首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The activity of ribulose 1,5-diphosphate (RDP) carboxylase was found in the soluble fraction of the cytoplasm from sonicated Pseudomonas thermophila K-2 cells. The enzyme is relatively thermolabile and completely loses its activity at 80 degrees C. The activity of RDP carboxylase at 60 degrees C increases by 40% during the first 10 min of heating in the presence of Mg2+ ions, bicarbonate and dithiothreitol, and again decreases if the enzyme is heated over 20 min. The optimum temperature of the enzyme is 50--55 degrees C. The specific activity of the enzyme in fresh preparations under these conditions reaches 0.22 unit per 1 mg of protein in the extract. The calculated value of the activation energy for RDP carboxylase is 6.4 kcal-mole-1, but 11.6 kcal-mole-1 in frozen preparations. The optimal pH is 7.0--7.3 depending on the buffer. The temperature optimum for the enzyme action does not depend on pH within the range of 7.3 to 8.8. Therefore, RDP carboxylase of Ps. thermophila K-2 differs from RDP carboxylases of mesophilic cultures studied earlier by a higher susceptibility to a decrease in temperature (the enzyme activity is negligible at 30 degrees C), by a lower value of the activation energy at suboptimal temperatures, and by a lower pH optimum of the enzyme action.  相似文献   

2.
G Rimon  E Hanski  A Levitzki 《Biochemistry》1980,19(19):4451-4460
The individual temperature dependencies of the process which control the activity of turkey erythrocyte adenylate cyclase have been determined. The temperature dependence of the fraction of activable cyclase units experiences a thermal transition at 24 degrees C for all three modes of enzyme activation: l-epinephrine, adenosine, and NaF. This thermal transition probably reflects the phase transition in the inner monolayer of the membrane which influences the behavior of the GTP regulatory unit which is involved in all three modes of enzyme activation. The "rate constant" of enzyme activation by adenosine reflects two thermal transitions, at 24 and at 35 degrees C; the apparent rate constant of cyclase activation by NaF activation experiences a transition only at 24 degrees C whereas the rate constant of the beta-receptor-bound agonist decreases monotonously with no "breaks" on the Arrhenium plot. Following the temperature dependence of the fluorescence intensity of dansylphosphatidylethanolamine embedded in both sides of the membrane and exclusively in the outer monolayer, one can assign the thermal transition of 24 degrees C to the inner monolayer and the other two transitions to the outer monolayer (10 and 35 degrees C). We interpret these results as follows. (a) The monomolecular rate constant characterizing the activation of cyclase by the precoupled adenosine receptor experiences both the transition at 24 and 35 degrees C, indicating that the latter may span the bilayer. (b) The bata receptor activates the cyclase units only in fluid areas since it can diffuse exclusively in the fluid areas of the membrane and is unable to interact with cyclase units in "frozen" areas. the linear dependence of the logarithm of the rate constant on 1/T for the bata receptor reflects the change of membrane fluidity as a function of temperature.  相似文献   

3.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) is used to evaluate the thermal stability and reversibility after heat treatment of transitions associated with various cellular components of Escherichia coli and Lactobacillus plantarum. The reversibility and the change in the thermal stability of individual transitions are evaluated by a second temperature scan after preheating in the DSC to various temperatures between 40 and 130 degrees C. The viability of bacteria after a heat treatment between 55 and 70 degrees C in the DSC is determined by both plate count and calorimetric data. The fractional viability values based on calorimetric and plate count data show a linear relationship. Viability loss and the irreversible change in DSC thermograms of pretreated whole cells are highly correlated between 55 and 70 degrees C. Comparison of DSC scans for isolated ribosomes shows that the thermal stability of E. coli ribosomes is greater than that of L. plantarum ribosomes, consistent with the greater thermal tolerance of E. coli observed from viability loss and DSC scans of whole cells.  相似文献   

4.
Resistance of pathogenic Naegleria to drying, low and high temperature, and two halogens was studied. Dying made trophozoites nonviable instantaneously and cysts nonviable in less than 5 min. Trophozoites degenerated in hours at temperatures below 10 degrees C and in minutes when frozen; cysts survived according to the equation th - t0/theta 1,440/1.122T (t0 is survival at 0 degrees C; Tis temperature between 0 and 10 degrees C), but 1.5 h at --10 degrees C to 1 h at --30 degrees C. At 51, 55, 58, 63, and 65 degrees C, trophozoites survived about 30, 10, 5, 1 and less than 0.5 min, respectively, cysts survived three to four times longer at 51 degrees C and six to seven times longer at 55 to 65 degrees C. Cyst destruction rates by heat indicated first-order kinetics with 25,400 cal/1 degree C for energy of activation. Cyst destruction rates by free chlorine and I2 also conformed to first-order kinetics. Concentration-contact time curves yielded concentration coefficient values of 1.05 for free chlorine and 1.4 for I2 and point to superchlorination as an effective means of destroying the cysts if free residuals are used as a guide and allowance is provided for low temperature and/or high pH waters.  相似文献   

5.
Resistance of pathogenic Naegleria to drying, low and high temperature, and two halogens was studied. Dying made trophozoites nonviable instantaneously and cysts nonviable in less than 5 min. Trophozoites degenerated in hours at temperatures below 10 degrees C and in minutes when frozen; cysts survived according to the equation th - t0/theta 1,440/1.122T (t0 is survival at 0 degrees C; Tis temperature between 0 and 10 degrees C), but 1.5 h at --10 degrees C to 1 h at --30 degrees C. At 51, 55, 58, 63, and 65 degrees C, trophozoites survived about 30, 10, 5, 1 and less than 0.5 min, respectively, cysts survived three to four times longer at 51 degrees C and six to seven times longer at 55 to 65 degrees C. Cyst destruction rates by heat indicated first-order kinetics with 25,400 cal/1 degree C for energy of activation. Cyst destruction rates by free chlorine and I2 also conformed to first-order kinetics. Concentration-contact time curves yielded concentration coefficient values of 1.05 for free chlorine and 1.4 for I2 and point to superchlorination as an effective means of destroying the cysts if free residuals are used as a guide and allowance is provided for low temperature and/or high pH waters.  相似文献   

6.
Elevated hydrostatic pressure has been used to increase catalytic activity and thermal stability of alpha-chymotrypsin (CT). For an anilide substrate, characterized by a negative value of the reaction activation volume (DeltaV( not equal)), an increase in pressure at 20 degrees C results in an exponential acceleration of the hydrolysis rate catalyzed by CT reaching a 6.5-fold increase in activity at 4700 atm (4.7 kbar). Due to a strong temperature dependence of DeltaV( not equal), the acceleration effect of high pressure becomes more pronounced at high temperatures. For example, at 50 degrees C, under a pressure of 3.6 kbar, CT shows activity which is more than 30 times higher than the activity at normal conditions (20 degrees C, 1 atm). At pressures of higher than 3.6 kbar, the enzymatic activity is decreased due to a pressure-induced denaturation.Elevated hydrostatic pressure is also efficient for increasing stability of CT against thermal denaturation. For example, at 55 degrees C, CT is almost instantaneously inactivated at atmospheric pressure, whereas under a pressure of 1.8 kbar CT retains its anilide-hydrolyzing activity during several dozen minutes. Additional stabilization can be achieved in the presence of glycerol, which is most effective for protection of CT at an intermediate concentration of 40% (v/v). There has been observed an additivity in stabilization effects of high pressure and glycerol: thermal inactivation of pressure-stabilized CT can be decelerated in a supplementary manner by addition of 40% (v/v) glycerol. The protection effect of glycerol on the catalytic activity and stability of CT becomes especially pronounced when both extreme factors of temperature and pressure reach critical values. For example, at approximately 55 degrees C and 4.7 kbar, enzymatic activity of CT in the presence of 40% (v/v) glycerol is severalfold higher than in aqueous buffer.The results of this study are discussed in terms of the hypotheses which explain the action of external and medium effects on protein structure, such as preferential hydration and osmotic pressure. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
The thermal behaviour of leucine aminopeptidase (LAP, EC: 3.4.11.1) from bovine eye lens has been investigated in the temperature region 20--70 degrees C by spin-labelling of SH-groups (ESR), by CD and by fluorescence of tryptophane residues. Enzymatic activity of LAP was compared with spectroscopic data in this temperature region. From 20-60 degrees C the structural parts (alpha, beta, random coil) estimated from CD spectra remain unchanged. Within 20-55 degrees C no irreversible exposure of tryptophane residues takes place. In both types of spin-labelled LAP the strong immobilizing environment of the label retains its highly ordered structure up to 55 degrees C. Reversible changes of mobility and polarity of the environment of the label induced by temperature within 20-50 degrees C do not reduce the enzymatic activity and are regarded as local loosening of ordered structure. At 65 degrees C strong precipitation occurs. From 55 degrees C to 65 degrees C tryptophane residues are irreversibly exposed. The highly ordered environment of the label is destroyed about 55 degrees C, and a considerable amount of spin label molecules is reduced at the NO group by exposed SH groups. The above mentioned local loosening of structure becomes irreversible at 60 degrees C. The environment of both labels dominating above 60 degrees C is highly mobile and strongly polar and represents an extensively unfolded conformation. Until 60 degrees C no essential disordering of protein structure leading to a decrease of enzymatic activity occurs. Above 60 degrees C a sharp breakdown of ordered structures takes place, which is accompanied by a strong diminution of enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

8.
Soluble preparations of horse radish peroxidase are obtained by means of its amino groups modification with glutaric aldehyde, maleic anhydride and inert proteins including albumin. The enzyme activity is found to decrease under the modification with glutaric aldehyde and to be unchanged at all other cases. Thermal stability of the enzyme preparations obtained is studied within the temperature range from 56 to 80 degrees C. Thermostability of glutaric aldehyde-modified peroxidase is approximately 2.5-fold decreased at 56 degrees C. Thermostability of other preparations exceeds the stability of native peroxidase in 25--90 times at 56 degrees C. Thermodynamic parameters of activation for the process of irreversible thermoinactivation of native and modified enzyme are calculated. A strong compensation effect between activation enthalpy and entropy values is observed, which were changed in 1.5--2 times, while the free activation energy is changed by 2--3 kcal/mol only. Possible mechanism of the change of the enzyme thermal stability under its chemical modification is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
A derivative of crosslinked Sepharose, p-(N-acetyl-L-tyrosine azo) benzamidoethyl-CL-Sepharose 4B, was synthesized and used for the selective immobilization of thermostable lactase from Aspergillus oryzae.Preparations of soluble and immobilized lactase were evaluated under initial velocity conditions in a batch process. Immobilization had no significant effect on the pH optimum at 50 degrees C or kinetic parameters at pH 4.5 or pH 6.5 and 50 degrees C. At pH 4.5, the soluble enzyme possessed maximum activity at 60 degrees C and the immobilized at 55 degrees C; at pH 6.5 both showed maximum activity at 55 degrees C. The activation energy, entropy, and enthalpy decreased significantly with immobilization at pH 4.5 but not at pH 6.5. When the immobilized enzyme was placed in a packed-bed reactor, the effect of temperature on activity was altered as reflected by a marked decrease in the thermodynamic parameters of activation at both pH levels. Upon immobilization there was also a dramatic increase in the apparent thermal stability of the lactase, and the mean half-life at 50 degrees C was increased from 7.2 to 13 days at pH 4.5 and from 3.8 to 16 days at pH 6.5.  相似文献   

10.
Extracted tomato polygalacturonase was purified by cation-exchange chromatography (and gel filtration) and characterized for molar mass, isoelectric point, as well as optimal pH for polygalacturonase activity. The enzymatic reaction of purified tomato polygalacturonase on polygalacturonic acid as substrate was investigated during a combined high-pressure/temperature treatment in a temperature range of 25 degrees to 80 degrees C and in a pressure range of 0.1 to 500 MPa at pH 4.4 (the pH of tomato-based products). The optimal temperature for initial tomato polygalacturonase activity in the presence of polygalacturonic acid at atmospheric pressure is about 55 degrees to 60 degrees C. The optimal temperature for initial tomato polygalacturonase activity during processing shifted to lower values at elevated pressure as compared with atmospheric pressure, and the catalytic activity of pure tomato polygalacturonase decreased with increasing pressure, which was mostly pronounced at higher temperatures. The elution profiles of the degradation products on high-performance anion-exchange chromatography indicated that for both thermal and high-pressure treatment all oligomers were present in very small amounts in the initial stage of polygalacturonase activity. The amounts of monomer and small oligomers increased with increasing incubation times, whereas the amount of larger oligomers decreased due to further degradation.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of temperature on the activity and structural stability of an acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2.) purified from castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) seeds have been examined. The enzyme showed high activity at 45 degrees C using p-nitrophenylphosphate (p-NPP) as substrate. The activation energy for the catalyzed reaction was 55.2 kJ mol(-1) and the enzyme maintained 50% of its activity even after 30 min at 55 degrees C. Thermal inactivation studies showed an influence of pH in the loss of enzymatic activity at 60 degrees C. A noticeable protective effect from thermal inactivation was observed when the enzyme was preincubated, at 60 degrees C, with the reaction products inorganic phosphate-P (10 mM) and p-nitrophenol-p-NP(10 mM). Denaturation studies showed a relatively high transition temperature (Tm) value of 75 degrees C and an influence of the combination of Pi (10 mM) and p-NP (10 mM) was observed on the conformational behaviour of the macromolecule.  相似文献   

12.
Isocitrate lyase was isolated in homogeneous state from a thermophilic Bacillus. The enzyme has a mol.wt. of 180000 and a pI of 4.5 and contains threonine as the N-terminal residue. It resembles in size the cognate enzyme from the mesophilic bacterium Pseudomonas indigofera, but is smaller than the enzyme from the eukaryotic fungus Neurospora crassa. All three lyases are tetramers and similar in amino acid composition, but the thermophile enzyme is distinctive from its mesophilic coutnerparts in possessing a lower catalytic-centre activity, greater resistance to chemical and thermal denaturation and fewer thiol groups and in being strongly activated by salts. Salt activation, by 0.4M-KCl, is about 3-fold at 30 degrees C and pH 6.8 and weakens progressively as the temperature or pH is raised. The activation is probably due to a change in the enzyme conformation caused by the electrolyte modifying the interaction between charged groups or between hydrophobic groups in protein. The possible significance of the salt activation, of the relative paucity of thiol groups and of the greater resistance to chemical denaturants is discussed. Besides its effect on the Vmax., KCl produces large increases in the magnitude of several kinetic parameters. A rise in reaction temperature from 30 to 55 degrees C produces a somewhat similar result. In view of these peculiar features, the patterns of inhibition of enzyme activity by compounds such as succinate and phosphoenolpyruvate were examined at 30 and 55 degrees C in the presence and absence of KCl.  相似文献   

13.
The temperature dependence of the active monosaccharide transport across the cell membrane of the yeast Rhodotorula gracilis has been studied between 0 and 55 degrees C with D-xylose as the transported substrate: (i) Between 0 and 10 degrees C there is virtually no transport. (ii) The initial velocity of transport increases exponentially from 15 to 30 degrees C (deltaE equal to 32 plus or minus 2 kcal/mol). (iii) At 30 degrees C a sharp "break" occurs in the Arrhenius plot and with increasing temperature the transport becomes inactivated, with a positive slope of the corresponding straight line ("deltaE equal to minus 15 kcal/mol"). (iv) In the temperature range of 50-55 degrees C, both the transport and the metabolic activity cease. In order to account for the abrupt changes of the membrane permeability, we attempted to ascribe them to phase transitions in the membrane structure: the first one, between 10 and 15 degrees C, to the crystalline: liquid-crystalline phase change; the second one, around 30 degrees C, to a change from highly ordered (low entropy) to less ordered (high entropy) membrane structure. Whereas the former phase transition is reversible, the latter appears to be irreversible. Arrhenius plots of the cell respiration exhibit a "break" at 30 degrees C, as well. However, at higher temperatures there is no thermal inactivation of the respiratory activity. The importance of a proper organization of the cell membrane constituents for the efficient transport function is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
By incubating native (N) transglutaminase from guinea-pig liver at various temperatures and assaying it at 25 degrees C, two steps in the irreversible deactivation process to the denatured form (D) have been found. The fitting of the data to the equations of two possible models (the two-steps model and the two-isoenzymes model) is only compatible with the first one (N----X----D). It is shown that the structure of the active intermediate, X, depends on the deactivation temperature and on the thermal history of the enzyme. This may mean that transglutaminase exists in a large number of microstates. Surprisingly, the activation energy of deactivation is lower than that of activity (36.6 +/- 3.4 against 47.2 +/- 2.2 kJ.mol-1). By deactivating transglutaminase at a constant temperature (55 degrees C) and assaying it at variable temperatures, the activation energy of the intermediate, (X55), has been determined to be 40.2 +/- 5 kJ.mol-1, of the same order of magnitude as the native form. Among several agents assayed, only Ca2+ had a positive effect on the thermal stability of this enzyme. At 40 degrees C, transglutaminase was quite stable in the presence of Ca2+ (in its absence, the half-life was 65 min) and at 45 degrees C, its thermostability had been considerably increased, the half-life being raised from 47 min to 275 min.  相似文献   

15.
Optimal conditions of the glucose isomerase fixation in a cell are determined by thermal treatment of Str. robeus S-606 biomass. Under these conditions the maximal enzyme activation (by 50-55 percent) is simultaneously observed. Basic properties of glucose isomerase fixed inside the cell are studied in comparison with the enzymic cell-free extract of this enzyme. The pH-optimum for preparations coincides and is observed at pH 7.5; the temperature optimum for the soluble enzyme is 70 degrees C, and for the intracellular enzyme it is higher by 5 degrees C. Thermostability of the intracellular enzyme is also higher than that of the soluble one. The Michaelis constants are calculated for the glucose isomerase preparations in a form of producer cells and enzymic extract: they equal to 0.375 M and 0.285 M, respectively. A comparison of properties permits considering intracellular glucose isomerase as an immobilized enzymic preparation.  相似文献   

16.
Thermal denaturation of porcine pancreatic elastase was studied by difference spectrophotometry. At 293 nm, and pH 8.0, the thermal transition of elastase occurs with a midpoint temperature (Tm) of (58.0 +/- 0.5) degrees C. Mg2+ and Ca2+ stabilize the native form in increasing the midpoint temperature of the transition, Ca2+ being more effective than Mg2+ in the 0-0.02 M concentration range. Furthermore, Ca2+ protects pancreatic elastase against the destabilizing effect of Cu2+. Whatever be the temperature between 40 degrees C and 55 degrees C, Ca2+ protects pancreatic elastase against loss of enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

17.
Amylolytic activity was measured in whole body homogenates of High Arctic (Onychiurus arcticus) and temperate (Protaphorura armata) springtails (Collembola: Onychiuridae) in the temperature range 5-55 degrees C. A pH of ca. 8 was optimum for amylolytic activity in both species. A higher weight-specific amylolytic activity was observed in P. armata. In O. arcticus, amylolytic activity depended on thermal acclimation, which increased during 2 and 9 weeks of cold acclimation (5 degrees C) and decreased over 7 weeks of warming (15 degrees C) of animals that were previously acclimated to cold for 2 weeks. In cold-acclimated O. arcticus, a slower decrease of amylolytic activity occurred with lowering of temperature in the range 5-20 degrees C in comparison with warm-acclimated specimens and P. armata, which resulted in higher activity at 5 degrees C. The activation energy calculated from an Arrhenius plot for P. armata was 68.7 kJ.mol(-1). In O. arcticus it was between 30.2 and 61.5 kJ.mol(-1), being lower in cold-acclimated samples. The temperature optimum for amylolytic activity was higher in the temperate species (40 degrees C), whilst in O. arcticus it depended on the acclimation regime: it rose to 35 degrees C after warm acclimation and decreased to 20 degrees C after cold adaptation. The total soluble protein content of body tissues of O. arcticus also increased during cold acclimation. These differences between the two species suggest that amylolytic activity is an indicator of cold adaptation in the High Arctic O. arcticus.  相似文献   

18.
The temperature dependence and effects of sodium and potassium chloride on purified preparations of sarcolemmal Ca2+-activated ATPase were investigated. It was shown that within the concentration range of 0,1--1,0 M both salts have the same effect on the enzyme activity. A low ionic strength and concentration of the salts of 0,1 M the temperature maximum was 45 degrees and the shapes of temperature curves were the same. The Arrhenius plots showed a break at 16--19 degrees. The apparent activation energies were 27,3 kcal/mole below and 17,1 kcal/mole above the break point. At high ionic strength (0,5 M) the temperature maximum was observed at 40 degrees and the apparent activation energies decreased down to 18,0 kcal/mole below and 11,5 kcal/mole above the break point.  相似文献   

19.
The real (G') and imaginary (G") components of the complex modulus have been measured between 0.1 and 100 rad/s in the temperature range of 70--55 degrees C for a mixture of 1% high acyl gellan with 79% glucose syrup, and 79% glucose syrup. The method of reduced variables gave superposed curves of G' and G" as a function of timescale of measurement, which matched the thermal profiles of shear modulus obtained by scanning at the constant rate of 1 degrees C/min. Data of the gellan/co-solute mixture could be analysed in terms of two distinct mechanisms. For the alpha dispersion, G' and G" superposed with the horizontal reduction factor a(T) whose temperature dependence followed an equation of the Williams-Landel-Ferry form. Mechanical spectra of the beta dispersion also superposed with the factor a(T) whose temperature dependence, however, corresponded to a constant energy of activation. Relaxation spectra have been calculated for both dispersions. Those for the alpha mechanism were attributed to the chain backbone motions and the friction coefficient per tetrasaccharide repeat unit in backbone motion was calculated from the extended Rouse theory. When the contribution of the solvent alone was studied, no spectra for the beta dispersion were observed supporting the hypothesis of the dispersion being attributed to the side-chain motions of the acyl groups. The spectra of the beta mechanism were relatively broader than for the alpha dispersion. The relative location of the beta dispersion on the time scale or temperature range was found to be between the alpha dispersion (glass transition region) and the glassy state.  相似文献   

20.
Pectinmethylesterase (PME) extracted from tomato fruit was purified by affinity chromatography. A single peak of PME activity was observed, presenting a molar mass of 33.6 kDa, an isoelectric point higher than 9.3, and an optimal temperature and pH for activity of 55 degrees C and 8.0, respectively. The processing stability of purified tomato PME in buffer solution was compared to PME stability in tomato juice. In both media, thermal inactivation of PME presented first-order inactivation kinetics, PME in tomato juice being more heat-labile than purified PME. Regarding high-pressure treatment, tomato PME showed to be very pressure-resistant, revealing an outspoken antagonistic effect of temperature and pressure. To avoid cloud loss in tomato juice, a time-temperature treatment of 1 min at 76.5 degrees C was calculated in order to have a residual PME activity of 1 x 10(-)(4) U/mL.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号