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1.
Rhizopus (Rh.) delemar were cultivated under the various conditions and the productivity of three lipases (A, B, and C) were examined. There seemed to be no remarkable change of A-lipase production so far as examined, however, the productions of B- and C-lipases were changed with correlation depending on the composition of the medium. B-lipase was increasingly produced as much as C-lipase production decreased by the presence of phospholipid in a culture medium. The property of C-lipase was so changed by the incubation with phospholipid as to agree with that of B-lipase. Besides the above, the property of B-lipase was changed by its purification to that of C-lipase.From these results, it seems that B-lipase protein is the same as that of C-lipase and a phospholipid is related to the intercoversion from C-lipase to B-lipase. 相似文献
2.
3.
壳聚糖固定化德氏根霉脂肪酶的研究 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
研究了壳聚糖吸附和戊二醛交联对脂肪酶固定化条件,在室温条件下将0.4g酶粉溶于pH6.0缓冲液中,加入10g壳聚糖,摇匀,再加入浓度为0.6%戊二醛交联6h,得到固定化酶,酶活力回收率约为54.2%。固定化酶的半失活温度比游离酶的高,半失活温度由游离酶的47℃提高到100℃,最适反应温度由40℃上升至80℃,最适pH由6下降到5.5,固定化酶K’m值由游离酶的Km 50mg/mL增加到56mg/mL。该固定化脂肪酶用于酯的合成;在80℃条件下经过10批次连续水解植物油反应,固定化酶的活力仍保持在82.6%以上。 相似文献
4.
ABSTRACT. Both the lag period and the time required for the filament and sporoplasm to emerge from Nosema algerae spores were prolonged when germination occurred under hyperosmotic conditions. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) and sucrose inhibited germination, first by preventing eversion of the filament, and then at higher concentrations by preventing stimulation. The size of the spore cases decreased by about 21% following germination, indicating an elastic spore wall and turgor pressure in the dormant spores. Increased pressure during germination was indicated by less osmotically-induced shrinkage in stimulated than in dormant spores and by higher concentration of solutes in the homogenates of germinated than ungerminated spores. These results are consistent with the hypothesis of a pressure increase during germination that is caused by an endogenous increase in solute concentration. 相似文献
5.
Daniel Paredes-Sabja Peter Setlow Mahfuzur R. Sarker 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2009,75(11):3813-3817
Previous work indicated that Clostridium perfringens gerKA gerKC spores germinate significantly, suggesting that gerKB also has a role in C. perfringens spore germination. We now find that (i) gerKB was expressed only during sporulation, likely in the forespore; (ii) gerKB spores germinated like wild-type spores with nonnutrient germinants and with high concentrations of nutrients but more slowly with low nutrient concentrations; and (iii) gerKB spores had lower colony-forming efficiency and slower outgrowth than wild-type spores. These results suggest that GerKB plays an auxiliary role in spore germination under some conditions and is required for normal spore viability and outgrowth.Spores of Bacillus and Clostridium species can break dormancy upon sensing a variety of compounds (termed germinants), including amino acids, nutrient mixtures, a 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA]), and cationic surfactants such as dodecylamine (20). Nutrient germinants are sensed by their cognate receptors, located in the spore''s inner membrane (6), which are composed of proteins belonging to the GerA family (10, 11). In Bacillus subtilis, three tricistronic operons (gerA, gerB, and gerK) expressed uniquely during sporulation in the developing forespore each encode the three major germinant receptors, with different receptors responding to a different spectrum of nutrient germinants (5, 9, 20). Null mutations in any cistron in a gerA family operon inactivate the function of the respective receptor (9, 11). In contrast, Clostridium perfringens, a gram-positive, spore-forming, anaerobic pathogenic bacterium, has no tricistronic gerA-like operon but only a monocistronic gerAA that is far from a gerK locus. This locus contains a bicistronic gerKA-gerKC operon and a monocistronic gerKB upstream of and in the opposite orientation to gerKA-gerKC (Fig. (Fig.1A)1A) (16). GerAA has an auxiliary role in the germination of C. perfringens spores at low germinant concentrations, while GerKA and/or GerKC are required for l-asparagine germination and have partial roles in germination with KCl and a mixture of KCl and l-asparagine (AK) (16). In contrast to the situation with B. subtilis, where germinant receptors play no role in Ca-DPA germination (12, 13), GerKA and/or GerKC is required for Ca-DPA germination (16). The partial requirement for GerKA and/or GerKC in C. perfringens spore germination by KCl and AK suggests that the upstream gene product, GerKB, might also have some role in KCl and AK germination of C. perfringens spores. Therefore, in this study we have investigated the role of GerKB in the germination and outgrowth of C. perfringens spores.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Arrangement and expression of gerKB in C. perfringens SM101. (A) The arrangement of the gerK locus in C. perfringens SM101 is shown, and the locations of the primers used to amplify the upstream regions of the gerKB gene and the putative promoters of gerKB and gerKA are indicated. The gerKB promoter was predicted to be within the intergenic regions between gerKB and the gerK operon. (B) GUS specific activities from the gerKB-gusA fusion in strain SM101(pDP84) grown in TGY vegetative (filled squares) and DS sporulation (open squares) media were determined as described in the text. Data represent averages from three independent experiments with the error bars representing standard deviations, and time zero denotes the time of inoculation of cells into either TGY or DS medium.To determine if gerKB is expressed during sporulation, 485 bp upstream of the gerKB coding sequence, including DNA between gerKB and gerKA, was PCR amplified with primer pair CPP389/CPP391, which had SalI and PstI cleavage sites, respectively (see Table S2 in the supplemental material). The PCR fragment was cloned between SalI and PstI cleavage sites in plasmid pMRS127 (17) to create a gerKB-gusA fusion in plasmid pDP84 (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). This plasmid was introduced into C. perfringens SM101 by electroporation (3), and Emr transformants were selected. The SM101 transformant carrying plasmid pDP84 was grown in TGY vegetative growth medium (3% Trypticase soy, 2% glucose, 1% yeast extract, 0.1% l-cysteine) (7) and in Duncan-Strong (DS) (4) sporulation medium and assayed for β-glucuronidase (GUS) activity as described previously (23). Vegetative cultures of strain SM101 carrying plasmid pMRS127 (empty vector) or pDP84 (gerKB-gusA) exhibited no significant GUS activity, and strain SM101 grown in DS medium also exhibited no significant GUS activity (Fig. (Fig.1B1B and data not shown). However, GUS activity was observed in sporulating cultures of SM101(pDP84) (Fig. (Fig.1B),1B), indicating that a sporulation-specific promoter is located upstream of gerKB. The expression of the gerKB-gusA fusion began ∼3 h after induction of sporulation and reached a maximum after ∼6 h of sporulation (Fig. (Fig.1B).1B). The decrease in GUS activity observed after ∼6 h is consistent with the GerKB-GusA protein being packaged into the dormant spore where it cannot be easily assayed and thus with gerKB being expressed in the forespore compartment of the sporulating cell (8). These results confirm that, as with the gerKA-gerKC operon (16), gerKB is also expressed only during sporulation.To investigate the role of GerKB in C. perfringens spore germination, we constructed a gerKB mutant strain (DPS108) as described previously (14-16). A 2,203-bp DNA fragment carrying 2,080 bp upstream of and 123 bp from the N-terminal coding region of gerKB was PCR amplified using primers CPP369 and CPP367, which had XhoI and BamHI cleavage sites at the 5′ ends of the forward and reverse primers, respectively (see Table S2 in the supplemental material). A 1,329-bp fragment carrying 134 bp from the C-terminal and 1,195 bp downstream of the coding region of gerKB was PCR amplified using primers CPP371 and CPP370, which had BamHI and KpnI cleavage sites at the 5′ ends of the forward and reverse primers, respectively (see Table S2 in the supplemental material). These PCR fragments were cloned into plasmid pCR-XL-TOPO, giving plasmids pDP67 and pDP69, respectively (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). An ∼2.2-kb BamHI-XhoI fragment from pDP67 was cloned into pDP1 (pCR-XL-TOPO carrying an internal fragment of gerAA), giving plasmid pDP68, and an ∼1.4-kb KpnI-BamHI fragment from pDP69 was cloned in pDP68, giving pDP73 (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). The latter plasmid was digested with BamHI, the ends were filled, and an ∼1.3-kb NaeI-SmaI fragment carrying catP from pJIR418 (1) was inserted, giving plasmid pDP74. Finally, an ∼4.8-kb KpnI-XhoI fragment from pDP74 (see Table S1 in the supplemental material) was cloned between the KpnI and SalI sites of pMRS104, giving pDP75, which cannot replicate in C. perfringens. Plasmid pDP75 was introduced into C. perfringens SM101 by electroporation (3), and the gerKB deletion strain DPS108 was isolated as described previously (18). The presence of the gerKB deletion in strain DPS108 was confirmed by PCR and Southern blot analyses (data not shown). Strain DPS108 gave ∼70% sporulating cells in DS sporulation medium, similar to results with the wild-type strain, SM101 (data not shown).Having obtained evidence for successful construction of the gerKB mutant, we compared the germinations of heat-activated (80°C; 10 min) gerKB and wild-type spores as previously described (16). Both the gerKB and wild-type spores germinated identically and nearly completely in 60 min at 40°C in brain heart infusion (BHI) broth as determined by the fall in optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of germinating cultures and phase-contrast microscopy (data not shown). This result suggests that GerKB plays no essential role in spore germination in rich medium. The role of GerKB in C. perfringens spore germination was also assessed with individual germinants identified previously (16). Heat-activated wild-type and gerKB spores germinated similarly with high (100 mM) concentrations of KCl, l-asparagine, and AK, all in 25 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.0), and in 50 mM Ca-DPA adjusted to pH 8.0 with Tris base (Fig. 2A to D). These results were also confirmed by phase-contrast microscopy (data not shown). However, with lower (10 to 20 mM) concentrations of KCl, l-asparagine, and AK, gerKB spore germination was very slightly (Fig. (Fig.2A)2A) to significantly (Fig. 2B and C) slower than that of wild-type spores. These results suggest that while GerKB is not essential for germination with high concentrations of KCl, l-asparagine, or AK, it plays a significant role in germination with low l-asparagine and AK concentrations and, further, that GerKB is not required for Ca-DPA germination. This latter finding is similar to the situation with B. subtilis spores where germinant receptors play no role in Ca-DPA germination (19, 20). However, in C. perfringens spores, GerKA and/or GerKC do play a significant role in Ca-DPA germination (16).Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Germination of spores of C. perfringens strains with various germinants. Heat-activated spores of strains SM101 (wild type) (filled symbols) and DPS108 (gerKB) (open symbols) were incubated at an OD600 of 1 at 40°C with high (squares) and low (triangles) germinant concentrations of 100 and 10 mM KCl (A), 100 and 20 mM l-asparagine (B), 100 and 10 mM AK (C), and 50 mM Ca-DPA (D) as described in the text, and at various times the OD600 was measured. No significant germination was observed when heat-activated spores of SM101 and DPS108 were incubated for 60 min at 40°C in 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) (data not shown). The data shown are averages from duplicate determinations with two different spore preparations, and error bars represent standard deviations.Bacterial spores can also germinate with dodecylamine, a cationic surfactant (19). In B. subtilis spores, dodecylamine induces germination most likely by opening channels composed, at least in part, of SpoVA proteins (22), allowing release of the spores'' Ca-DPA (19). Spores of B. subtilis lacking all three functional germinant receptors release DPA, as do wild-type spores, upon incubation with dodecylamine (19), while C. perfringens spores lacking GerKA-GerKC incubated with dodecylamine release DPA slower than wild-type spores (16). However, when C. perfringens gerKB spores at an OD600 of 1.5 were incubated with 1 mM dodecylamine in Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) at 60°C (2, 16), gerKB spores released their DPA slightly faster than wild-type spores (Fig. (Fig.3)3) when DPA release was measured as described previously (16). These results suggest that GerKB has no role in dodecylamine germination.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Germination of spores of C. perfringens strains with dodecylamine. Spores of strains SM101 (wild type) (filled squares) and DPS108 (gerKB) (open squares) were germinated with dodecylamine, and germination was monitored by measuring DPA release as described in the text. There was no significant DPA release in 60 min by spores incubated similarly but without dodecylamine (data not shown). Error bars represent standard deviations.Previous work (16) found that C. perfringens spores lacking GerKA-GerKC had lower viability than wild-type spores on rich medium plates, and it was thus of interest to determine gerKB spore viability, which was measured as previously described (14, 16). Strikingly, the colony-forming ability of gerKB spores was ∼7-fold lower (P < 0.01) than that of wild-type spores after 24 h on BHI plates (Table (Table1),1), and no additional colonies appeared when plates were incubated for up to 3 days (data not shown). The colony-forming ability of spores lacking GerKA and GerKC determined in parallel was ∼12-fold lower than that of wild-type spores (Table (Table1).1). Phase-contrast microscopy of C. perfringens spores incubated in BHI broth for 24 h under aerobic conditions to prevent vegetative cell growth indicated that >90% of wild-type spores not only had germinated but had also released the nascent vegetative cell, while >85% of gerKA gerKC and gerKB spores remained as only phase-dark germinated spores with no evidence of nascent cell release (data not shown), as found previously with gerKA gerKC spores (16). The fact that >85% of gerKB spores germinated in BHI medium in 24 h but most of these germinated spores did not progress further in development strongly suggests that GerKB is needed for normal spore outgrowth (and see below) as well as for normal spore germination.
Open in a separate windowaHeat-activated spores of various strains were plated on BHI agar, and colonies were counted after anaerobic incubation at 37°C for 24 h.bTiters are the average number of CFU/ml/OD600 determined in three experiments, and the variance was less than 15%.cHeat-activated spores were preincubated with Ca-DPA as described in the text and plated on BHI plates.dSpores were decoated, heat activated, and plated on BHI agar containing lysozyme (Lyz), and colonies were counted after anaerobic incubation at 37°C for 24 h.To evaluate whether preincubation with Ca-DPA could rescue apparently inviable gerKB spores via activation of GerKA and/or GerKC (16), C. perfringens spores of the wild-type and various gerK strains were heat activated, cooled, and incubated in 50 mM Ca-DPA (made to pH 8.0 with Tris base) for 20 min at 40°C, plated on BHI medium agar plates with or without lysozyme, and counted after anaerobic incubation at 37°C for 24 h. The preincubation of mutant spores with Ca-DPA gave no significant increase in colony-forming efficiency (Table (Table1).1). To test whether spores with a lesion in either gerKB or the gerKA-gerKC operon could be recovered by digestion of the spore''s peptidoglycan cortex, spores of various strains were decoated in 1 ml of 0.1 M sodium borate (pH 10)-2% 2-mercaptoethanol for 60 min at 37°C, washed at least nine times with sterile distilled water (14), and plated on BHI plates containing lysozyme (1 μg/ml). While the viability of gerKA gerKC spores remained ∼12-fold lower than that of wild-type spores, gerKB spores'' viability increased slightly but was still ∼5-fold lower than that of wild-type spores (Table (Table11).The results given above suggest that GerKB is essential not only for normal spore germination but also for normal spore viability and outgrowth. To further examine if GerKB is involved in spore outgrowth, heat-activated spores of DPS108 (gerKB) and SM101 (wild-type) strains were inoculated into 10 ml TGY broth to a final OD600 of 0.110 and 0.015 (one-seventh that of the gerKB spores), respectively, and incubated anaerobically at 37°C, and at various times the OD600 was measured. Although the initial wild-type spores were diluted to one-seventh the OD600 of gerKB spores to correct for the gerKB spores'' lower viability, the wild-type spores'' outgrowth was much faster than that of the gerKB spores (Fig. (Fig.4),4), suggesting that GerKB is essential not only for normal spore germination and viability but also for normal spore outgrowth, since the growth rates of wild-type and gerKB cells are identical (data not shown). The difference in rates of outgrowth of wild-type and gerKB spores was even greater when the initial spores were at the same starting OD600 (data not shown).Open in a separate windowFIG. 4.Outgrowth of spores of C. perfringens strains. Heat-activated spores of strains DPS108 (gerKB) (filled squares) and SM101 (wild type) (open squares) were incubated anaerobically in TGY broth at an initial OD600 of 0.110 and 0.015, respectively, and the OD600 of the cultures was measured. Error bars represent standard deviations.The lack of effect of lysozyme on the viability of decoated gerKB (or gerKA gerKC) spores indicates that the defect in these spores is not the inability to degrade cortex peptidoglycan, since exogenous lysozyme restores viability to decoated C. perfringens spores that lack the essential cortex-lytic enzyme SleC (15). Indeed, gerKB spores degraded cortex peptidoglycan normally during spore germination with KCl (data not shown). The loss of GerKB (and perhaps GerKA and/or GerKC [16]) also slowed spore outgrowth noticeably. Some of this effect may be due to the low viability of the mutant spores, as the viability defect in these spores could manifest itself in spore outgrowth (and see below). However, when differences in spore viability were corrected for, gerKB spores still went through spore outgrowth more slowly than wild-type spores. The latter two findings are again different than the situation with B. subtilis spores, as while B. subtilis spores lacking known germinant receptors show low apparent viability on nutrient plates, the viability of these spores can be restored to almost that of wild-type spores by preincubation with Ca-DPA (12, 13).The more novel conclusions from this work concern the role of GerKB in spore germination. GerKB is the only evident C. perfringens homolog of B proteins encoded by gerA operon homologs, and in B. subtilis, loss of the B protein from a GerA-type receptor eliminates the function of that receptor (20). One would therefore predict, based on the B. subtilis model, that loss of GerKB would largely eliminate C. perfringens spore germination. However, this was certainly not the case. There appear to be a number of possible explanations for the marked difference in the germination behaviors of spores of these two genera. First, the various GerA family proteins in C. perfringens spores may be able to function independently of each other, as opposed to the situation with B. subtilis spores. Second, it is possible that there are additional gerA family genes in the C. perfringens genome that encode proteins sufficiently different in sequence such that they are not detected by sequence alignment programs. However, use of the C. perfringens gerA family genes as query sequences also does not detect additional gerA family members (data not shown). Third, perhaps there is a radically different mechanism than activation of germinant receptors for triggering germination of C. perfringens spores. There is of course no evidence for this. However, recent work has identified a novel mechanism for triggering germination of spores of Bacillus species that does not involve the germinant receptors (21), and perhaps C. perfringens has a novel germination mechanism as well. At present we cannot decide definitively between these possible explanations. However, deletion of all known gerA family genes from C. perfringens and examination of the germination of these multiply deficient spores would certainly help in deciding between these possibilities. 相似文献
TABLE 1.
Colony formation by spores of C. perfringens strainsaStrain (genotype) | Spore titer (CFU/ml/OD600)b
| ||
---|---|---|---|
BHI | BHI + Ca-DPAc | BHI + Lyzd | |
SM101 (wild type) | 3.1 × 107 | 3.3 × 107 | 3.9 × 107 |
DPS101 (gerKA gerKC) | 2.6 × 106 | 3.5 × 106 | 2.0 × 106 |
DPS108 (gerKB) | 4.4 × 106 | 4.2 × 106 | 8.6 × 106 |
6.
《Enzyme and microbial technology》1986,8(7):429-432
Mycelial lipase activity of the mould Rhizopus delemar was purified by gel filtration chromatography to three distinct proteins of notable lipase activity. The three enzymes were designated A′, B′ and C′, according to elution volumes from a Sephadex G150 column. The capacity of the three lipases to catalyse glyceride synthesis from free fatty acids and glycerol indicated a tendency towards short-chain and unsaturated fatty acids in preference to long-chain saturated fatty acids. The postional specificity of all lipases involved in such synthetic reactions indicated the formation of ester bonds at positions 1 and 3 of glycerol. 相似文献
7.
Kazuhito Nagayama Kaori Tada Kazumitsu Naoe Masanao Imai 《Biocatalysis and Biotransformation》2013,31(6):321-324
The reactivity of Rhizopus delemar lipase immobilized in sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate microemulsion-based organogels (MBGs) was investigated as a function of the water content in the gel. Gelatin was used as the gelling component of the MBGs. The maximal reaction rate of 6.5 μM s?1 was obtained at a WG (molar ratio of water to AOT in the MBG phase) value of 100. In the experimental WG conditions, the reaction proceeded under an effectiveness factor of 0.02 to 0.04 giving the reaction-limiting regime. 相似文献
8.
Kazuhito Nagayama Kaori Tada Kazumitsu Naoe Masanao Imai 《Biocatalysis and Biotransformation》2003,21(6):321-324
The reactivity of Rhizopus delemar lipase immobilized in sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate microemulsion-based organogels (MBGs) was investigated as a function of the water content in the gel. Gelatin was used as the gelling component of the MBGs. The maximal reaction rate of 6.5 μM s-1 was obtained at a WG (molar ratio of water to AOT in the MBG phase) value of 100. In the experimental WG conditions, the reaction proceeded under an effectiveness factor of 0.02 to 0.04 giving the reaction-limiting regime. 相似文献
9.
拟通过根霉菌发酵小麦麸皮纤维质实现其高效生物转化制备富马酸的目标。在单因素试验研究基础上,对发酵工艺进行响应曲面法优化,并开展代谢机理初步探索。通过单因素试验确定了酵母浸粉、硫酸镁及硫酸锰质量浓度为主要影响因素,响应曲面研究结果显示:当发酵水解液总糖浓度80.0g/L、硫酸铵2.00g/L、酵母浸粉0.29g/L、硫酸镁0.26g/L、硫酸锰0.07g/L、硫酸亚铁0.05g/L时,富马酸产量最高,其值为27.423g/L。对戴尔根霉Rhizopus delemar CICC41341的木糖代谢途径的初步分析结果表明木酮糖激酶为该菌株木糖代谢的关键限速酶。论文研究结果可为纤维质糖液工业发酵制备平台有机酸提供一定支持。 相似文献
10.
The infectious agent of the disease anthrax is the spore of Bacillus anthracis. Bacterial spores are extremely resistant to environmental stresses, which greatly hinders spore decontamination efforts. The spore cortex, a thick layer of modified peptidoglycan, contributes to spore dormancy and resistance by maintaining the low water content of the spore core. The cortex is degraded by germination-specific lytic enzymes (GSLEs) during spore germination, rendering the cells vulnerable to common disinfection techniques. This study investigates the relationship between SleB, a GSLE in B. anthracis, and YpeB, a protein necessary for SleB stability and function. The results indicate that ΔsleB and ΔypeB spores exhibit similar germination phenotypes and that the two proteins have a strict codependency for their incorporation into the dormant spore. In the absence of its partner protein, SleB or YpeB is proteolytically degraded soon after expression during sporulation, rather than escaping the developing spore. The three PepSY domains of YpeB were examined for their roles in the interaction with SleB. YpeB truncation mutants illustrate the necessity of a region beyond the first PepSY domain for SleB stability. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis of highly conserved residues within the PepSY domains resulted in germination defects corresponding to reduced levels of both SleB and YpeB in the mutant spores. These results identify residues involved in the stability of both proteins and reiterate their codependent relationship. It is hoped that the study of GSLEs and interacting proteins will lead to the use of GSLEs as targets for efficient activation of spore germination and facilitation of spore cleanup. 相似文献
11.
ALBERT H. UNDEEN 《The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology》1983,30(2):274-277
Buffered solutions of KCl and NaCl were tested for their stimulatory effect on the germination of variously-aged spores of Vavraia culicis. Germination was optimal in 0.2 M KCl, pH 6.5 for one isolate, and, for another isolate, peaks of germination occurred at pH 7.0 and 9.5. Spores incubated for several hours in suboptimal solutions became unable to germinate under optimal conditions. After being returned to water, they regained their ability to germinate. Calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, and ammonium chloride inhibited germination. After ingestion by mosquito larvae, spores germinated near the posterior end of the midgut. 相似文献
12.
Germination of Bacillus anthracis spores occurs when nutrients such as amino acids or purine nucleosides stimulate specific germinant receptors located in the spore inner membrane. The gerPABCDEF operon has been suggested to play a role in facilitating the interaction between germinants and their receptors in spores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus cereus. B. anthracis mutants containing deletions in each of the six genes belonging to the orthologue of the gerPABCDEF operon, or deletion of the entire operon, were tested for their ability to germinate. Deletion of the entire gerP operon resulted in a significant delay in germination in response to nutrient germinants. These spores eventually germinated to levels equivalent to wild-type, suggesting that an additional entry point for nutrient germinants may exist. Deletions of each individual gene resulted in a similar phenotype, with the exception of ΔgerPF, which showed no obvious defect. The removal of two additional gerPF-like orthologues was necessary to achieve the germination defect observed for the other mutants. Upon physical removal of the spore coat, the mutant lacking the full gerP operon no longer exhibited a germination defect, suggesting that the GerP proteins play a role in spore coat permeability. Additionally, each of the gerP mutants exhibited a severe defect in calcium-dipicolinic acid (Ca-DPA)–dependent germination, suggesting a role for the GerP proteins in this process. Collectively, these data implicate all GerP proteins in the early stages of spore germination. 相似文献
13.
M. L. F. Giuseppin 《Applied microbiology and biotechnology》1984,20(3):161-165
Summary The influence of the concentration of oxygen on lipase production by the fungus Rhizopus delemar was studied in different fermenters. The effect of oxygen limitation ( 47 mol/l) on lipase production by R. delemar is large as could be demonstrated in pellet and filamentous cultures. A model is proposed to describe the extent of oxygen limitation in pellet cultures. Model estimates indicate that oxygen is the limiting substrate in shake flask cultures and that an optimal inoculum size for oxygen-dependent processes can occur.Low oxygen concentrations greatly negatively affect the metabolism of R. delemar, which could be shown by cultivation in continuous cultures in filamentous growth form (Doptimal=0.086 h-1). Continuous cultivations of R. delemar at constant, low-oxygen concentrations are a useful tool to scale down fermentation processes in cases where a transient or local oxygen limitation occurs.Symbols and Abbreviations CO
Oxygen concentration in the gas phase at time = 0 (kg·m-3)
- CO
2i
Oxygen concentration at the pellet liquid interface (kg·m-3)
- CO
2i
Oxygen concentration in the bulk (kg·m-3)
-
D
Dilution rate (h-1)
- IDO
2
Diffusion coefficient for oxygen (m2·s-1)
-
dw
Dry weight of biomass (kg)
-
f
Conversion factor (rs
O
2 to oxygen consumption rate per m3) (-)
-
k
Radial growth rate (m·s-1)
-
K
Constant
-
kla
Volumetric mass transfer coefficient (s-1)
-
klA
Oxygen transfer rate (m-3·s-1)
-
kl
Mass transfer coefficient (m·s-1)
-
K
O
2
Affinity constant for oxygen (mol·m-3)
-
K
w
Cotton plug resistance (m-3·s-1)
-
M
Henry coefficient (-)
-
NV
Number of pellets per volume (m-3)
-
R
Radius (m)
-
RO
Radius of oxygen-deficient core (m)
-
RQ
Respiration quotient (mol CO2/mol O2)
-
rs
O
2
Specific oxygen consumption rate per dry weight biomass (kg O2·s-1[kg dw]-1)
-
rX
Biomass production rate (kg·m-3·s-1)
-
SG
Soytone glucose medium (for shake flask experiments)
-
SG
4
Soytone glucose medium (for tower fermenter and continuous culture experiments)
-
V
Volume of medium (m-3)
-
X
Biomass (dry weight) concentration (kg·m-3)
-
XR
o
Biomass concentration within RO for a given X (kg·m-3)
-
Y
O
2
Biomass yield calculated on oxygen (kg dw/kg O2)
-
Thiele modulus
-
Efficiency factor =1-(RO/R)3 (-)
-
Growth rate (m-1·s-1·kg1/3)
-
Dry weight per volume of pellet (kg·m-3) 相似文献
14.
Changes in refractility and optical density occurring in individual spores of Bacillus cereus T and B. megaterium QM B1551 during germination were investigated by use of a Zeiss microscope photometer. The curves revealed that the germination process in single spores had two distinct phases; an initial rapid phase was followed by a second slower phase. Under the experimental condition employed, the first phase of germination of B. cereus spores lasted for approximately 75 +/- 15 sec, whereas the second phase lasted for 3 to 4.5 min. In B. megaterium spores, the first phase was observed to last for approximately 2 min and the second phase for more than 7 min. The duration of the second phase was dependent on conditions employed for germination. The kinetics of the first phase were strikingly similar under all conditions of physiological germination. Time-lapse phase-contrast microscopy of germinating spores also revealed the biphasic nature of germination. It was postulated that the first phase represents changes induced by an initial partial hydration of the spore and release into the medium of dipicolinic acid, whereas the second phase reflects degradation of the cortex and hydration of the core. 相似文献
15.
The morphology of Rhizopus oligosporus (NRRL 2710) sporangiospores and their physiological requirements for germination were studied. Germination proceeded in two separable phases: phase I (swelling) and phase II (germ tube protrusion). The optimal conditions for germination were 42 degrees C and pH 4.0. Sporangiospores contained insufficient endogenous carbon for swelling or germination to occur in distilled water. Initial swelling during phase I occurred only in the presence of a suitable carbohydrate. Subsequent production of germ tubes during phase II required exogenous sources of both carbon and nitrogen. Spores germinated most rapidly in mixtures of amino acids; l-proline and l-alanine were the most effective. These amino acids, at concentrations as low as 10 M, supported germination when combined with glucose and McIlvaine (citric acid-phosphate) buffer. d-Glucose, d-xylose, and d-mannose were the most effective carbohydrates tested for promotion of germination. 相似文献
16.
Hirofumi Shibata Sawako Adachi Yoko Hirose Mika Ike Isamu Tani Tadayo Hashimoto 《Microbiology and immunology》1993,37(3):187-194
Biphasic germination induced by inosine in the presence of Ca2+ was examined using Bacillus cereus T spores treated with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dithiothreitol (DTT) at pH 10. The first phase of the germination was stimulated by Ca2+ in the concentration-dependent manner, showing the optimal concentration at 0.5-1.0 mM. The second phase appeared to be insensitive to the cation. The optimal temperatures for the first and the second phase were 25 C and 40 C, respectively; the optimal pHs for the two phases were 7-9 and around 7.5, respectively. Heat resistance and dipicolinic acid of the SDS-DTT-treated spores were lost mostly during the first phase. A Ca2+-specific chelator, glycoletherdiamine-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (GEDTA), inhibited the first phase evoked by Ca2+, while it had no inhibitory effect on the second phase. In contrast, the divalent cations examined, except Mg2+ and Sr2+, affected not only the first phase but also the second phase. The order of inhibitory effect on the first phase was Hg2+ > Zn2+ > Ba2+, Co2+, Cu2+ > Mn2+; on the second phase, it was Hg2+ > Cu2+ > Zn2+ > Co2+ > Mn2+ > Ba2+. 相似文献
17.
研究了Rhizopus delemar菌固态发酵曲中麦角固醇的提取及其高效液相色谱(HPLC)测定方法。结果表明,固态曲中麦角固醇分离提取以1:25(w/v)的丙酮回流浸提2.0h为最佳,HPLC测定麦角固醇的条件为:HypersilC-8柱。甲醇/水(85/15,v/v)为流动相,流速为1.0mL/min,紫外检测波长为282nm。柱温为30℃。依据HPLC的分析测定,确定了麦角固醇与菌丝体间的定量关系,并以此为基础。测定了Rhizopus delemar菌固态发酵过程中的生物量变化。得到了生长曲线,发现当发酵培养至60h时固态曲中的生物量达到最大值为0.18g菌丝体/g干曲,而该菌所合成的脂肪酶的活力在48h达到最大值。 相似文献
18.
Optimization of fumaric acid production by Rhizopus delemar based on the morphology formation 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The effects of temperature, agitation rate and medium composition, including concentrations of glucose, soybean peptone, and inorganic ions, on pellet formation and pellet diameter of Rhizopus delemar (Rhizopus oryzae) NRRL1526 during pre-culture were studied. Inorganic ions and soybean peptone had negative and positive effects on pellet formation, respectively. The initial glucose and soybean peptone concentrations directly affected pellet diameter. Within a certain range, pellet diameter decreased with increased initial substrate concentrations; however, above this range there was an opposite trend. Thus, optimal concentrations of substrate during pre-culture were beneficial for producing small pellets of R. delemar. Furthermore, dry cell mass and yield of fumaric acid tended to increase with decreased pellet diameter. Based on the pellet morphology optimization, the final fumaric acid concentration was improved by 46.13% when fermented in a flask and 31.82% in stirred bioreactor tank fermentation. 相似文献
19.
Cloning, expression and characterization of a cDNA encoding a lipase from Rhizopus delemar. 总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8
A lambda gt11 cDNA library was constructed in Escherichia coli using poly(A)-selected mRNA from the fungus, Rhizopus (Rp.) delemar. Lipase-producing members of the library were identified by means of a phenotypic score wherein the release of fatty acids by lipase causes a characteristic color change in the growth medium. One such isolate contained a 1287-bp insert (LIP cDNA) which hybridizes to 1.25- to 1.35-kb mRNA species from Rp. delemar. The lipase produced in E. coli containing the LIP cDNA exhibits the same substrate selectivity as the authentic fungal enzyme, hydrolyzing ester bonds at the stereospecific numbering (sn) sn-1 and sn-3, but not the sn-2, positions of triglycerides. The complete nucleotide sequence of the LIP cDNA was determined. By reference to the N-terminal sequence of authentic Rp. delemar lipase, the lipase-encoding region was identified within this fragment. The LIP cDNA encodes a putative preprolipase consisting of a 26-amino-acid(aa) signal sequence, a 97-aa propeptide, and a 269-aa mature enzyme. The predicted mature lipase has the same molecular weight and aa composition as that of Rp. delemar, is highly homologous to that produced by the fungus Rhizomucor miehei, and contains the consensus pentapeptide (Gly-Xaa-Ser-Yaa-Gly) which is conserved among lipolytic enzymes. It is concluded that the LIP cDNA is an essentially full-length analogue of the lipase-encoding gene of Rp. delemar. The lipase encoded by the LIP cDNA occupies a cytoplasmic location when synthesized in E. coli. Unprocessed forms of the lipase accumulate in E. coli. 相似文献
20.
The phytochrome-dependent germination of spores was studiedin the fern Pteris vittata. Brief irradiations with red lightgiven at 0 and 25?C resulted in very similar germination rates.Irradiation with far-red light cancelled this promotive effect,irrespective of the temperature at which tested. The maximumrate of germination was induced by red light of ca. 70Jm2and half of the rate was induced by ca. 15Jm2 When sporesimbibed in the dark were kept for 1 h at 0 or 25?C under irradiationswith monochromatic lights from 660 to 730 nm at 10 nm intervals,spore germination was induced depending upon the establishedphotostationary states of phytochrome at both temperatures tested.The percent of PFR estimated in spores that had been irradiatedbriefly with red light was consistent with that resulted fromphotostationary states under different monochromatic lightsin terms of the percent of germination of a spore population.The threshold of the % PFR required for the germination of eachspore ranged widely from a few percent to 80% of the PFR. Thisdiversity may vary the timing of germination in nature.
1 Partial preliminary results of this research were introducedin a review by M.F. (1978).
3 Present address: Department of Biology, Faculty of Science,Tokyo Metropolitan University, Setagaya, Tokyo 158, Japan. (Received May 15, 1982; Accepted August 5, 1982) 相似文献