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1.
Ethylhydroxyethyl cellulose (EHEC) of three different viscosity classes (EHEC I, II, and III) was analyzed by programmed cross-flow asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation coupled to multiangle light scattering and refractive index detectors to determine their size and molar mass distribution. Two size populations were detected in the two lower viscosity classes, EHEC I and II, one high molar mass and one ultrahigh molar mass (UHM). The two covered molar masses from 10(4) up to 10(9) g X mol(-1). The highest viscosity class EHEC III was less size-dispersed covering molar masses from 5 x 10(5) to 5 x 10(7) g.mol(-1). Filtering of the EHEC II solution removed small amounts of compact UHM material. Enzyme treatments were performed on EHEC II to further characterize it. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry and anion ion-exchange chromatography coupled to pulsed amperometric detection showed that the UHM component contained EHEC.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of substituents along the polymer backbone will have a strong influence on the properties of modified cellulose. Endoglucanases were used to degrade three different batches of hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose (HPMC) derivatives with similar chemical properties. The phase separation of the HPMCs as a function of temperature, i.e., the clouding behavior, was analyzed prior to degradation. The total amount of unsubstituted glucose was determined using total acid hydrolysis followed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection (HPAEC-PAD). The products after enzymatic degradation were analyzed with size-exclusion chromatography with online multiangle light scattering and refractive index detection and also with reducing end determination. To further characterize the formed products, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry was employed for analysis of short-chained oligosaccharides. The different endoglucanases showed varying degradation capability of HPMC derivatives, depending on structure of the active site. The investigated HPMCs had different susceptibility to degradation by the endoglucanases. The results showed a difference in substituent distribution between HPMC batches, which could explain the differing clouding behaviors. The batch with the lowest cloud point was shown to contain a higher number of non-degradable, highly substituted regions.  相似文献   

3.
The distribution of substituents in hydroxypropylated potato amylopectin starch (amylose deficient) modified in a slurry of granular starch (HPPAPg) or in a polymer 'solution' of dissolved starch (HPPAPs), was investigated. The molar substitution (MS) was determined by three different methods: proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy, gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) with mass spectrometry, and a colourimetric method. The MS values obtained by 1H NMR spectroscopy were higher than those obtained by GLC-mass spectrometry analysis and colourimetry. The relative ratio of 2-, 3-, and 6-substitution, as well as un-, mono-, and disubstitution in the anhydroglucose unit (AGU) were determined by GLC-mass spectrometry analysis. Results obtained showed no significant difference in molar distribution of hydroxypropyl groups in the AGU between the two derivatives. For analysis of the distribution pattern along the polymer chain, the starch derivatives were hydrolysed by enzymes with different selectivities. Debranching of the polymers indicated that more substituents were located in close vicinity to branching points in HPPAPg than in HPPAPs. Simultaneous alpha-amylase and amyloglucosidase hydrolysis of HPPAPg liberated more unsubstituted glucose units than the hydrolysis of HPPAPs, indicating a more heterogeneous distribution of substituents in HPPAPg.  相似文献   

4.
In this part of our studies, dealing with new approaches to the analysis of enzymatically hydrolyzed methyl cellulose, five different enzymes or enzyme preparations containing endoglucanases (from Bacillus agaradhaerens Cel 5A, Trichoderma reesei, Trichoderma viride, and two obtained from Trichoderma longibrachiatum) were used to hydrolyze six different methyl celluloses (MCs). The main goal was to investigate whether enzymes could be used for determination of the heterogeneity of the substituent distribution along the cellulose chain. To obtain information about the heterogeneity, it was necessary to gather information on how the enzymes affect hydrolysis. Size exclusion chromatography with multi-angle light scattering and refractive index detection (SEC-MALS/RI) was used to estimate the molar mass distribution of the MCs before and after hydrolysis. A novel internal standard addition method in combination with electrospray ionization ion trap mass spectrometry (ESI-ITMS) was used to determine the amount of formed oligomers. Two MCs, one with a degree of substitution (DS) of 1.8 and one with DS 1.3, were hydrolyzed with all of the five enzymes. The yield of summarized di- and trisaccharides was approximately 2% of the hydrolysis products for the MC with DS 1.8, whereas the product mixture, obtained from a MC with a DS of 1.3, contained 7-16% di- and trisaccharides. By a novel sample preparation method in combination with ESI-IT tandem MS, outlined in part 1 of this work, it was shown that the enzymes produced oligomers with the reducing end bearing no or only one substituent. Comparison of the methyl pattern at the nonreducing ends of the dimers and trimers indicated that the -2 subsite of the active complex is less tolerant than subsites -3 and +1. All enzymes had similar general selectivity toward the methyl substituents but also showed some differences. From both SEC-MALS/RI and ESI-ITMS, differences with respect to substituent distribution of MCs could be recognized but not for each enzyme used. Basic considerations for enzymatic hydrolysis and analysis of methyl cellulose were listed as a consequence of the results from the work.  相似文献   

5.
The properties of modified cellulose polymers, such as methylcellulose, are significantly influenced by the distribution of substituents along the polymer backbone. This distribution is difficult to determine due to the lack of suitable analytical methods. One approach is to use cellulose-degrading enzymes to gain information from the capability of the enzymes to cleave the bonds between glucose units. Endoglucanases are cellulase enzymes that can break internal glycosidic linkages and degrade low substituted regions of modified cellulose where the substituents do not interfere with the enzyme active site. In this work methyl cellulose was degraded using five endoglucanases from glycosyl hydrolase families 5 and 7 from three different species. The products were analyzed with reducing end analysis, chromatography (SEC-MALS-RI), and MALDI-TOFMS. The results were correlated with available determined enzyme structures and using structural alignment for unknown enzyme structures. This was performed in order to elucidate the relationship between active site structures and sensitivity for substituents on derivatized cellulose. The evaluation of endoglucanase hydrolysis of methyl cellulose showed that differences in sensitivity could be related to differences in steric hindrance of substituents in the active site, which could explain differences within family 5 and 7 enzymes, as well as the generally higher substituent tolerance for family 5 enzymes. This information is important for use of endoglucanases as tools for characterization of substituent distribution. The results are also valuable since soluble cellulose derivatives are generally used as substrates during enzyme characterization and in endoglucanase activity assays.  相似文献   

6.
Two model sodium carboxymethyl celluloses (CMC) with similar monomer composition but with significant differences in the viscoelastic properties, that could not be assigned to variations in the average molar mass or molar mass distribution, were investigated with respect to the fraction of nonsubstituted cellulose segments in the polymers. The CMCs were hydrolyzed by a purified highly selective endoglucanase. The average molar mass and molar mass distribution of the enzyme products, as measured by size-exclusion chromatography with online multi-angle light scattering and refractive index detection (SEC/MALS/RI), revealed that the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis was more effective on one of the CMCs. To investigate whether this was due to a higher fraction of nonsubstituted cellulose segments in the polymer, the concentrations of nonsubstituted enzyme products, e.g., cellotetraose and cellopentaose, were measured by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS). It was concluded that the two CMCs displayed significant differences in the fraction of nonsubstituted cellulose segments. Furthermore, the CMC with the strongest attractive intermolecular interactions, according to rheometry, also contained the highest fraction of nonsubstituted cellulose segments.  相似文献   

7.
Hyaluronan (HA) has different biological functions according to its molar mass; short HA fragments are involved in inflammation processes and angiogenesis, whereas native HA is not. Physicochemically, studies of native HA hydrolysis catalyzed by bovine testicular hyaluronidase (HAase) have suggested that kinetic parameters depend on HA chain length. To study the influence of HA chain length in more detail, and to try to correlate the physicochemical and biological properties of HA, HA hydrolysis catalyzed by HAase was used in a new procedure to obtain HA fragments of different molar masses. HA fragments (10-mg scale) with a molar mass from 800 to 300,000 g mol(-1) were prepared, purified using low-pressure size exclusion chromatography (SEC), lyophilized, and characterized in molar mass by either mass spectrometry or HPLC-SEC-multiangle laser light scattering. The polydispersity index of the purified fractions was less than 1.25. The complete set of HA standards obtained was used to calibrate our routine HPLC-SEC device using only a refractive index (RI) detector. We showed that the N-acetyl-d-glucosamine reducing end assay and the calibrated HPLC-SEC-RI gave equivalent kinetic data. In addition, the HPLC-SEC-RI furnished the mass distribution of the polysaccharide during its hydrolysis.  相似文献   

8.
The substituent patterns of some chemically modified celluloses were characterized as a function of their size distribution, using size-exclusion chromatography coupled to both nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and cloud-point measurements. Intact and enzymatically hydrolyzed methyl cellulose (MC) was fractionated according to size, and the level of substitution of the fractions was measured off-line using NMR. Clouding behavior was also measured as a function of size. Clear differences between hydrolyzed and nonhydrolyzed samples were observed using both techniques. For samples that had been selectively hydrolyzed using cellulose-degrading enzymes, NMR data showed a direct link between the degree of degradation and the level of substitution. Differences in the clouding behavior highlighted changes in substituent levels and substituent patterns across the size distribution. The techniques gave valuable and somewhat complementary information on the substituent distributions of the samples before and after enzymatic hydrolysis.  相似文献   

9.
Aspergillus chevalieri andPenicillium steckii grew best at 30°C and at pH of 6.5–7.5. Among the carbon sources employed, sucrose supported maximum growth ofA. chevalieri while glucose was best forP. steckii. Growth of both organisms was optimal on ammonium tartrate as the sole source of nitrogen.A. chevalieri andP. steckii grew in synthetic media containing, respectively, soluble or insoluble cellulose as the sole carbon source, releasing a cellulolytic enzyme into the medium. The enzymes from each organism were separated and partially purified by molecular exclusion and ion-exchange chromatography into two components. There was synergism between the components of enzymes from each organism in that they together released more glucose units from insoluble cellulose than could be predicted from their activities alone. The molar mass of the enzymes estimated from the elution volume on Sephadex was approximately 110 kg/mol forA. chevalieri and 94 kg/mol forP. steckii.  相似文献   

10.
Enzymatic hydrolysis of carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) has been studied with purified endoglucanases Hi Cel5A (EG II), Hi Cel7B (EG I), and Hi Cel45A (EG V) from Humicola insolens, and Tr Cel7B (EG I), Tr Cel12A (EG III), and Tr Cel45Acore (EG V) from Trichoderma reesei. The CMC, with a degree of substitution (DS) of 0.7, was hydrolyzed with a single enzyme until no further hydrolysis was observed. The hydrolysates were analyzed for production of substituted and non-substituted oligosaccharides with size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS). Production of reducing ends and of nonsubstituted oligosaccharides was determined as well. The two most effective endoglucanases for CMC hydrolysis were Hi Cel5A and Tr Cel7B. These enzymes degraded CMC to lower molar mass fragments compared with the other endoglucanases. The products had the highest DS determined by MALDI-TOF-MS. Thus, Hi Cel5A and Tr Cel7B were less inhibited by the substituents than the other endoglucanases. The endoglucanase with clearly the lowest activity on CMC was Tr Cel45Acore. It produced less than half of the amount of reducing ends compared to Tr Cel7B; furthermore, the products had significantly lower DS. By MALDI-TOF-MS, oligosaccharides with different degree of polymerization (DP) and with different number of substituents could be separated and identified. The average oligosaccharide DS as function of DP could be measured for each enzyme after hydrolysis. The combination of techniques for analysis of product formation gave information on average length of unsubstituted blocks of CMC.  相似文献   

11.
An unknown species of Alternaria, when grown on a medium containing carboxymethylcellulose as a carbon source produced a mixture of extracellular enzymes which solubilized acid-swollen cellulose. The product of the hydrolysis was a 1:2 molar mixture of cellobiose and glucose. The organism apparently produced no cellobiase. It is suggested that the mixture of cellulolytic enzymes contains at least two different enzymes which degrade cellulose in an endwise manner.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of substituents along the polymer backbone will have a strong influence on the properties of modified cellulose. Endoglucanases were used to degrade a series of hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) derivatives with a high degree of substitution. The HPCs were characterized with cloud-point analysis prior to degradation. The extent of enzymatic degradation was determined with size-exclusion chromatography with online multi-angle light scattering and refractive index detection and also with high-pH anion exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection. To further characterize the formed products, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry was employed for analysis of short-chained oligosaccharides. The different endoglucanases showed varying degradation capability depending on structure of the active site. The highly substituted HPCs had different susceptibility to degradation by the endoglucanases. The results show a difference in substituent distribution between HPCs, which would explain the differing cloud-point behaviors. Increased number of regions with low substitution could be correlated with lower polymer cloud point. The study shows the usefulness of enzymatic degradation to study the distribution of substituents in soluble biopolymer derivates.  相似文献   

13.
Subcritical water is a high potential green chemical for the hydrolysis of cellulose. In this study microcrystalline cellulose was treated in subcritical water to study structural changes of the cellulose residues. The alterations in particle size and appearance were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and those in the degree of polymerization (DP) and molar mass distributions by gel permeation chromatography (GPC). Further, changes in crystallinity and crystallite dimensions were quantified by wide-angle X-ray scattering and (13)C solid-state NMR. The results showed that the crystallinity remained practically unchanged throughout the treatment, whereas the size of the remaining cellulose crystallites increased. Microcrystalline cellulose underwent significant depolymerization in subcritical water. However, depolymerization leveled off at a relatively high degree of polymerization. The molar mass distributions of the residues showed a bimodal form. We infer that cellulose gets dissolved in subcritical water only after extensive depolymerization.  相似文献   

14.
RNA nucleotidyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.6) of Streptomyces granaticolor was purified by precipitation with polymin P and ammonium sulphate, affinity chromatography on DNA- cellulose and gell filtration on Biogel A 1.5 m. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed 8 protein bands of molar mass ranging from 37 to 130 kg/mol. Proteins of molar mass of 130 and 120 kg/mol were identified to be beta and beta subunits, respectively. The role of other subunits of the enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
This article describes the experimental conditions that should be applied to avoid molecular degradation in size-exclusion chromatography of polymers of ultra-high molar mass (weight-average molar mass M(w)>5000 kg/mol). The applicability of the optimized experimental conditions is demonstrated using polystyrene as a model substance, but also by using polymers of biochemical and biophysical interest, such as polyethylene of ultra-high molar mass, suitable, e.g., for articulating surfaces in joint endoprotheses, and natural rubber, the most important commercial source for products like septa or medical gloves.  相似文献   

16.
A water-soluble cellulose acetate sulfate (CAS) with a degree of acetylation (DS(Ac)) 2.4 and a degree of sulfation (DS(Sulf)) of 0.3 was obtained by direct acetylation of cellulose using sulfuric acid as catalyst. Using methylation analysis, IR and NMR spectroscopy, sulfate groups have been located on primary alcohol function of glucose residues. The distribution of the sulfate groups along the cellulose chain has been investigated using enzymatic hydrolysis. CAS was first de-acetylated under mild hydrolysis conditions (NaOH 0.25 mol/L at room temperature), and then cellulose sulfate was hydrolyzed by a cellulolytic complex (Celluclast 1.5L). Reaction products were separated by ion exchange chromatography on a DEAE Sepharose CL6B column into five fractions F(1), F(2), F(3), F(4) and F(5), which were analyzed for their chemical composition. F(1) was glucose and represented the main product of reaction (approximately 50% of the initial glucose), F(2) was a dimer (approximately 30%) with a ratio Sulfates-Glucose of 0.41 (about one sulfate group for two glucose units), F(3) a trimer (approximately 10%) with a ratio Sulfates-Glucose of 0.62 (about two sulfate groups for three glucose units), and F(4) a tetramer (approximately 5%) with a ratio Sulfates-Glucose of 0.69. The structure of the oligomers was established using 1H and 13C NMR. The observed proportion of the different blocks of sulfate groups was in good agreement with computed random distribution.  相似文献   

17.
Size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) of wood pulp polysaccharides (cellulose and hemicelluloses) has become widely used for the analysis of these polymers, including monitoring of transformations occurring under various chemical and biological processes. The present review provides information on the different procedures and methodologies developed for the characterization of molecular mass distribution (MMD) and chemical composition of cellulose and hemicelluloses by SEC. This paper also includes the significant results obtained in the characterization of enzymatically treated wood polysaccharides. Conventional SEC with double detection (refractometric and UV), "hyphenated" with a fractional dissolution, was demonstrated to be an efficient method for simultaneous determination of MMD and chemical heterogeneity.  相似文献   

18.
O-(2-Hydroxyethyl)cellulose (1) as formed by the alkali-catalyzed addition of ethylene oxide to cellulose flock in a slurry process is not uniformly substituted. Most of the ethylene oxide adds to HO-6 in a chain-fashion, so that ~20% of the d-glucose residues remain totally unsubstituted at 2.0 molar substitution. Consequently, an aqueous solution thickened by 1 is highly susceptible to enzymic degradation. Stepwise decrease in concentration of alkali during etherification gives improved stability to enzymic degradation associated with a more-uniform distribution of hydroxyethyl groups between the three hydroxyl groups of the glucose residues in cellulose. The relative reactivities of hydroxyl groups and patterns of substitution were established by matching the distribution patterns from a stochastic computer-model with the distribution of substituents as determined by chemical analyses [namely hydrolysis with sulfuric acid to determine the percentage of unsubstituted glucose residues (u-2) and with periodate oxidation for determining the percentage of unsubstituted 2,3-vicinal diol groups per residue]. The reactivities of the three hydroxyl groups at various alkali concentrations in a heterogeneous, slurry-addition process approximate those observed under homogeneous conditions, wherein the reactivities have been determined by tedious chromatographic analyses. In the variable-alkali procedure for addition of ethylene oxide, the amount of water available to the cellulose matrix in the low-alkali (m) sequence is important both for the stability to enzymic degradation and for obtaining gel-free, thickened, aqueous solutions. Optimal stabilities and gel-free solutions are observed at intermediate water: cellulose ratios of 1.10–1.23. At a ratio of 1.23, the stability to enzymic degradation is less sensitive to percentage variations of u-2 than in 1 prepared at higher or lower water: cellulose ratios. Although the initial degree of degradation between 1 of high molar substitution prepared at 6.8m alkali concentration and a similar product prepared under variable alkali conditions may be related to percentage differences of u-2, the rate and final degree of degradation do not relate to percentage differences of u-2. An adequate interpretation, utilizing known cellulase turnover-rates, is found in stochastic-model projections of the distribution of consecutive 2 residues not substituted at HO-2. The results indicate that (1) more-uniform substitution through equalization of hydroxyl reactivities is achieved by lowering the alkali concentration, and (2) more-uniform substitution of 2 of the many cellulose-chains being substituted is achieved by employing an optimal amount of “available” water during etherification.  相似文献   

19.
Hydrolysis of cellulose and nitrocellulose in the presence of sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris 1388 was studied. The cellulolytic activity was found in culture medium after D. vulgaris growth (1.45 ± 0.04 nmol/mg protein/min). In the presence of cellulose or nitrocellulose the activity accounted for 4.82 ± 0.23 and 2.35 ± 0.11 nmol/mg protein/min, respectively. The initial rates of cellulose decomposition were measured using toluene to inhibit the microbial uptake of hydrolysis product—glucose. It was established that 7.6% of initially added cellulose was hydrolyzed in 3 weeks. The highest rate of glucose accumulation was observed on day 10 (2.13 μmol glucose/g dry-wt cellulose/h). At the same time only 3.3% of nitrocellulose was hydrolyzed, since nitro-groups of polymer exerted negative influence on the hydrolysis process. It is supposed that nonspecific extracellular hydrolases participate in the polymers hydrolysis.  相似文献   

20.
Economically competitive production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass by enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation is currently limited, in part, by the relatively high cost and low efficiency of the enzymes required to hydrolyze cellulose to fermentable sugars. Discovery of novel cellulases with greater activity could be a critical step in overcoming this cost barrier. beta-Glucosidase catalyzes the final step in conversion of glucose polymers to glucose. Despite the importance, only a few beta-glucosidases are commercially available, and more efficient ones are clearly needed. We developed a proteomics strategy aiming to discover beta-glucosidases present in the secreted proteome of the cellulose-degrading fungus Aspergillus fumigatus. With the use of partial or complete protein denaturing conditions, the secretory proteome was fractionated in a 2DGE format and beta-glucosidase activity was detected in the gel after infusion with a substrate analogue that fluoresces upon hydrolysis. Fluorescing spots were subjected to tryptic-digestion, and identification as beta-glucosidases was confirmed by tandem mass spectrometry. Two novel beta-glucosidases of A. fumigatus were identified by this in situ activity staining method, and the gene coding for a novel beta-glucosidase ( EAL88289 ) was cloned and heterologously expressed. The expressed beta-glucosidase showed far superior heat stability to the previously characterized beta-glucosidases of Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus oryzae. Improved heat stability is important for development of the next generation of saccharifying enzymes capable of performing fast cellulose hydrolysis reactions at elevated temperatures, thereby lowering the cost of bioethanol production. The in situ activity staining approach described here would be a useful tool for cataloguing and assessing the efficiency of beta-glucosidases in a high throughput fashion.  相似文献   

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