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1.
The effects on the polymorphic crystallization of l-glutamic acid were examined of many substances including amino acids, inorganic salts, surface active agents, and sodium salt or hydrochloride of l-glutamic acid, when contained in the mother liquor.

The co-existence of amino acids, especially of l-aspartic acid, l-phenylalanine, l-tyrosine, l-lcucine and l-cystine contributed to the crystallization of l-glutamic acid in α-form, and these amino acid showed an inhibitory action on the transition of α-crystals as the solid phase in the aqueous solution, to β-crystals.

In the presence of a large amount of l-glutamate or the hydrochloride at the time of nucleation of l-glutamic acid, mostly β-crystals appeared even in the presence of the amino acids named above.  相似文献   

2.
Microorganisms which require oleic acid for the formation of antibiotics were screened. Streptomyces sp. No. 362, one of the selected organisms, produced antimicrobial substances only when oleic acid, palmitic acid or the high concentration of l-glutamic acid (or l-glutamine) was supplemented to the medium. The cellular fatty acid composition was changed by the supplement of these fatty acids, but not by l-glutamic acid (or l-glutamine). Antibiotic-producing cells had about 4 to 10 times larger amino acid pools, especially l-glutamic acid pool, and hexosamine pools. The ability for l-glutamate uptake of cells grown in the oleic or palmitic acid supplemented medium was markedly enhanced and the efflux of the accumulated l-glutamate was reduced. The antibiotic produced by this strain was identified as one of the streptothricin-group antibiotics and the role of these additives in the antibiotic formation is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The present investigation is concerned with l-glutamic acid production in the presence of pyrrolidone carboxylic acid and glucose in Bacillus megaterium st. 6126. This strain does not grow on dl-pyrrolidone carboxylic acid (dl-PCA)1) as the sole source of carbon and nitrogen. The optimal concentration of yeast extract required for the maximal production of l-glutamic acid was 0.005% under the conditions used. As the yeast extract concentration was increased, growth increased proportionally; but the l-glutamic acid production did not exceed the control’s to which glucose and ammonium chloride had been added. l-Glutamic acid produced by both growing cultures and resting cells was derived from glucose and ammonium salt of dl-PCA. Isotope experiments suggested that the l-glutamic acid produced was partially derived from ammonium salt of dl-PCA in the growing culture which had been supplemented with d-glucose-U-14C or dl-PCA-1-14C and that ammonium salt of dl-PCA was consumed as the source of nitrogen and carbon for l-glutamic acid.  相似文献   

4.
The behaviors of impurities on the crystallizations of the free acid and the hydrochloride, monosodium, zinc, calcium and barium salts of l-glutamic acid were examined, and a tendency was recognized that coexisting impurities were apt to be taken into the crystals when the crystallization proceeded from the zwitterion, i.e., Glu.± or The adsorption of l-tyro-sine was compared when l, d and dl-glutamic acid were crystallized with coexistence of l-tyrosine, and an effect of more or less extent of steric configuration on its behavior could be recognized.  相似文献   

5.
Structure of a sugar lipid produced by an oleic acid-requiring mutant of Brevibacterium thiogenitalis was studied and established as (I).

Relation between biotin and oleic acid was studied using a biotin-requiring organism accumulating l-glutamic acid and its blocked mutants lacking the biosynthetic system of biotin or/and oleic acid. The results support the following considerations. Biotin is not formed from oleic acid and does not substantially affect the growth of l-glutamic acid-accumulating bacteria and their productivity of l-glutamic acid.

Consequently, biotin serves only for the synthesis of fatty acids in the present organisms. The essential factor for their growth and metabolism is an unsaturated fatty acid like oleic acid and not biotin. And also, saturated fatty acids have substantially no relation with their growth and metabolism like accumulation of l-glutamic acid.  相似文献   

6.
Two new amino acid amides which yield in acid hydrolysis isomeric hydroxybenzylamines and amino acids have been isolated from the achenes of Fagopyrum esculentum Moench. One of them called BN-II is composed of salicylamine and allo-4-hydroxy-l-glutamic acid, and the other, BN-III, p-hydroxybenzylamine and l-glutamic acid. These coupled compounds link one another to form an amide respectively. Finally the structures of BN-II and BN-III were determined to be N5-(2′-hydroxybenzyl)-allo-4-hydroxy-l-glutamine and N5-(4′-hydroxybenzyl)-l-glutamine respectively from their chemical and spectrometry properties.  相似文献   

7.
Potent l-valine producers were screened among 2-thiazolealanine resistant mutants derived from three typical l-glutamic acid producing bacteria: Brevibacterium lactofermentum, Corynebacterium acetoacidophilum, Arthrobacter citreus. By strain No. 487, the best producer derived from Brevibacterium, 31 mg/ml of l-valine was produced after 72 hr when 10% glucose was supplied as a carbon source, thus giving the yield of 31% from glucose. Accumulation of the other amino acids was negligible. The addition of l-isoleucine and l-leucine in the culture medium did not reduce the l-valine production, indicating that the l-valine biosynthesis is insensitive to these end products in the l-valine producer.  相似文献   

8.
The crude enzyme preparation obtained from culture media of Bacillus cereus Kp 931 was fractionated into three active fractions by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. These three enzymes had pH optima at between 10.5 and 11.0. One of them, the largest molecular weight species, the enzyme I, was purified extensively. The enzyme catalyzes the release of a number of free amino acids from casein. Large amounts of l-alanine and l-glutamic acid and small amounts of l-leucine, l-serine, glycine, l-cysteic acid and l-arginine were released from oxidized insulin B-chain by the action of the purified enzyme I. It is also suggested that the other two enzymes, II and III, belong to so-called bacterial proteninases.  相似文献   

9.
l-Homoserine was prepared by the reduction of l-aspartic acid β-methyl ester with sodium borohydride in water solution without any racemization. The yield of l-homoserine was about 25% of the theoretical amount, and no product other than l-homoserine, l-aspartic acid and l-aspartic acid β-methyl ester was present in the reaction mixture. The low yield of l-homoserine was ascribed to the hydrolysis of the ester.

l-Azetidine-2-carboxylic acid could not be detected in the reaction mixture. In contrast with the reduction of l-glutamic acid γ-esters, the reduction of l-aspartic acid β-ester was not accompanied by the cyclization.  相似文献   

10.
It is confirmed by a new method for the determination of d-glutamic acid, that Aerobacter strain A rapidly metabolizes d-glutamic acid, while it only shows feeble metabolic activity towards l-glutamic acid when it is grown on a dl-glutamate-K2HPO4 medium. A specific d-glutamic oxidase is demonstrated in the cell-free extracts of Aerobacter strain A. This enzyme seems to be different from d-glutamic-aspartic oxidase obtained from Aspergillus ustus by the authors, since the former has no activity towards d-aspartic acid.  相似文献   

11.
Crude ammonium sulfate fraction of a cell free extract from Bacillus natto contained an enzyme (or enzymes) which catalyzed the transamidation reaction specific for glutamine. Both l- and d-isomers of glutamine were active as substrate. On incubation of l- or d-glutamine with the enzyme preparation, two peptides consisting of glutamic acid and glutamine were formed. The main component of the peptides was readily isolated by ion-exchange chromatography and identified as γ-glutamylglutamine by paper chromatography and by paper electrophoresis using authentic peptides. The optical configuration of the amino acid residues in the dipeptide was determined by digestion of the acid hydrolyzate with l-glutamic acid decarboxylase, and the result showed that the dipeptide obtained from l-glutamine was a l-l isomer, while the dipeptide from d-glutamine was a d-d isomer.  相似文献   

12.
At maximum production of l-glutamic acid, the oxidation-reduction potential of the culture broth in l-glutamic acid fermentation showed a stable value of 9.0 to 9.6 as rH value. When biotin concentration in the medium was high (40γ/liter), the production of l-glutamic acid decreased, and the rH was 8.0 and it was out of accordance with that of the control (biotin-poor; 2γ/liter). Under “less-aerobic” conditions, its rH rose to 10.4.

From these results, it was concluded that the rH during maximum production of l-glutamic acid showed a stable value affected actively by the redox system, l-glutamic acid/α-ketoglutaric acid and   相似文献   

13.
An attempt has been made to isolate the bacteria capable of accumulating amino acids during the growth at low temperature from various natural sources. A psychrophilic strain P 145 forming glutamic acid at 5°C was obtained and identified as a Brevibacterium sp. The bacterium grew in the range of 0° to 37°C and exhibited the optimum growth at 15°C. The bacterium was defined as a facultative psychrophile.

The strain strictly required methionine only at above 28°C; below this temperature it grew normally without the amino acid. When methionine was added thiamine and biotin stimulated the growth of this strain at 28°C.

With the Brevibacterium sp. P 145 isolated from soil, the effect of incubation temperature on the extracellular amino acid accumulation has been examined from cultural and enzymological points of view. The strain was found to accumulate l-glutamic acid up to 5.88 mg/ml and l-alanine 0.38 mg/ml at 5°C, whereas it formed 0.21 mg/ml of l-glutamic acid and 2.54 mg/ml of l-alanine at 28°C.

The accumulation of l-alanine in the medium at 28°C seemed to be related to the thiamine requirement of the strain. In the case of thiamine deficiency, l-alanine was the main product in the culture at 28°C. When the incubation temperature was abruptly shifted from 28° to 5°C or from 5° to 28°C, the amino acid accumulation was also changed to that of the final temperature. l-Alanine dehydrogenase existed even in the cells grown at 5°C but was not active at this low temperature. These results were in accord with the informations obtained from cultural experiments.  相似文献   

14.
Paracetamol, sulfathiazole and l-glutamic acid are presented as examples of pharmaceutical crystal polymorphic systems. The effect of N-acylated sulfathiazole derivatives (3–6) on sulfathiazole crystallisation is discussed, and possible modes of action presented. Methods for the control of the crystal polymorphism of l-glutamic acid which utilise the principles of conformation mimicry and co-operative binding are presented. The preparation of a series of bis-amides of EDTA derived from sulfathiazole, 5-aminoisophthalic acid and 4-hydroxyaniline (i.e. compounds 9a–c) is presented, as is data on the effect of these compounds on the crystallisation of, respectively, sulfathiazole, l-glutamic acid and paracetamol.  相似文献   

15.
l-Glutamic acid was formed from d-, l-, and dl-PCA with cell-free extract of Pseudomonas alcaligenes ATCC-12815 grown in the medium containing dl-PCA as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. The enzyme(s) involved in this conversion reaction was distributed in the soluble fraction within the cell and in 0.5 saturated fraction at the fractionation procedure with the saturation of ammonium sulfate. Optimum pH of this enzyme(s) lied at pH 8.5 and optimum temperature was 30°C. Cu (5 × 10?3 m) inhibited the reaction considerably while Ca or Fe accelerated it. PALP (1×10?3 m) also gave an enhanced activity to some extent. The enzyme preparation converted dextro-rotatory enan-thiomorph of PCA to its laevo-rotatory one which in turn was not converted to the opposite rotation direction by this enzyme. Furthermore, the preparation did not, if any, show d-glutamic acid racemase activity. Isotopic experiments with using dl-PCA-1-14C revealed that l-glutamic acid-1-14C was formed by the cleavage of –CO–NH– bond of pyrrolidone ring of PCA. It was concluded that dl-PCA when assimilated by the present bacterium is at first transformed to l-PCA by the optically isomerizing enzyme and subsequently is cleaved to l-glutamic acid probably by the PCA hydrolysing enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
The authors have carried out a series of studies on l-glutamic acid fermentation with a strain of Brevibacterium divaricatum nov. sp. in the previous papers.

In this paper, some metabolism of l-glutamic acid and oxidative decomposition of several organic acids concerning the tricarboxylic acid cycle by the resting cells have been studied. The results suggest that l-glutamic acid is one of the final fermentative products of this bacterium, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle is working as a glutamic acid forming cycle.

The presence of glucokinase, phosphoglucoisomerase, phosphofructokinase, aldolase, DPN-linked glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and TPN-linked glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in cell-free extracts of this bacterium was also demonstrated.  相似文献   

17.
In this study, the mechanism of the extracellular accumulation of l-glutamic acid by the glycerol auxotroph was partially clarified. Whenever Corynebacterium alkanolyticum GL–21 (glycerol auxotroph) accumulated a large amount of l-glutamic acid in the fermentation broth, the content of its cellular phospholipids was not more than 50% of that of C. alkanolyticum No. 314 (prototroph).

Moreover, biotin, oleic acid or thiamine had no influence on the cellular phospholipid content of the auxotroph.

Under limited supply of glycerol, the efflux of l-glutamic acid in the auxotroph was extremely enhanced, but its enzyme activities participating in l-glutamic acid biosynthesis remained at the same level as those of the prototroph.

From the results, it is considered that the regulation of phospholipid content gave rise to the destruction of the permeability barrier to l-glutamic acid in the cell membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Micrococcus glutamicus, a glutamate-produeing bacterium, is known to have strong activity of l-glutamic acid dehydrogenase which requires NADP as co-enzyme. In this paper, the NADP-speeifie l-glutamic acid dehydrogenase was purified from M. glutamicus by means of heat treatment with sodium sulfate, precipitation with acetic acid and diethyl-amino-ethyl (DEAE) cellulose column chromatography. The activity of the purified enzyme preparation reached 200-fold as high as that of the crude extract. Some properties of the purified enzyme were investigated. As a result, it was found that the highly purified enzyme preparation acted not only on l-glutamic acid (l-GA) but also on α, ε-diaminopimelic acid (α, ε-DAP) in the presence of NADP. Some of the probable consideration for the dehydrogenation of l-GA and α, ε-DAP are noted.  相似文献   

19.
The protective effect of dietary l-glutamine against the hepatotoxic action of d-galactosamine (GalN) was investigated by model experiments with rats. Rats fed with 20% casein diets containing 10% free amino acids were injected with GalN, and the serum aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and lactate dehydrogenase activities and the hepatic glycogen content were assayed 20 hours after the injection. These enzyme activities in the group fed with the 10% l-glutamine diet for 8 days were lower than those in the groups fed with the control, 10% l-glutamic acid and 10% l-alanine diets for 8 days. The more prolonged the feeding period with the 10% l-glutamine diet was, the more the serum activity levels of such enzymes were decreased. Although neomycin also lowered these enzyme activities, its simultaneous ingestion with neomycin did not show any additive or synergistic effect. The hepatic glycogen content in the 10% glutamine group still remained high after the GalN treatment. It is therefore assumed that the effectiveness of glutamine intake would have been mediated by glycogen metabolism rather than by uridine metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
Effect of oxygen tension on l-lysine, l-threonine and l-isoleucine accumulation was investigated. Sufficient supply of oxygen to satisfy the cell’s oxygen demand was essential for the maximum production in each fermentation. The dissolved oxygen level must be controlled at greater than 0.01 atm in every fermentation, and the optimum redox potentials of culture media were above ?170 mV in l-lysine and l-threonine and above ?180 mV in l-isoleucine fermentations. The maximum concentrations of the products were 45.5 mg/ml for l-lysine, 10.3 mg/ml for l-threonine and 15.1 mg/ml for l-isoleucine. The degree of the inhibition due to oxygen limitation was slight in the fermentative production of l-lysine, l-threonine and l-isoleucine, whose biosynthesis is initiated with l-aspartic acid, in contrast to the accumulation of l-proline, l-glutamine and l-arginine, which is biosynthesized by way of l-glutamic acid.  相似文献   

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