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1.
d-Glucose-isomerizing enzyme has been extracted in high yield from d-xylose-grown cells of Bacillus coagulans, strain HN-68, by treating with lysozyme, and purified approximately 60-fold by manganese sulfate treatment, fractionation with ammonium sulfate and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex column. The purified d-glucose-isomerizing enzyme was homogeneous in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and ultracentrifugation and was free from d-glucose-6-phosphate isomerase. Optimum pH and temperature for activity were found to be pH 7.0 and 75°C, respectively. The enzyme required specifically Co++ with suitable concentration for maximal activity being 10?3 m. In the presence of Co++, enzyme activity was inhibited strongly by Cu++, Zn++, Ni++, Mn++ or Ca++. At reaction equilibrium, the ratio of d-fructose to d-glucose was approximately 1.0. The enzyme catalyzed the isomerization of d-glucose, d-xylose and d-ribose. Apparent Michaelis constants for d-glucose and d-xylose were 9×10?2 m and 7.7×10?2 m, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
A bacterial strain, HN-56, having an activity of d-glucose isomerization was isolated from soil, and was identified to be similar to Aerobacter aerogenes (Kruse) Beijerink. d-Glucose-isomerizing activity was induced when HN-56 was precultured in the media containing d-xylose, d-mannose, lactate, especially d-mannitol. Paper chromatography showed that the ketose formed in reaction system containing d-glucose was d-fructose alone. The optimum pH for the reaction was 6.5~7.0. Sulfhydryl reagents inhibit the reaction, but metal inhibitors affect little if any. With the washed living cells as enzyme source, only arsenate could accumulate d-fructose. In addition, the cells grown with d-mannitol and d-mannose showed no activity of d-xylose isomerase.  相似文献   

3.
The crystalline d-mannitol dehyrogenase (d-mannitol:NAD oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.67) catalyzed the reversible reduction of d-fructose to d-mannitol. d-Sorbitol was oxidized only at the rate of 4% of the activity for d-mannitol. The enzyme was inactive for all of four pentitols and their corresponding 2-ketopentoses. The apparent optimal pH for the reduction of d-fructose or the oxidation of d-mannitol was 5.35 or 8.6, respectively. The Michaelis constants were 0.035 m for d-fructose and 0.020 m for d-mannitol. The enzyme was also found to be specific for NAD. The Michaelis constans were 1 × 10?5 m for NADH2 and 2.7 × 10?4 m for NAD.  相似文献   

4.
We detected carboxymethyl cellulase activity in a crude extract of Acetobacter xylinum KU-1. The enzyme activity was detected when glycerol, d-fructose, d-mannitol, d-glucose, d-arabitol, d-sorbitol, or carboxymethyl cellulose was used as a carbon source. The optimum pH was found to be 4.0, while the optimum temperature was 50°C. The enzyme activity was inhibited characteristically by the addition of Hg2+.  相似文献   

5.
A bacterial strain, HN-500, having an activity of d-glucose isomerization was newly isolated from soil, and was identified to be similar to Escherichia intermedia (Werkman and Gillen) Vaughn and Levine. The strain, grown on wide varieties of carbon sources, shows definitely d-glucose isomerizing activity in the presence of arsenate. d-Fructose formed in reaction mixture was identified by paper chromatography and was isolated in crystalline form from calcium-fructose complex. In order to increase the production of d-glucose isomerase, d-glucose and ammonium nitrogen were effective carbon and nitrogen sources, respectively, but none of the metallic ions tested were effective, furthermore manganese, ferrous and ferric ions present mOre than 10-5m in growth medium fully repressed the enzyme formation. The cells grown on carbon sources other than d-xylose showed no activity of d-xylose isomerase.  相似文献   

6.
The equilibrium constant of the isomerization reaction between d-mannose and d-fructose which is catalyzed by a mannose isomerase from Streptomyces aerocolorigenes was obtained by using three methods over the temperature range from 1 to 40°C.

It was found that the equilibrium constant was scarcely dependent on temperature, ΔH, the heat of the formation of d-fructose from d-mannose, being approximately zero.

The standard free energy change, ΔG, and the standard entropy change, ΔS, of the reaction were calculated from the equilibrium constants at various temperatures and ΔH. The values of ΔG and ΔS at 25°C were ?650 cal/mole and + 2.2 cal/deg·mole, respectively.

By combining these thermodynamic data with those obtained for the isomerization reaction between d-glucose and d-fructose reported in the previous paper, ΔH, ΔG and ΔS for the isomerization between d-mannose and d-glucose were indirectly obtained to be +2220 cal/mole, +830 cal/mole and +4.6 cal/deg·mole at 25°C, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Glucose isomerizing enzyme was partially purified after investigation on the properties of crude enzyme extract. The crude extract was partly inactivated by the contact with air. The addition of manganese was effective to improve the stability. Magnesium was essential to the enzyme action and cobalt accelerated the reaction.

The maximal activity was observed at pH about 7.6 and 50°C was optimal for the incubation time of 30 minutes. The enzyme solution reacted with d-xylose as well as d-glucose. The activity of the enzyme was inhibited at high glucose concentrations.

An enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of d-glucose to d-fructose has been demonstrated in cell-free extracts of Streptomyces phaeochromo genus grown in the presence of D-xylose. The enzyme preparation reacts with d-glucose and d-xylose, but not with other sugars tested. It appears to require magnesium for the maximal activity and the addition of cobaltous ion remarkably intensifies the heat tolerance of the enzyme. The maximal activity occurs at about pH 9.3~9.5. Equilibrium is reached when about 52% fructose is present in the reaction mixture. The enzyme has half-maximal activity when the concentration of d-glucose is about 0.3 M at pH 9 and 60°C.  相似文献   

8.
A glucose isomerase which reversibly catalyzes the reaction between d-glucose and d-fructose was demonstrated in the cell-free extracts of a strain of Streptomyces sp. isolated from soil. The enzyme was produced when the strain was grown in the medium containing xylan or xylan-containing material such as wheat bran. A medium which consists of 3% of wheat bran, 2% of corn steep liquor and 0.024% of CoCl2·6H2O is recommendabie for the production of the glucose isomerase enzyme with the strain. With the enzyme, some conditions for the conversion of d-glucose to d-fructose were also studied. The method is very useful for the production of invert sugar from d-glucose and is now on the way to be applied to the practical use.  相似文献   

9.
A thermophilic spore-forming strain HN-68, only d-xylose grown cells of which have an activity of d-glucose isomerization, was isolated from soil, and identified to be similar to Bacillus coagulans Hammer. The conditions necessary for maximal production of the glucose isomerizing activity by the cells from shaken cultures in d-xylose media were studied. Much higher activities were observed with the cells grown from 14 ~ 16 hours at 40°C on d-xylose medium containing yeast extract, ammonium chloride, manganese sulfate and calcium carbonate. d-Glucose isomerizing activity was also developed inductively by exposing the washed cells grown on d-glucose to d-xylose within one hour. With the use of living cells as an enzyme source, the addition of both cobaltous ion and toluene in reaction system remarkably enhanced the reaction rate of d-glucose isomerization.  相似文献   

10.
Prodigiosin-25 C     
The equilibrium constant of the isomerization reaction between d-glucose and d-fructose which is catalyzed by a. glucose isomerase from Streptomyces sp. was obtained by both methods of chemical analysis and of kinetic study over the temperature range of 25° to 70°C.

It was found that the formation of d-fructose from d-glucose was an endothermic reaction with the heat of the reaction, ΔH, of +2220 cal/mole. The standard free energy change, ΔG, and the standard entropy change, ΔS, associated with the isomeric change were found to be +180 cal/mole and + 6.8 cal/deg. mole at 25°C, respectively. The values of these thermodynamic quantities at other temperature are also summarized.  相似文献   

11.
Polyol dehydrogenases of Acetobacter melanogenum were investigated. Three polyol dehydrogenases, i. e. NAD+-linked d-mannitol dehydrogenase, NAD+-linked sorbitol dehydrogenase and NADP+-linked d-mannitol dehydrogenase, in the soluble fraction of the organism were purified 12-fold, 8-fold and 88-fold, respectively, by fractionation with ammonium sulfate and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. NAD+-linked sorbitol dehydrogenase reduced 5-keto-d-fructose (5KF) to l-sorbose in the presence of NADH, whereas NADP+-linked d-mannitol dehydrogenase reduced the same substrate to d-fructose in the presence of NADPH. It was also shown that NAD+-linked d-mannitol dehydrogenase was specific for the interconversion between d-mannitol and d-fructose and that this enzyme was very unstable in alkaline conditions.  相似文献   

12.
D-Mannitol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.138) was purified and crystallized for the first time from the cell-free extract of Gluconobacter suboxydans IFO 12528. The enzyme was purified about 100-fold by a procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-Sephadex A-50 column chromatography, and gel filtration by a Sephadex G-75 column. The enzyme was completely separated from a similar enzyme, NAD-dependent D-mannitol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.67), during enzyme purification. There being sufficient purity of the enzyme at this stage, the enzyme was crystallized, by the addition of ammonium sulfate, to fine needles. The crystalline enzyme showed a single sedimentation peak in analytical ultracentrifugation, giving an apparent sedimentation constant of 3.6 s. The molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be 50 kDa by SDS-PAGE and gel filtration chromatography. Oxidation of D-mannitol to D-fructose and reduction of D-fructose to D-mannitol were specifically catalyzed with NADP and NADPH, respectively. NAD and NADH were inert for the enzyme. Since the reaction equilibrium declined to D-fructose reduction over a wide pH range, the enzyme showed several advantages for direct enzymatic measurement of D-fructose. Even in the presence of a large excess of D-glucose and other substances, oxidation of NADPH to NADP was highly specific and stoichiometric to the D-fructose reduced.  相似文献   

13.
d-xylose and l-arabinose are the major constituents of plant lignocelluloses, and the related fungal metabolic pathways have been extensively examined. Although Pichia stipitis CBS 6054 grows using d-arabinose as the sole carbon source, the hypothetical pathway has not yet been clarified at the molecular level. We herein purified NAD(P)H-dependent d-arabinose reductase from cells grown on d-arabinose, and found that the enzyme was identical to the known d-xylose reductase (XR). The enzyme activity of XR with d-arabinose was previously reported to be only 1% that with d-xylose. The kcat/Km value with d-arabinose (1.27 min?1 mM?1), which was determined using the recombinant enzyme, was 13.6- and 10.5-fold lower than those with l-arabinose and d-xylose, respectively. Among the 34 putative sugar transporters from P. stipitis, only seven genes exhibited uptake ability not only for d-arabinose, but also for d-glucose and other pentose sugars including d-xylose and l-arabinose in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

14.
ABSTRACT

Maltose phosphorylase (MP), a glycoside hydrolase family 65 enzyme, reversibly phosphorolyzes maltose. In this study, we characterized Bacillus sp. AHU2001 MP (MalE) that was produced in Escherichia coli. The enzyme exhibited phosphorolytic activity to maltose, but not to other α-linked glucobioses and maltotriose. The optimum pH and temperature of MalE for maltose-phosphorolysis were 8.1 and 45°C, respectively. MalE was stable at a pH range of 4.5–10.4 and at ≤40°C. The phosphorolysis of maltose by MalE obeyed the sequential Bi–Bi mechanism. In reverse phosphorolysis, MalE utilized d-glucose, 1,5-anhydro-d-glucitol, methyl α-d-glucoside, 2-deoxy-d-glucose, d-mannose, d-glucosamine, N-acetyl-d-glucosamine, kojibiose, 3-deoxy-d-glucose, d-allose, 6-deoxy-d-glucose, d-xylose, d-lyxose, l-fucose, and l-sorbose as acceptors. The kcat(app)/Km(app) value for d-glucosamine and 6-deoxy-d-glucose was comparable to that for d-glucose, and that for other acceptors was 0.23–12% of that for d-glucose. MalE synthesized α-(1→3)-glucosides through reverse phosphorolysis with 2-deoxy-d-glucose and l-sorbose, and synthesized α-(1→4)-glucosides in the reaction with other tested acceptors.  相似文献   

15.
[13C]Formaldehyde was selectively incorporated into the C-1 position of D-fructose 6-phosphate by condensation with D-ribulose 5-phosphate catalyzed by a partially purified enzyme system for formaldehyde fixation in Methylomonas aminofaciens 77a. Much of the [1-13C]D-fructose 6-phosphate produced in this reaction was converted to [1-13C]D-glucose 6-phosphate by the addition of glucose-6-phosphate isomerase. A fed-batch reaction with periodic additions of the substrates afforded 56.2 g/liter D-glucose 6-phosphate and 26.8g/liter D-fructose 6-phosphate. When [13C]methanol was used as the C1-donor, the yield of [1-13C]D-glucose 6-phosphate was high when alcohol oxidase was added. The optimum conditions for sugar phosphate production in the fed-batch reaction gave 45.6g/liter [1-13C]D-glucose 6-phosphate and 16.4g/liter [1-13C]D-fructose 6-phosphate in 165min. The molar yield of the total sugar phosphates to methanol added was 95%. The addition of H2O2 and catalase to the reaction system supplied molecular oxygen for methanol oxidation to formaldehyde by alcohol oxidase.  相似文献   

16.
It was found that a bacterial strain, KN-69, which was isolated from soil, converted d-glucose to d-fructose. From the results of investigations of characters, it seems reasonable to conclude that the strain is related to Aerobacter cloacae Bergey et al. The formation of d-fructose in the glucose containing reaction system was confirmed by isolation and characterization of the product.  相似文献   

17.
d-Glucose-isomerizing enzyme from Escherichia intermedia HN-500, which converts d-glucose to d-fructose in the presence of arsenate, was purified by treating with manganous sulfate, rivanol, and DEAE-Sephadex column chromatography. About 180-fold purified enzyme preparation was obtained by the above procedures. The purified preparation was free from the activities of d-glucose-, d-galactose-, glucose-6-phosphate-, mannitol-, and sorbitol-dehydrogenases and was homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel in zone electrophoresis. Optima of pH and temperature for the enzyme were found to be pH 7.0 and 50°C, respectively. The enzyme was completely inactivated by heating at 60°C for ten minutes and stable in the pH range of 7.0~9.0 at 30°C. Activation energy for the isomerizing enzyme was calculated to be 15,300 calories per mole degree from Arrhenius' equation. Either in the absence or presecne of arsenate, d-mannose, d-xylose, d-mannitol and d-sorbitol could not be isomerized by the purified enzyme at all, but the present enzyme isomerized exclusively glucose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate in the absence of arsenate.  相似文献   

18.
α-Glucosyltransferase was purified from Pseudomonas mesoacidophila MX-45. The molecular weight was estimated to be 63,000 by SDS–PAGE, and the isoelectric point was pi 5.4. For enzyme activity based on sucrose decomposition, the optimum pH and the optimum temperature were pH 5.8 and 40°C, respectively. The ranges of stable pH and temperature were pH 5.1–6.7 and below 40°C, respectively. The purified enzyme of MX-45 converted sucrose into trehalulose (1-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-d-fructose) and isomaltulose (palatinose, 6–O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-d-fructose) simultaneously, and the ratio of trehalulose to isomaltulose increased at lower reaction temperatures. Therefore, optimum conditions for trehalulose production were pH 5.5–6.5 at 20°C. The yield of trehalulose from sucrose (20–40% solution) was 91%. The Km for sucrose was 19.2 ± 3.3 mm estimated by the Hanes–Woolf plot. Product inhibition was observed, and the product inhibition constant was 0.17 m. Hg2+, Fe3+, Cu2+, Mg2+, Ag+, Pb2+, glucono-1,5-lactone, and Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane inhibited the reaction.  相似文献   

19.
The physico-chemical properties of the purified glucose isomerases [d-xylose ketol isomerase, EC 5.3.1.5] of Streptomyces olivochromogenes and Bacillus stearothennophilus were examined. The molecular size and shape of both enzymes were similar. The molecular weights, sedimentation coefficients, partial specific volumes, diffusion constants and Stokes’ radii of the Streptomyces and Bacillus enzymes were determined to be 120,000 and 130,000, 7.55 S and 9.35 S, 0.725 and 0.736 ml/g, 5.87 × 10-7 and 6.82 × 10-7 cm2/sec, and 51 and 53 Å, respectively. The Streptomyces glucose isomerase was found to consist of two subunits, each having a molecular weight of 56,000. Large differences were found in the amino acid compositions of these two enzymes, especially in their serine, proline, tyrosine, lysine and arginine contents. The enzymatic properties of both these purified glucose isomerases were also examined, and it was seen that they both displayed activity on d-xylose, d-xylulose, d-glucose, d-fructose, d-arabinose and d-ribose. The smaller Km values and the larger molecular activities for d-xylose and d-xyluIose indicated that both enzymes are essentially d-xylose isomerases. The optimum temperature was 80°C for both enzymes. The optimum pH was 8 to 10 for the Streptomyces enzymes and 7.5 to 8.0 for the Bacillus enzyme. The Bacillus enzyme was more thermostable than the Streptomyces enzyme, but required cobalt ions in addition to magnesium ions for the full expression of its activity.  相似文献   

20.
d-Xylose isomerase requires manganese ions for its action, but l-arabinose isomerase has a less specific on metal requirement. l-Arabinose isomerase is activated by addition of Mn++ or Co++, less effectively by addition of Zn++, Ca++, Mg++, Sr++ or Cd++. Moreover, manganese and potassium ions for d-xylose isomerase, and manganese and cobaltous ions for l-arabinose isomerase were also shown to have protective effect on respective enzymes against thermal inactivation.  相似文献   

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