fishes and yeast were inhibited and immunoprecipitated to lower extents. In immunoblotting experiments, after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the antibodies recognized a single band of about 40 kDa in all the species analyzed, and the entity of the signal was inversely related to the phylogenetic distance from mammals. The antibodies did not inhibit D-alanine dehydrogenase activity from Escherichia coli, but gave positive bands in immunoblotting.  相似文献   

6.
D-amino-acid oxidase (EC 1.4.3.3) was purified about 1480-fold from the yeast Candida guilliermondii using chromatofocusing method. The purification procedure gave an enzyme preparation which is greater than 90% homogenous on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with a specific activity of 11.54 U/mg at 30°C with D-proline as substrate with the yield of total activity 9.3%. The molecular weights of subunit and native enzyme were determined to be 38.4 and 78.6 kDa by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel-filtration, respectively, suggesting that the native enzyme exists as a homodimer. A single molecular form with an isoelectric point of 6.85 was detected in analytical isoelectrofocusing. The optimum pH and temperature were 8.0 and 33°C. An enzyme shows stability in the pH range from 7.4 to 9.0 and at the temperature no higher than 38°C. Activation energy for D-amino-acid oxidase reaction was calculated to be 60 kJ/mol at 30°C. The strict D-isomer specificity of the enzyme is confirmed, since no reaction could be detected with L-amino acids, and a large number of D-amino acids could be substrates for this enzyme. K m and V max values were determined for D-proline and D-alanine, which, among 22 tested, were the best substrates of the enzyme. D-amino-acid oxidase from the yeast C. guilliermondii is a flavoprotein oxidase in which the prosthetic group is tightly, but not covalently, bound FAD. The enzyme is completely inhibited by sodium benzoate, SH-oxidizing agents, but not by sodium azide, toluene or chloroform.  相似文献   

7.
1. Mutant mice lacking D-amino-acid oxidase activity were examined as to whether they possessed the enzyme protein. 2. Immunoblotting using an antibody against hog kidney D-amino-acid oxidase showed that kidney homogenates of the mutant mice as well as that of the normal mice had proteins reactive to the antibody. 3. Peroxisomal proteins of the kidney cells of the mutant mice were not different from those of the normal mice. 4. The peroxisomes of the mutant mice possessed a protein reactive to the antibody in the immunoblotting whose size was the same as the D-amino-acid oxidase protein present in the peroxisomes of the normal mice. 5. These results suggest that the mutant mice synthesize the D-amino-acid oxidase protein and integrate it into peroxisomes, though it is a nonfunctional enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) was isolated from chicken livers and immobilized by adsorption to a Sepharose derivative, prepared by reaction of n-octylamine with CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. Using a crude preparation of enzyme for immobilization it was observed that relatively more activity was adsorbed than protein, but the yield of immobilized activity increased as a purer enzyme preparation was used. As more activity and protein were bound, relatively less immobilized activity was recovered. This effect was probably due to blocking of active xanthine dehydrogenase by protein impurities. The kinetics of free and immobilized xanthine dehydrogenase were studied in the pH range 7.5-9.1. The Km and V values estimated for free xanthine dehydrogenase increase as the pH increase; the K'm and V values for the immobilized enzyme go through a minimum at pH 8.1. By varying the amount of enzyme activity bound per unit volume of gel, it was shown that K'm is larger than Km are result of substrate diffusion limitation in the pores of the support material. Both free and immobilized xanthine dehydrogenase showed substrate activation at low concentrations (up to 2 microM xanthine). Immobilized xanthine dehydrogenase was more stable than the free enzyme during storage in the temperature range of 4-50 degrees C. The operational stability of immobilized xanthine dehydrogenase at 30 degrees C was two orders of magnitude smaller than the storage stability, t 1/2 was 9 and 800 hr, respectively. The operational stability was, however, better than than of immobilized milk xanthine oxidase (t 1/2 = 1 hr). In addition, the amount of product formed per unit initial activity in one half-life, was higher for immobilized xanthine dehydrogenase than for immobilized xanthine oxidase. Unless immobilized milk xanthine oxidase can be considerable stabilized, immobilized chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase is more promising for application in organic synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Aldehyde oxidase (E.C. 1.2.3.1) was isolated from rabbit liver and two potential bioaffinity ligands, i.e., 3-aminocarbonyl-1-benzyl-6-methylpyridinium bromide and 3-aminocarbonyl-1-benzyl-4,6-dimethylpyridinium chloride, were tested for their applicability in a purification procedure for this enzyme. Various supports and different coupling methods were investigated for the immobilization of aldehyde oxidase. Adsorption to n-hexyl- and n-octylamine-substituted Sepharose 4B and DEAE Sepharose 6B gave the best retention of aldehyde oxidase activity. The storage stability of free enzyme and enzyme immobilized to n-octylamine-substituted Sepharose 4B was studied in several buffers at pH 7.8 and 9.0. This showed that the stability of immobilized enzyme was much less than that of free enzyme. The apparent operational stability of the immobilized enzyme preparation, however, improved substantially compared to soluble enzyme, although the corresponding product yield is still very poor. Coimmobilization of catalase and/or superoxide dismutase provided no significant increase of the apparent operational stability and product yield. A positive effect on both parameters was found for aldehyde oxidase-n-alkylamine Sepharose 4B preparations by increasing the amount of enzyme adsorbed per unit weight of support, whereas the productivity of these preparations remained about constant.  相似文献   

11.
Arthrobacter species strain FR-3, isolated from sediments of a swamp, produced a novel serine-type sulfide oxidase. The production of sulfide oxidase was maximal at pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C. Among various carbon and nitrogen sources tested, glucose and yeast extract were found to be the most effective substrates for the secretion of sulfide oxidase. The sulfide oxidase was purified to homogeneity and the molecular weight of the purified enzyme was 43 kDa when estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified sulfide oxidase can be effectively immobilized in DEAE (diethylaminoethyl)-cellulose matrix with a yield of 66%. The purified free and immobilized enzyme had optimum activity at pH 7.5 and 6.0, respectively. Immobilization increases the stability of the enzyme with respect to temperature. The half-life of the immobilized enzyme was 30 min at 45 degrees C, longer than that of the free enzyme (10 min). The purified free sulfide oxidase activity was completely inhibited by 1 mM Co2+ and Zn2+ and sulfhydryl group reagents (para-chloromercuribenzoic acid and iodoacetic acid). Catalytic activity was not affected by 1 mM Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+ and metal-chelating agent (EDTA).  相似文献   

12.
Thin-layer chromatography and amino acid analysis showed that urine of mutant ddY/DAO- mice lacking D-amino-acid oxidase activity contained more serine, proline, alanine and methionine than that of normal ddY/DAO+ mice. Among these four, an increase in alanine was conspicuous. However, the urinary levels of 11 other amino acids and glucose were not different between the ddY/DAO- and ddY/DAO+ mice. Amino acid analysis showed that the plasma levels of serine, proline and methionine were not elevated in the ddY/DAO- mice, though a slight increase in alanine was observed. Genetic crosses showed that aminoaciduria and lack of D-amino-acid oxidase activity were concomitantly transmitted as a set through generations. These results indicated that the lack of enzyme activity caused a specific renal aminoaciduria. Whether this enzyme merely diminishes the D-amino acid load presented for reabsorption, or actually participates catalytically in the reabsorption process, remains undetermined.  相似文献   

13.
A method for the quantitative determination of several D-amino acids in the range of 0.05-1 nmol per assay (0.25-5 microM) is described. It is insensitive to the presence of excesses of the respective L-amino acids. The assay system employs D-amino-acid oxidase (hog kidney), peroxidase (horse radish) and luminol; the total photon output elicited by the oxidation of the D-amino acids is determined. The different reactivity of individual D-amino acids with D-amino-acid oxidase limits the applicability of the assay. Indications for the usefulness of immobilized enzymes in D-amino-acid analysers are also given.  相似文献   

14.
Four methods (an enzyme activity assay, western blotting, RT-PCR, and northern hybridization) to detect the enzyme D-amino-acid oxidase are described.  相似文献   

15.
Optimal conditions with respect to pH, concentration of glutaraldehyde and enzyme, and order of addition of enzyme and crosslinking reagent were established for the immobilization of hog kidney D-amino acid oxidase to an attapulgite support. Yields of 40 to 70% were generally attained although when low concentrations of enzyme were used yields were consistently greater than 100%. It is suggested that this is due to a dimer leads to monomer shift at low protein concentrations. The stability of soluble D-amino acid oxidase was dependent on the buffer in which it was stored (pyrophosphate-phosphate greater than borate greater than Tris). Stability of immobilized enzyme was less than soluble in pyrophosphate-phosphate buffer, but storage in the presence of FAD improved stability. In addition, treatment of stored, immobilized enzyme with FAD before assay restored some of its activity. The immobilized D-amino acid oxidase was less stable to heat (50 degrees C) than the soluble enzyme from pH 6 to 8 but was more stable above and below these values. Apparent Km values for D-alanine, D-valine, and D-tryptophan decreased for the immobilized enzyme compared to the soluble.  相似文献   

16.
Glucose oxidase (GOD) was immobilized on cellulose acetate-polymethylmethacrylate (CA-PMMA) membrane. The immobilized GOD showed better performance as compared to the free enzyme in terms of thermal stability retaining 46% of the original activity at 70 degrees C where the original activity corresponded to that obtained at 20 degrees C. FT-IR and SEM were employed to study the membrane morphology and structure after treatment at 70 degrees C. The pH profile of the immobilized and the free enzyme was found to be similar. A 2.4-fold increase in Km value was observed after immobilization whereas Vmax value was lower for the immobilized GOD. Immobilized glucose oxidase showed improved operational stability by maintaining 33% of the initial activity after 35 cycles of repeated use and was found to retain 94% of activity after 1 month storage period. Improved resistance against urea denaturation was achieved and the immobilized glucose oxidase retained 50% of the activity without urea in the presence of 5M urea whereas free enzyme retained only 8% activity.  相似文献   

17.
Monoclonal antibodies of two clones reacting with the nonnative forms of d-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, EC 1.2.1.12 (GAPDH), were obtained. Antibodies of clone 6C5 belonged to IgG1 subtype; antibodies of clone 6G7 belonged to IgM type. The interaction of antibodies of both clones with the immobilized and soluble enzyme was studied. The specificity of antibodies to the definite oligomeric forms was demonstrated on immobilized monomers, dimers, and tetramers of GAPDH. The affinity of antibodies to monomeric and dimeric forms of GAPDH, either active or not, was demonstrated. At the same time the antibodies did not react with the tetrameric enzyme. The binding of antibodies had no influence on the enzymatic activity. However, the addition of antibodies to the denatured enzyme blocked the spontaneous renaturation of GAPDH. The immobilized antibodies of both clones were successfully used for the purification of GAPDH solution from the denatured admixtures.  相似文献   

18.
The thermal stability of rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen phosphorylase b was characterized using enzymological inactivation studies, differential scanning calorimetry, and analytical ultracentrifugation. The results suggest that denaturation proceeds by the dissociative mechanism, i.e., it includes the step of reversible dissociation of the active dimer into inactive monomers and the following step of irreversible denaturation of the monomer. It was shown that glucose 1-phosphate (substrate), glucose (competitive inhibitor), AMP (allosteric activator), FMN, and glucose 6-phosphate (allosteric inhibitors) had a protective effect. Calorimetric study demonstrates that the cofactor of glycogen phosphorylase-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-stabilizes the enzyme molecule. Partial reactivation of glycogen phosphorylase b preheated at 53 degrees C occurs after cooling of the enzyme solution to 30 degrees C. The fact that the rate of reactivation decreases with dilution of the enzyme solution indicates association of inactive monomers into active dimers during renaturation. The allosteric inhibitor FMN enhances the rate of phosphorylase b reactivation.  相似文献   

19.
Milk xanthine oxidase was immobilized by covalent attachment to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B and by adsorption to n-octylamine-substituted Sepharose 4B. The amounts of activity immobilized for the two preparations were 30 and 90%, respectively. The pH optima for free and adsorbed xanthine oxidase were at 8.6 and 8.2, respectively. Both free and immobilized xanthine oxidase show substrate inhibition. The apparent inhibition constant (Ki′) found for adsorbed xanthine oxidase with xanthine as substrate was higher than the Ki for the free enzyme, which was shown to be due to substrate diffusion limitation in the pores of the carrier beads (internal diffusion limitation). Higher substrate concentrations, as desirable for practical application in organic synthesis, can therefore be used with the immobilized enzyme without decreasing the rate. As a result of the internal diffusion limitation the apparent Michaelis constant (Km′) for adsorbed xanthine oxidase was also higher than the Km for the free enzyme. Immobilized xanthine oxidase was more stable than the free enzyme during storage at 4 and 30°C. Both forms rapidly lost activity during catalysis. The loss was proportional to the amount of substrate converted. Coimmobilization of xanthine oxidase with superoxide dismutase and catalase improved the operational stability, suggesting that O2? and H2O2 side-products of the enzymatic reaction were involved in the inactivation. Coimmobilization with albumin also had some stabilizing effect. Complete surrounding of xanthine oxidase by protein, however, by means of etrapment in a glutaraldehyde-crosslinked gelatin matrix, considerably enhanced the operational half-life. This system was less efficient than the Sepharose preparations either because much activity was lost during the immobilization procedure and/or because it had poor flow properties. Xanthine (15 mg)was converted by an adsorbed xanthine oxidase preparation and product (uric acid) was isolated in high yield (84%).  相似文献   

20.
Interaction between 1,4-thiazine derivatives and D-amino-acid oxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Aminoethylcysteine-ketimine (2H-1,4-thiazine-5,6-dihydro-3-carboxylic acid) strongly inhibits D-amino-acid oxidase (D-amino-acid:oxygen oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.3). The inhibition is purely competitive (Ki = 3.3 X 10(-7) M). Aminoethylcysteine-ketimine modifies the visible spectrum of the enzyme: the absorption maxima of bound FAD shift from 375-455 nm to 385-445 nm with a definite shoulder at 465 nm; the appearance of a large absorption band centered at 750 nm may be due to a charge-transfer complex formation. The dissociation constant for the aminoethylcysteine-ketimine-enzyme complex, calculated by a photometric procedure (4 X 10(-7) M), is in good agreement with kinetic data. The dicarboxylic analogue of this inhibitor (lanthionine-ketimine) is ineffective in D-amino-acid oxidase inhibition and does not produce any spectral modification of the enzyme. These results confirm structural requirements for D-amino-acid oxidase inhibitor reported by other researchers. Ketimine reduced forms (thiomorpholine-2-carboxylic acid and thiomorpholine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid) are chemically synthesized and checked as D-amino-acid oxidase substrates: only thiomorpholine-2-carboxylic acid is oxidized to aminoethylcysteine-ketimine (Km = 2 X 10(-4) M).  相似文献   

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