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1.
1. We describe the use of benzyloxycarbonylmethionine and ethoxycarbonylmethionine for the selective protection of the amino groups of glycine-A1 and lysine-B29 of pig insulin. We have used the Edman method to remove residues from the N-terminal and of the B-chain of the NA1NB29-di-protected derivatives. The benzyloxycarbonyl group shows slight but noticeable lability in the acid-cleavage step, but the ethoxycarbonyl group remained intact even after five cycles of degradation. 2. We have prepared the following truncated forms of insulin via the di(ethoxycarbonylmethionyl) derivative: des-PheB1-insulin;des-(PheB1-ValB2)-insulin; des-(PheB1-ValB2-AsnB3)-insulin;des- (PheB1-ValB2-AsnB3-GlnB4)-insulin; des-(PheB1-ValB2-AsnB3 -GlnB4-HisB5)-insulin. 3. Insulin was re-synthesized from the di-protected des-PheB1-insulin by reaction with an active ester of t-butoxycarbonyl-l-phenylalanine. The product after deprotection crystallized, and the immunoreactivity of the crystalline material was identical with that of the native protein. 4. We have prepared the following analogues of insulin in a similar manner: [l-AlaB1]insulin; [l-ValB1]insulin; [l-TyrB1]insulin; [m-F-l-PheB1]insulin; [o-F-l-PheB1]-insulin; [o-F-l-PheB2]des-PheB1-insulin. All had between 34 and 62% of the activity of insulin in the fat-cell test. 5. We have also investigated the use of the benzyol, toluene-p-sulphonyl, p-nitrobenzyloxycarbonyl and 2,4-dinitrophenyl groups for the N-protection of the methionine active esters. Each should have had some particular advantage over the benzyloxycarbonyl and ethoxycarbonyl groups, but all proved in practice to have disadvantages that more than outweighed anything in their favour.  相似文献   

2.
Peptidoglycan hydrolases (PGHs) are responsible for bacterial cell lysis. Most PGHs have a modular structure comprising a catalytic domain and a cell wall-binding domain (CWBD). PGHs of bacteriophage origin, called endolysins, are involved in bacterial lysis at the end of the infection cycle. We have characterized two endolysins, Lc-Lys and Lc-Lys-2, identified in prophages present in the genome of Lactobacillus casei BL23. These two enzymes have different catalytic domains but similar putative C-terminal CWBDs. By analyzing purified peptidoglycan (PG) degradation products, we showed that Lc-Lys is an N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidase, whereas Lc-Lys-2 is a γ-d-glutamyl-l-lysyl endopeptidase. Remarkably, both lysins were able to lyse only Gram-positive bacterial strains that possess PG with d-Ala4d-Asx-l-Lys3 in their cross-bridge, such as Lactococcus casei, Lactococcus lactis, and Enterococcus faecium. By testing a panel of L. lactis cell wall mutants, we observed that Lc-Lys and Lc-Lys-2 were not able to lyse mutants with a modified PG cross-bridge, constituting d-Ala4l-Ala-(l-Ala/l-Ser)-l-Lys3; moreover, they do not lyse the L. lactis mutant containing only the nonamidated d-Asp cross-bridge, i.e. d-Ala4d-Asp-l-Lys3. In contrast, Lc-Lys could lyse the ampicillin-resistant E. faecium mutant with 3→3 l-Lys3-d-Asn-l-Lys3 bridges replacing the wild-type 4→3 d-Ala4-d-Asn-l-Lys3 bridges. We showed that the C-terminal CWBD of Lc-Lys binds PG containing mainly d-Asn but not PG with only the nonamidated d-Asp-containing cross-bridge, indicating that the CWBD confers to Lc-Lys its narrow specificity. In conclusion, the CWBD characterized in this study is a novel type of PG-binding domain targeting specifically the d-Asn interpeptide bridge of PG.  相似文献   

3.
Thermotoga maritima is a Gram-negative, hyperthermophilic bacterium whose peptidoglycan contains comparable amounts of l- and d-lysine. We have determined the fine structure of this cell-wall polymer. The muropeptides resulting from the digestion of peptidoglycan by mutanolysin were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by amino acid analysis after acid hydrolysis, dinitrophenylation, enzymatic determination of the configuration of the chiral amino acids, and mass spectrometry. The high-performance liquid chromatography profile contained four main peaks, two monomers, and two dimers, plus a few minor peaks corresponding to anhydro forms. The first monomer was the d-lysine-containing disaccharide-tripeptide in which the d-Glu-d-Lys bond had the unusual γ→ϵ arrangement (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-ϵ-d-Lys). The second monomer was the conventional disaccharide-tetrapeptide (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-l-Lys-d-Ala). The first dimer contained a disaccharide-l-Ala as the acyl donor cross-linked to the α-amine of d-Lys in a tripeptide acceptor stem with the sequence of the first monomer. In the second dimer, donor and acceptor stems with the sequences of the second and first monomers, respectively, were connected by a d-Ala4-α-d-Lys3 cross-link. The cross-linking index was 10 with an average chain length of 30 disaccharide units. The structure of the peptidoglycan of T. maritima revealed for the first time the key role of d-Lys in peptidoglycan synthesis, both as a surrogate of l-Lys or meso-diaminopimelic acid at the third position of peptide stems and in the formation of novel cross-links of the l-Ala1(α→α)d-Lys3 and d-Ala4(α→α)d-Lys3 types.Peptidoglycan (or murein) is a giant macromolecule whose main function is the protection of the cytoplasmic membrane against the internal osmotic pressure. It is composed of alternating residues of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc)2 cross-linked by short peptides (1). The composition of the peptide stem in nascent peptidoglycan is l-Ala1-γ-d-Glu2-X3-d-Ala4-d-Ala5, where X is most often meso-diaminopimelic acid (meso-A2pm) or l-lysine in Gram-negative and Gram-positive species, respectively (2, 3). In the mature macromolecule, the last d-Ala residue is removed. Cross-linking of the glycan chains generally occurs between the carboxyl group of d-Ala at position 4 of a donor peptide stem and the side-chain amino group of the diamino acid at position 3 of an acceptor peptide stem (4→3 cross-links). Cross-linking is either direct or through a short peptide bridge such as pentaglycine in Staphylococcus aureus (2, 3). The enzymes for the formation of the 4→3 cross-links are active-site serine dd- transpeptidases that belong to the penicillin-binding protein (PBP) family and are the essential targets of β-lactam antibiotics in pathogenic bacteria (4). Catalysis involves the cleavage of the d-Ala4-d-Ala5 bond of a donor peptide stem and the formation of an amide bond between the carboxyl of d-Ala4 and the side chain amine at the third position of an acceptor stem. Transpeptidases of the ld specificity are active-site cysteine enzymes that were shown to act as surrogates of the PBPs in mutants of Enterococcus faecium resistant to β-lactam antibiotics (5). They cleave the X3-d-Ala4 bond of a donor stem peptide to form 3→3 cross-links. This alternate mode of cross-linking is usually marginal, although it has recently been shown to predominate in non-replicative “dormant” forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (6).Thermotoga maritima is a Gram-negative, extremely thermophilic bacterium isolated from geothermally heated sea floors by Huber et al. (7). A morphological characteristic is the presence of an outer sheath-like envelope called “toga.” Although the organism has received considerable attention for its biotechnological potential, studies about its peptidoglycan are scarce (811), and in particular the fine structure of the macromolecule is still unknown. In their initial work, Huber et al. (7) showed that the composition of its peptidoglycan was unusual for a Gram-negative species, because it contained both isomers of lysine and no A2pm. Recently, we purified and studied the properties of T. maritima MurE (12); this enzyme is responsible for the addition of the amino acid residue at position 3 of the peptide stem (13, 14). We demonstrated that T. maritima MurE added in vitro l- and d-Lys to UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-d-Glu. Although l-Lys was added in the usual way, yielding the conventional nucleotide UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-l-Lys containing a d-Glu(γ→α)l-Lys amide bond, the d-isomer was added in an “upside-down” manner, yielding the novel nucleotide UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-d-Glu(γ→ϵ)d-Lys. We also showed that the d-Lys-containing nucleotide was not a substrate for T. maritima MurF, the subsequent enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, whereas this ligase catalyzed the addition of dipeptide d-Ala-d-Ala to the l-Lys-containing tripeptide, yielding the conventional UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide (12).However, both the l-Lys-containing UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide and d-Lys-containing UDP-MurNAc-tripeptide were used as substrates by T. maritima MraY with comparable efficiencies in vitro (12). This observation implies that the unusual d-Lys-containing peptide stems are likely to be translocated to the periplasmic face of the cytoplasmic membrane and to participate in peptidoglycan polymerization. Therefore, we have determined here the fine structure of T. maritima peptidoglycan and we have shown that l-Lys- and d-Lys-containing peptide stems are both present in the polymer, the latter being involved in the formation of two novel types of peptidoglycan cross-link.  相似文献   

4.
Insulin binds with high affinity to the insulin receptor (IR) and with low affinity to the type 1 insulin-like growth factor (IGF) receptor (IGFR). Such cross-binding, which reflects homologies within the insulin-IGF signaling system, is of clinical interest in relation to the association between hyperinsulinemia and colorectal cancer. Here, we employ nonstandard mutagenesis to design an insulin analog with enhanced affinity for the IR but reduced affinity for the IGFR. Unnatural amino acids were introduced by chemical synthesis at the N- and C-capping positions of a recognition α-helix (residues A1 and A8). These sites adjoin the hormone-receptor interface as indicated by photocross-linking studies. Specificity is enhanced more than 3-fold on the following: (i) substitution of GlyA1 by d-Ala or d-Leu, and (ii) substitution of ThrA8 by diaminobutyric acid (Dab). The crystal structure of [d-AlaA1,DabA8]insulin, as determined within a T6 zinc hexamer to a resolution of 1.35 Å, is essentially identical to that of human insulin. The nonstandard side chains project into solvent at the edge of a conserved receptor-binding surface shared by insulin and IGF-I. Our results demonstrate that modifications at this edge discriminate between IR and IGFR. Because hyperinsulinemia is typically characterized by a 3-fold increase in integrated postprandial insulin concentrations, we envisage that such insulin analogs may facilitate studies of the initiation and progression of cancer in animal models. Future development of clinical analogs lacking significant IGFR cross-binding may enhance the safety of insulin replacement therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus at increased risk of colorectal cancer.  相似文献   

5.
Amino acid uptake in fungi is mediated by general and specialized members of the yeast amino acid transporter (YAT) family, a branch of the amino acid polyamine organocation (APC) transporter superfamily. PrnB, a highly specific l-proline transporter, only weakly recognizes other Put4p substrates, its Saccharomyces cerevisiae orthologue. Taking advantage of the high sequence similarity between the two transporters, we combined molecular modeling, induced fit docking, genetic, and biochemical approaches to investigate the molecular basis of this difference and identify residues governing substrate binding and specificity. We demonstrate that l-proline is recognized by PrnB via interactions with residues within TMS1 (Gly56, Thr57), TMS3 (Glu138), and TMS6 (Phe248), which are evolutionary conserved in YATs, whereas specificity is achieved by subtle amino acid substitutions in variable residues. Put4p-mimicking substitutions in TMS3 (S130C), TMS6 (F252L, S253G), TMS8 (W351F), and TMS10 (T414S) broadened the specificity of PrnB, enabling it to recognize more efficiently l-alanine, l-azetidine-2-carboxylic acid, and glycine without significantly affecting the apparent Km for l-proline. S253G and W351F could transport l-alanine, whereas T414S, despite displaying reduced proline uptake, could transport l-alanine and glycine, a phenotype suppressed by the S130C mutation. A combination of all five Put4p-ressembling substitutions resulted in a functional allele that could also transport l-alanine and glycine, displaying a specificity profile impressively similar to that of Put4p. Our results support a model where residues in these positions determine specificity by interacting with the substrates, acting as gating elements, altering the flexibility of the substrate binding core, or affecting conformational changes of the transport cycle.  相似文献   

6.
The uncharacterized gene previously proposed as a mannose-6-phosphate isomerase from Bacillus subtilis was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The maximal activity of the recombinant enzyme was observed at pH 7.5 and 40°C in the presence of 0.5 mM Co2+. The isomerization activity was specific for aldose substrates possessing hydroxyl groups oriented in the same direction at the C-2 and C-3 positions, such as the d and l forms of ribose, lyxose, talose, mannose, and allose. The enzyme exhibited the highest activity for l-ribulose among all pentoses and hexoses. Thus, l-ribose, as a potential starting material for many l-nucleoside-based pharmaceutical compounds, was produced at 213 g/liter from 300-g/liter l-ribulose by mannose-6-phosphate isomerase at 40°C for 3 h, with a conversion yield of 71% and a volumetric productivity of 71 g liter−1 h−1.l-Ribose is a potential starting material for the synthesis of many l-nucleoside-based pharmaceutical compounds, and it is not abundant in nature (5, 19). l-Ribose has been produced mainly by chemical synthesis from l-arabinose, l-xylose, d-glucose, d-galactose, d-ribose, or d-mannono-1,4-lactone (2, 17, 23). Biological l-ribose manufacture has been investigated using ribitol or l-ribulose. Recently, l-ribose was produced from ribitol by a recombinant Escherichia coli containing an NAD-dependent mannitol-1-dehydrogenase (MDH) with a 55% conversion yield when 100 g/liter ribitol was used in a 72-h fermentation (18). However, the volumetric productivity of l-ribose in the fermentation is 28-fold lower than that of the chemical method synthesized from l-arabinose (8). l-Ribulose has been biochemically converted from l-ribose using an l-ribose isomerase from an Acinetobacter sp. (9), an l-arabinose isomerase mutant from Escherichia coli (4), a d-xylose isomerase mutant from Actinoplanes missouriensis (14), and a d-lyxose isomerase from Cohnella laeviribosi (3), indicating that l-ribose can be produced from l-ribulose by these enzymes. However, the enzymatic production of l-ribulose is slow, and the enzymatic production of l-ribose from l-ribulose has been not reported.Sugar phosphate isomerases, such as ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, and galactose-6-phosphate isomerase, work as general aldose-ketose isomerases and are useful tools for producing rare sugars, because they convert the substrate sugar phosphates and the substrate sugars without phosphate to have a similar configuration (11, 12, 21, 22). l-Ribose isomerase from an Acinetobacter sp. (9) and d-lyxose isomerase from C. laeviribosi (3) had activity with l-ribose, d-lyxose, and d-mannose. Thus, we can apply mannose-6-phosphate (EC 5.3.1.8) isomerase to the production of l-ribose, because there are no sugar phosphate isomerases relating to l-ribose and d-lyxose. The production of the expensive sugar l-ribose (bulk price, $1,000/kg) from the rare sugar l-ribulose by mannose-6-phosphate isomerase may prove to be a valuable industrial process, because we have produced l-ribulose from the cheap sugar l-arabinose (bulk price, $50/kg) using the l-arabinose isomerase from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans (20) (Fig. (Fig.11).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Schematic representation for the production of l-ribulose from l-arabinose by G. thermodenitrificans l-arabinose isomerase and the production of l-ribose from l-ribulose by B. subtilis mannose-6-phosphate isomerase.In this study, the gene encoding mannose-6-phosphate isomerase from Bacillus subtilis was cloned and expressed in E. coli. The substrate specificity of the recombinant enzyme for various aldoses and ketoses was investigated, and l-ribulose exhibited the highest activity among all pentoses and hexoses. Therefore, mannose-6-phosphate isomerase was applied to the production of l-ribose from l-ribulose.  相似文献   

7.
Evidence for a specific glutamate/h cotransport in isolated mesophyll cells   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Mechanically isolated Asparagus sprengeri Regel mesophyll cells were suspended in 1 millimolar CaSO4. Immediate alkalinization of the medium occured on the addition of 1 millimolar concentrations of l-glutamate (Glu) and its analog l-methionine-d,l-sulfoximine (l-MSO). d-Glu and the l isomers of the protein amino acids did not elicit alkalinization. l-Glu dependent alkalinization was transient and acidification resumed after approximately 30 to 45 minutes. At pH 6.0, 5 millimolar l-Glu stimulated initial rates of alkalinization that varied between 1.3 to 4.1 nmol H+/106 cells·minute. l-Glu dependent alkalinization was saturable, increased with decreasing pH, was inhibited by carbonyl cyanide-p-trichloromethoxyphenyl hydrazone (CCCP), and was not stimulated by light. Uptake of l-[U-14C]glutamate increased as the pH decreased from 6.5 to 5.5, and was inhibited by l-MSO. l-Glu had no influence on K+ efflux. Although evidence for multiple amino acid/proton cotransport systems has been found in other tissues, the present report indicates that a highly specific l-Glu/proton uptake process is present in Asparagus mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

8.
We present evidence that the role of tryptophan and other potential intermediates in the pathways that could lead to indole derivatives needs to be reexamined. Two lines of Lemna gibba were tested for uptake of [15N-indole]-labeled tryptophan isomers and incorporation of that label into free indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). Both lines required levels of l-[15N]tryptophan 2 to 3 orders of magnitude over endogenous levels in order to obtain measurable incorporation of label into IAA. Labeled l-tryptophan was extractable from plant tissue after feeding and showed no measurable isomerization into d-tryptophan. d-[15N]tryptophan supplied to Lemna at rates of approximately 400 times excess of endogenous d-tryptophan levels (to yield an isotopic enrichment equal to that which allowed detection of the incorporation of l-tryptophan into IAA), did not result in measurable incorporation of label into free IAA. These results demonstrate that l-tryptophan is a more direct precursor to IAA than the d isomer and suggest (a) that the availability of tryptophan in vivo is not a limiting factor in the biosynthesis of IAA, thus implying that other regulatory mechanisms are in operation and (b) that l-tryptophan also may not be a primary precursor to IAA in plants.  相似文献   

9.
The metabolic fate of l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid has been examined in the grape (Vitis labrusca L.) and lemon geranium (Pelargonium crispum L. L'Hér. cv. Prince Rupert) under conditions comparable to data from l-[1-14C]ascorbic acid and l-[6-14C]ascorbic acid experiments. In detached grape leaves and immature berries, l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid and l-[1-14C]ascorbic acid were equivalent precursors to carboxyl labeled (+)-tartaric acid. In geranium apices, l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid yielded internal labeled (+)-tartaric acid while l-[6-14C]ascorbic acid gave an equivalent conversion to carboxyl labeled (+)-tartaric acid. These findings clearly show that two distinct processes for the synthesis of (+)-tartaric acid from l-ascorbic acid exist in plants identified as (+)-tartaric acid accumulators. In grape leaves and immature berries, (+)-tartaric acid synthesis proceeds via preservation of a four-carbon fragment derived from carbons 1 through 4 of l-ascorbic acid while carbons 3 through 6 yield (+)-tartaric acid in geranium apices.  相似文献   

10.
The tryptophan prenyltransferases FgaPT2 and 7-DMATS (7-dimethylallyl tryptophan synthase) from Aspergillus fumigatus catalyze C4- and C7-prenylation of the indole ring, respectively. 7-DMATS was found to accept l-tyrosine as substrate as well and converted it to an O-prenylated derivative. An acceptance of l-tyrosine by FgaPT2 was also observed in this study. Interestingly, isolation and structure elucidation revealed the identification of a C3-prenylated l-tyrosine as enzyme product. Molecular modeling and site-directed mutagenesis led to creation of a mutant FgaPT2_K174F, which showed much higher specificity toward l-tyrosine than l-tryptophan. Its catalytic efficiency toward l-tyrosine was found to be 4.9-fold in comparison with that of non-mutated FgaPT2, whereas the activity toward l-tryptophan was less than 0.4% of that of the wild-type. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on an enzymatic C-prenylation of l-tyrosine as free amino acid and altering the substrate preference of a prenyltransferase by mutagenesis.  相似文献   

11.
Although amino acids are dietary nutrients that evoke the secretion of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) from intestinal L cells, the precise molecular mechanism(s) by which amino acids regulate GLP-1 secretion from intestinal L cells remains unknown. Here, we show that the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), family C group 6 subtype A (GPRC6A), is involved in amino acid-induced GLP-1 secretion from the intestinal L cell line GLUTag. Application of l-ornithine caused an increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in GLUTag cells. Application of a GPRC6A receptor antagonist, a phospholipase C inhibitor, or an IP3 receptor antagonist significantly suppressed the l-ornithine-induced [Ca2+]i increase. We found that the increase in [Ca2+]i stimulated by l-ornithine correlated with GLP-1 secretion and that l-ornithine stimulation increased exocytosis in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, depletion of endogenous GPRC6A by a specific small interfering RNA (siRNA) inhibited the l-ornithine-induced [Ca2+]i increase and GLP-1 secretion. Taken together, these findings suggest that the GPRC6A receptor functions as an amino acid sensor in GLUTag cells that promotes GLP-1 secretion.  相似文献   

12.
Endogenous l-tri-iodothyronine content in an hepatic nuclear extract was measured by a new unextracted-sample radioimmunoassay method using 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonic acid to inhibit the l-[125I]tri-iodothyronine binding to the nuclear l-tri-iodothyronine receptor within the extract. For this method, the lower sensitivity limit was 3.125 pg/tube, the recovery of added l-tri-iodothyronine was 90–120%, and the between-assay coefficient of variation was 10%. The amount of endogenous l-tri-iodothyronine was 10–40 pg/0.2 ml of hepatic nuclear extract from euthyroid rats, compared with less than 3.125 pg/0.2 ml from thyroidectomized rats. The results obtained by this new method were compared with a Sephadex G-25 column extracted-sample radioimmunoassay method and showed a good agreement. The values for the endogenous l-tri-iodothyronine content were utilized to correct for the l-tri-iodothyronine concentration within the binding assay mixture in order to accurately determine by Scatchard analysis the binding characteristics of the nuclear l-tri-iodothyronine receptor. The validity of the correction for endogeneous l-tri-iodothyronine was demonstrated by using a nuclear extract from a thyroidectomized rat which was preincubated with a small known amount of l-tri-iodothyronine before determining the nuclear l-tri-iodothyronine receptor binding characteristics. When the Scatchard plots were corrected for the preincubated dose, the results obtained were similar to true values, but they were falsely lower when not corrected. It is concluded that the necessity and validity of using endogenous l-tri-iodothyronine corrections in the Scatchard analytical computations of the nuclear l-tri-iodothyronine receptor binding characteristics has been demonstrated, being particularly more important for affinity constant than maximum binding capacity.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Two enzymes, l-arabinose isomerase and mannose-6-phosphate isomerase, from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans produced 118 g/liter l-ribose from 500 g/liter l-arabinose at pH 7.0, 70°C, and 1 mM Co2+ for 3 h, with a conversion yield of 23.6% and a volumetric productivity of 39.3 g liter−1 h−1.l-Ribose, a potential starting material for the synthesis of many l-nucleoside-based pharmaceutical compounds, is not abundant in nature (4, 15, 20). l-Ribose has been synthesized primarily from l-arabinose, l-xylose, d-glucose, d-galactose, d-ribose, and d-mannono-1,4-lactone (1, 13, 20). Recombinant cells containing a NAD-dependent mannitol-1-dehydrogenase produced 52 g/liter l-ribose from 100 g/liter ribitol after fermentation for 72 h (14). However, the volumetric productivity of l-ribose was 26-fold lower than that of the chemical synthetic method starting from l-arabinose (6). l-Ribose isomerase from an Acinetobacter sp., which is most active with l-ribose, showed poor efficiency in the conversion of l-ribulose to l-ribose (9). Recently, l-ribulose was produced with a conversion yield of 19% from the inexpensive sugar l-arabinose using l-arabinose isomerase (AI) from Geobacillus thermodenitrificans (18). l-Ribose has been produced from l-ribulose using mannose-6-phosphate isomerase (MPI) from Bacillus subtilis with a conversion yield of 70% (17). In this study, the production of l-ribose from l-arabinose was demonstrated via a two-enzyme system from G. thermodenitrificans, in which l-ribulose was first produced from l-arabinose by AI and subsequently converted to l-ribose by MPI.The analysis of monosaccharides and the purification and thermostability of AI and MPI from G. thermodenitrificans (2) isolated from compost were performed as described previously (7, 18, 19). The cross-linked enzymes were obtained from the treatment of 0.5% glutaraldehyde (10, 16). The reaction was performed by replacing the reaction solution with 100 g/liter l-arabinose and 1 mM Co2+ every 6 h at 70°C and pH 7.0. The reaction volume of 10 ml contained 5 g of the cross-linked enzymes with 8 U/ml AI and 20 U/ml MPI. One unit of AI or MPI activity, which corresponded to 0.0625 or 2.5 mg protein, respectively, was defined as the amount of enzyme required to produce 1 μmol of l-ribulose or l-ribose, respectively, per min at 70°C, pH 7.0, and 1 mM Co2+. Unless otherwise stated, the reaction was carried out in 50 mM piperazine-N,N′-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) (PIPES) buffer (pH 7.0) in the presence of 1 mM Co2+ at 70°C for 4 h. All experiments were performed in triplicate.The recombinant Escherichia coli ER2566 (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA) containing pTrc99A plasmid (Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) and the AI or MPI gene was cultivated in a 7-liter fermentor containing 3 liters of chemically defined medium (11). When the cell mass reached 2 g/liter, 10 g/liter lactose was added for enzyme induction. After 14 h, 40 g/liter cells with 13,400 U/liter of AI or 34 g/liter cells with 630 U/liter of MPI was obtained. The enzyme was purified by heat treatment and Hi-Trap anion-exchange chromatography. The purification yields of AI and MPI were 21 and 78%, respectively, and the levels of purity for the concentrated AI and MPI by gene scanning were 48 and 92%, respectively. Maximum l-ribose production from l-arabinose by AI and by MPI in 10 ml of total volume was observed at pH 7.0, 70°C, and 1 mM Co2+ (data not shown). Half-lives for the two-enzyme system containing 10 mM l-arabinose, 0.2 U/ml AI, and 0.5 U/ml MPI at 60, 65, 70, 75, and 80°C were 1,216, 235, 48, 26, and 12 h, respectively. The use of Co2+ may be disadvantageous, as it is fairly toxic. This problem can be solved by using Mn2+ instead of Co2+. When Mn2+ was used in the reaction with the same amounts of enzymes, the conversion yield was the same as that obtained with Co2+, even though the volumetric productivity was lower than that with Co2+ (data not shown).The effect of the ratio of AI to MPI in the two-step enzymatic production of l-ribose from l-arabinose was investigated by mixing the enzyme solutions (8 U/ml AI and 20 U/ml MPI) to obtain AI/MPI ratios ranging from 10:90 to 90:10 (vol/vol) (Fig. (Fig.1).1). The reactions were run with 300 g/liter l-arabinose. Maximum l-ribose production was observed at a volume ratio of 50:50 of the enzyme solutions. The effects of enzyme concentration on l-ribose production were investigated at the optimal unit ratio (AI/MPI ratio, 1:2.5) with 500 g/liter l-arabinose and AI and MPI concentrations from 0.4 and 1.0 U/ml, respectively, to 9.2 and 23.0 U/ml, respectively (Fig. (Fig.2A).2A). l-Ribose production increased with increasing amounts of enzymes until reaching a plateau at 8 U/ml AI and 20 U/ml MPI. The effect of substrate concentration on l-ribose production was evaluated at l-arabinose concentrations ranging from 15 to 500 g/liter with 8 U/ml AI and 20 U/ml MPI (Fig. (Fig.2B).2B). The production of both l-ribose and l-ribulose, an intermediate, increased with increasing substrate level. The results suggest that concentrations of substrate above 500 g/liter l-arabinose might cause the increased production. The conversion yields of l-ribose and l-ribulose from l-arabinose were constant at 32% and 14%, respectively, within an initial concentration of 100 g/liter l-arabinose, indicating that the reactions reached equilibrium at an l-arabinose/l-ribulose/l-ribose ratio of 54:14:32, which was in agreement with the calculated equilibrium (17). However, at l-arabinose concentrations above 100 g/liter, the conversion yields of l-ribose and l-ribulose from l-arabinose decreased with increasing l-arabinose concentration. The l-arabinose/l-ribulose/l-ribose ratio, with an initial l-arabinose concentration of 300 g/liter, was 71:6:23 after 4 h of reaction. To obtain near-equilibrium (54:14:32) at this high concentration of l-arabinose, more effective enzymes are required.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Effect of the ratio of AI to MPI on l-ribose production from l-arabinose by the purified AI and MPI from G. thermodenitrificans. Data are the means for three separate experiments, and error bars represent standard deviations. Symbols: •, l-ribose; ▪, l-ribulose.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.(A) Effect of enzyme concentration on l-ribose production from l-arabinose at the optimal unit ratio (AI/MPI ratio, 1:2.5). Symbols: •, l-ribose; ▪, l-ribulose; ○, l-arabinose. (B) Effect of l-arabinose concentration on l-ribose production. Symbols: •, l-ribose; ▪, l-ribulose. Data are the means for three separate experiments, and error bars represent standard deviations.A time course reaction of l-ribose production from l-arabinose was monitored for 3 h with 8 U/ml AI and 20 U/ml MPI (Fig. (Fig.3).3). As a result, 118 g/liter l-ribose was obtained from an initial l-arabinose concentration of 500 g/liter after 3 h, with a conversion yield of 23.6% and a productivity of 39.3 g liter−1 h−1. Recombinant E. coli containing MDH yielded 52 g/liter l-ribose from an initial ribitol concentration of 100 g/liter after 72 h, with a productivity of 0.72 g liter−1 h−1 (14). The production and productivity obtained in the current study using AI and MPI from G. thermodenitrificans were 2.3- and 55-fold higher, respectively, than those obtained from ribitol and 17- and 21-fold higher than those obtained with the production of l-ribose from l-arabinose using resting cells of recombinant Lactobacillus plantarum (5). The chemical synthetic method is capable of producing 56.5 g/liter l-ribose from 250 g/liter l-arabinose after 3 h, corresponding to a productivity of 18.8 g liter−1 h−1 (6). Still, both the production and productivity of l-ribose using the method described herein were 2.1-fold higher. Thus, the method of production of l-ribose in the present study exhibited the highest productivity and production, compared to other fermentation methods and chemical syntheses.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Time course of l-ribose production from l-arabinose by purified AI and MPI from G. thermodenitrificans. Data are the means for three separate experiments, and error bars represent standard deviations. Symbols: •, l-ribose; ▪, l-ribulose; ○, l-arabinose.Several rounds of conversion reusing the cross-linked enzymes were performed (Fig. (Fig.4).4). The immobilized enzymes showed more than 20% conversion of l-ribose from l-arabinose for the 9th batch, and the concentration of l-ribose was reduced to 43% after the 20th batch. These results suggest that the immobilization of enzyme facilitates separation of product and enzyme, and it enables the enzyme to function continuously, as reported previously (3, 8, 12). Thus, the reuse of enzyme by immobilization improves the economic viability of this enzymatic process.Open in a separate windowFIG. 4.Reuse of immobilized AI and MPI from G. thermodenitrificans for l-ribose production from 100 g/liter l-arabinose. Data are the means for three separate experiments, and error bars represent standard deviations.  相似文献   

15.
Saito K  Nick JA  Loewus FA 《Plant physiology》1990,94(3):1496-1500
d-[6-14C]Glucosone that had been prepared enzymically from d-[6-14C]glucose was used to compare relative efficiencies of these two sugars for l-ascorbic acid (AA) biosynthesis in detached bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L., cv California small white) apices and 4-week-old spinach (Spinacia oleracea L., cv Giant Noble) leaves. At tracer concentration, 14C from glucosone was utilized by spinach leaves for AA biosynthesis much more effectively than glucose. Carbon-14 from [6-14C]glucose underwent considerable redistribution during AA formation, whereas 14C from [6-14C]glucosone remained almost totally in carbon 6 of AA. In other experiments with spinach leaves, l-[U-14C]sorbosone was found to be equivalent to [6-14C]glucose as a source of 14C for AA. In the presence of 0.1% d-glucosone, conversion of [6-14C] glucose into labeled AA was greatly repressed. In a comparable experiment with l-sorbosone replacing d-glucosone, the effect was much less. The experiments described here give substance to the proposal that d-glucosone and l-sorbosone are putative intermediates in the conversion of d-glucose to AA in higher plants.  相似文献   

16.
1. The influence of cations on the active transport into cells of rat-brain-cortex slices of l-histidine, an amino acid that is not metabolized by this tissue, has been studied. 2. Like other amino acids, l-histidine accumulated in the cells in the presence of glucose in concentrations up to over double that in the incubation medium. 3. The active transport of l-histidine was highest in a medium containing Ca2+ (3mm). The addition of K+ (27mm) led to a marked decrease in the intracellular concentration of l-histidine, though the oxygen uptake of the slices was higher. 4. The active l-histidine transport was inhibited by NH4+. The inhibitory effect increased with the NH4+ concentration, being about 25% at 8mm, 65% at 20mm, and 90% at 27 and 50mm. The oxygen uptake of the brain slices was depressed by only 25% by the highest NH4+ concentration used, and less by lower concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
1. Three bacterial isolates capable of growth on l-threonine medium only when supplemented with branched-chain amino acids, and possessing high l-threonine dehydratase activity, were examined to elucidate the catabolic route for the amino acid. 2. Growth, manometric, radiotracer and enzymic experiments indicated that l-threonine was catabolized by initial deamination to 2-oxobutyrate and thence to propionate. No evidence was obtained for the involvement of l-threonine 3-dehydrogenase or l-threonine aldolase in threonine catabolism. 3. l-Threonine dehydratase of Corynebacterium sp. F5 (N.C.I.B. 11102) was partially purified and its kinetic properties were examined. The enzyme exhibited a sigmoid kinetic response to substrate concentration. The concentration of substrate giving half the maximum velocity, [S0.5], was 40mm and the Hill coefficient (h) was 2.0. l-Isoleucine inhibited enzyme activity markedly, causing 50% inhibition at 60μm, but did not affect the Hill constant. At the fixed l-threonine concentration of 10mm, the effect of l-valine was biphasic, progressive activation occurring at concentrations up to 2mm-l-valine, but was abolished by higher concentrations. Substrate-saturation plots for the l-valine-activated enzyme exhibited normal Michaelis–Menten kinetics with a Hill coefficient (h) of 1.0. The kinetic properties of the enzyme were thus similar to those of the `biosynthetic' isoenzyme from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides rather than those of the enteric bacteria. 4. The synthesis of l-threonine dehydratase was constitutive and was not subject to multivalent repression by l-isoleucine or other branched-chain amino acids either singly or in combination. 5. The catabolism of l-threonine, apparently initiated by a `biosynthetic' l-threonine dehydratase in the isolates studied, depended on the concomitant catabolism of branched-chain amino acids. The biochemical basis of this dependence appeared to lie in the further catabolism of 2-oxobutyrate by enzymes which required branched-chain 2-oxo acids for their induction.  相似文献   

18.
Insulin analogues withl- andd-tryptophan instead of glycine in A1 permit an estimate of the proximity relationship between the indole residue of tryptophan and B19-tyrosine by evaluation of singlet-singlet resonance energy transfer. A significantly higher transfer efficiency is observed with [(d)TrpA1]insulin than with the [TrpA1]analogue. On the basis of this result it is possible to deduce the arrangement of the side chains and the α-amino groups in position A1 of [(d)TrpA1] and [TrpA1]insulin.  相似文献   

19.
Mechanically isolated Asparagus sprengeri Regel mesophyll cells cause alkalinization of the suspension medium on the addition of l-glutamate or its analog l-methionine-d,l-sulfoximine. Using a radiolabeled pH probe, it was found that both compounds caused internal acidification whereas l-aspartate did not. Fusicoccin stimulated H+ efflux from the cells by 111% and the uptake of l-[U-14C]glutamate by 55%. Manometric experiments demonstrated that, unlike l-methionine-d,l-sulfoximine, l-glutamate stimulated CO2 evolution from nonilluminated cells. Simultaneous measurements of medium alkalinization and 14CO2 evolution upon the addition of labeled l-glutamate showed that alkalinization was immediate and reached a maximum value after 45 minutes whereas 14CO2 evolution exhibited a lag before its appearance and continued in a linear manner for at least 100 minutes. Rates of alkalinization and uptake of l-[U-14C]glutamate were higher in the light while rates of 14CO2 evolution were higher in the dark. The major labeled product of glutamate decarboxylation, γ-aminobutyric acid, was found in the cells and the suspension medium. Its addition to the cell suspension did not result in medium alkalinization and evidence indicates that it is lost from the cell to the medium. The data suggest that the origin of medium alkalinization is co-transport not metabolism, and that the loss of labeled CO2 and γ-aminobutyric acid from the cell result in an overestimation of the stoichiometry of the H+/l-glutamate uptake process.  相似文献   

20.
1. all-trans-Retinoic acid at concentrations greater than 10−7m stimulated the incorporation of d-[3H]glucosamine into 8m-urea/5% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulphate extracts of 1m-CaCl2-separated epidermis from pig ear skin slices cultured for 18h. The incorporation of 35SO42−, l-[14C]fucose and U-14C-labelled l-amino acids was not significantly affected. 2. Electrophoresis of the solubilized epidermis showed increased incorporation of d-[3H]glucosamine into a high-molecular-weight glycosaminoglycan-containing peak when skin slices were cultured in the presence of 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid. The labelling of other epidermal components with d-[3H]glucosamine, 35SO42−, l-[14C]fucose and U-14C-labelled l-amino acids was not significantly affected by 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid. 3. Trypsinization dispersed the epidermal cells and released 75–85% of the total d-[3H]glucosamine-labelled material in the glycosaminoglycan peak. Thus most of this material was extracellular in both control and 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid-treated epidermis. 4. Increased labelling of extracellular epidermal glycosaminoglycans was also observed when human skin slices were treated with all-trans-retinoic acid, indicating a similar mechanism in both tissues. Increased labelling was also found when the epidermis was cultured in the absence of the dermis, suggesting a direct effect of all-trans-retinoic acid on the epidermis. 5. Increased incorporation of d-[3H]-glucosamine into extracellular epidermal glycosaminoglycans in 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid-treated skin slices was apparent after 4–8h in culture and continued up to 48h. all-trans-Retinoic acid (10−5m) did not affect the rate of degradation of this material in cultures `chased' with 5mm-unlabelled glucosamine after 4 or 18h. 6. Cellulose acetate electrophoresis at pH7.2 revealed that hyaluronic acid was the major labelled glycosaminoglycan (80–90%) in both control and 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid-treated epidermis. 7. The labelling of epidermal plasma membranes isolated from d-[3H]glucosamine-labelled skin slices by sucrose density gradient centrifugation was similar in control and 10−5m-all-trans-retinoic acid-treated tissue. 8. The results indicate that increased synthesis of mainly extracellular glycosaminoglycans (largely hyaluronic acid) may be the first response of the epidermis to excess all-trans-retinoic acid.  相似文献   

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