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1.
Extracellular asparaginase from Candida utilis was partially purified by precipitation with acetone and by column chromatography on DEAE Sephadex A-50 and Sephadex G-200. The specific activity of the enzyme preparation was 3900 units per mg of protein. Candida asparaginase characteristically had deaminating activity for d-asparagine as well as for l-asparagine. But this enzyme was not able to hydrolyzed l- or d-glutamine. SH inhibitor, chelating agents and metal ions did not show any inhibition or activation of l-asparaginase activity. Optimum pH was about 6 for both l- and d-asparagine. This asparaginase was stable between pH 4 and pH 10 in heating for 10 min at 50°C.  相似文献   

2.
Crystalline l-asparaginase from Escherichia coli A-I-3 hydrolyzed d-asparagine, l- and d-glutamine but at much slower rates than the rate at which it hydrolyzed l-asparagine. Inhibitions by these substrates and related compounds were revealed to be competitive.

d-Asparagine showed the same affinity for the enzyme both in its hydrolysis and inhibition of l-asparagine hydrolysis. l-Aspartate, d-aspartate and α-N-ethylasparagine inhibited various hydrolysis reactions with the respective inhibitor constants. The enzyme was found to hydrolyze β-methylaspartate as well as β-aspartohydroxamate. These data strongly suggest that the hydrolysis occurred at the same active site of the enzyme molecule with relatively low specificity for the configuration of the substrate molecule and the kind of bonding which it hydrolyzes.  相似文献   

3.
  1. l-Aspartate was found to replace l-asparagine in the protective action from acid inactivation of l-asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) produced by Escherichia coli A–1–3 and at the same time to inhibit the proteolytic inactivation by α-chymotrypsin.

  2. l-Asparaginase changed in its chromatographic properties in the presence of l-aspartate and became to be absorbed on the CM Sephadex column.

  3. The sedimentation patterns of l-asparaginase at pH 3.5 were identical either in the presence or absence of l-aspartate, showing partial dissociation. But the reversibility to the active state was observed only in the enzyme dissolved in the solution containing l-aspartate.

  4. l-Aspartate did not prevent the enzyme either from the dissociation into subunits or from decrease in the activity by urea.

  5. High concentration of l-aspartate was shown to inhibit the l-asparagine hydrolysis reaction.

  6. l-Aspartate was suggested from ORD measurements to cause changes in the higher structure as well as the ionic properties or proteolytic inactivation.

  相似文献   

4.
  1. L-Asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) from Escherichia coli A–l–3 was acetylated using acetic anhydride as a modifying chemical. The fully acetylated L-asparaginase retained 60% of the activity of the unmodified L-asparaginase.

  2. The acetylated L-asparaginase hydrolyzed D-asparagine and L-glutamine as well as L-asparagine in the same ratio as the unmodified L-asparaginase did.

  3. However, the effects of pH on the activity of the acetylated L-asparaginase showed very interesting differences from that of L-asparaginase. On the other hand, both L-asparaginase and the acetylated L-asparaginase exhibited similar pH activity curves on L-glutamine hydrolysis.

  4. The acetylated L-asparaginase was found to become more stable against acid or heat in the presence of L-aspartate than in its absence in the same manner as L-asparaginase was.

  相似文献   

5.
l-ribose isomerase (L-RI) from Cellulomonas parahominis MB426 can convert l-psicose and d-tagatose to l-allose and d-talose, respectively. Partially purified recombinant L-RI from Escherichia coli JM109 was immobilized on DIAION HPA25L resin and then utilized to produce l-allose and d-talose. Conversion reaction was performed with the reaction mixture containing 10% l-psicose or d-tagatose and immobilized L-RI at 40 °C. At equilibrium state, the yield of l-allose and d-talose was 35.0% and 13.0%, respectively. Immobilized enzyme could convert l-psicose to l-allose without remarkable decrease in the enzyme activity over 7 times use and d-tagatose to d-talose over 37 times use. After separation and concentration, the mixture solution of l-allose and d-talose was concentrated up to 70% and crystallized by keeping at 4 °C. l-Allose and d-talose crystals were collected from the syrup by filtration. The final yield was 23.0% l-allose and 7.30% d-talose that were obtained from l-psicose and d-tagatose, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Regulatory properties of chorismate mutase from Corynebacterium glutamicum were studied using the dialyzed cell-free extract. The enzyme activity was strongly feedback inhibited by l-phenylalanine (90% inhibition at 0.1~1 mm) and almost completely by a pair of l-tyrosine and l-phenylalanine (each at 0.1~1 mm). The enzyme from phenylalanine auxotrophs was scarcely inhibited by l-tyrosine alone but the enzyme from a wild-type strain or a tyrosine auxotroph was weakly inhibited by l-tyrosine alone (40~50% inhibition, l-tyrosine at 1 mm). The enzyme activity was stimulated by l-tryptophan and the inhibition by l-phenylalanine alone or in the simultaneous presence of l-tyrosine was reversed by l-tryptophan. The Km value of the reaction for chorismate was 2.9 } 10?3 m. Formation of chorismate mutase was repressed by l-phenylalanine. A phenylalanine auxotrophic l-tyrosine producer, C. glutamicum 98–Tx–71, which is resistant to 3-amino-tyrosine, p-aminophenylanaine, p-fluorophenylalanine and tyrosine hydroxamate had chorismate mutase derepressed to two-fold level of the parent KY 10233. The enzyme in C. glutamicum seems to have two physiological roles; one is the control of the metabolic flow to l-phenylalanine and l-tyrosine biosynthesis and the other is the balanced partition of chorismate between l-phenylalanine-l-tyrosine biosynthesis and l-tryptophan biosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Regulatory properties of the enzymes in l-tyrosine and l-phenyalanine terminal pathway in Corynebacterium glutamicum were investigated. Prephenate dehydrogenase was partially feedback inhibited by l-tyrosine. Prephenate dehydratase was strongly inhibited by l-phenylalanine and l-tryptophan and 100% inhibition was attained at the concentrations of 5 × 10?2mm and 10?1mm, respectively. l-Tyrosine stimulated prephenate dehydratase activity (6-fold stimulation at 1 mm) and restored the enzyme activity inhibited by l-phenylalanine or l-tryptophan. These regulations seem to give the balanced synthesis of l-tyrosine and l-phenyl-alanine. Prephenate dehydratase from C. glutamicum was stimulated by l-methionine and l-leucine similarly to the enzyme in Bacillus subtilis and moreover by l-isoleucine and l-histidine. C. glutamicum mutant No. 66, an l-phenylalanine producer resistant to p-fluorophenyl-alanine, had a prephenate dehydratase completely resistant to the inhibition by l-phenylalanine and l-tryptophan.  相似文献   

8.
Since l-prolyl diketopiperazines, l-prolyl-l-valine anhydride and l-leucyl-l-proline anhydride, had been isolated from the culture filtrate of Streptomyces sp. S-580, the mechanism of l-prolyl diketopiperazine formation by Streptomyces has been studied. These two l-prolyl diketopiperazines were not formed from their constituent amino acids incubated with intact cell or cell free homogenate of this strain in buffered salt solution containing energy source. However, from milk casein, poly peptone or gelatin, the former two were components of the culture medium of this strain, hydrolyzed with the pure streptomyces-protease, these l-prolyl diketopiperazines were obtained (only from gelatin, glycyl-l-proline anhydride were obtained in addition to these two). Furthermore, in hydrolysis of some synthetic l-prolyl peptides with this enzyme, l-prolyl diketopiperazine formation were also studied, and as the result, glycyl-l-proline anhydride was obtained from glycyl-l-prolyl-l-leucine but no l-prolyl diketopiperazine was formed from l-prolyl-l-leucyl-glycine. From these evidences, the possible route of l-prolyl diketopiperazine formation by Streptomyces has been discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Branched chain amino acid aminotransferase was partially purified from Pseudomonas sp. by ammonium sulfate fractionation, aminohexyl-agarose and Bio-Gel A-0.5 m column chromatography.

This enzyme showed different substrate specificity from those of other origins, namely lower reactivity for l-isoleucine and higher reactivity for l-methionine.

Km values at pH 8.0 were calculated to be 0.3 mm for l-leucine, 0.3 mm for α-ketoglutarate, 1.1 mm for α-ketoisocaproate and 3.2 mm for l-glutamate.

This enzyme was activated with β-mercaptoethanol, and this activated enzyme had different kinetic properties from unactivated enzyme, namely, Km values at pH 8.0 were calculated to be 1.2 mm for l-leucine, 0.3 mm for α-ketoglutarate.

Isocaproic acid which is the substrate analog of l-leucine was competitive inhibitor for pyridoxal form of unactivated and activated enzymes, and inhibitor constants were estimated to be 6 mm and 14 mm, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Biosynthetic threonine deaminase was purified to an apparent homogeneous state from the cell extract of Proteus morganii, with an overall yield of 7.5%. The enzyme had a s020,w of 10.0 S, and the molecular weight was calculated to be approximately, 228,000. The molecular weight of a subunit of the enzyme was estimated to be 58,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The enzyme seemed to have a tetrameric structure consisting of identical subunits. The enzyme had a marked yellow color with an absorption maximum at 415 nm and contained 2 mol of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate per mol. The threonine deaminase catalyzed the deamination of l-threonine, l-serine, l-cysteine and β-chloro-l-alanine. Km values for l-threonine and l-serine were 3.2 and 7.1 mm, respectively. The enzyme was not activated by AMP, ADP and ATP, but was inhibited by l-isoleucine. The Ki for l-isoleucine was 1.17 mm, and the inhibition was not recovered by l-valine. Treatment with mercuric chloride effectively protected the enzyme from inhibition by l-isoleucine.  相似文献   

11.
Crystalline tyrosine phenol lyase was prepared from the cell extract of Erwinia herbicola grown in a medium supplemented with l-tyrosine. The crystalline enzyme was homogeneous by the criteria of ultracentrifugation and acrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight was determined to be approximately 259,000. The crystalline enzyme catalyzed the conversion of l-tyrosine into phenol, pyruvate and ammonia, in the presence of added pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme also catalyzed pyruvate formation from d-tyrosine, S-methyl-l-cysteine, 3, 4-dihydroxyphenyl-l-alanine, l- and d-serine, and l- and d-cysteine, but at lower rates than from l-tyrosine. l-Phenyl-alanine, l-alanine, phenol and pyrocatechol inhibited pyruvate formation from l-tyrosine.

Crystalline tyrosine phenol lyase from Erwinia herbicola is inactive in the absence of added pyridoxal phosphate. Binding of pyridoxal phosphate to the apoenzyme is accompanied by pronounced increase in absorbance at 340 and 425 mμ. The amount of pyridoxal phosphate bound to the apoenzyme was determined by equilibrium dialysis to be 2 moles per mole of enzyme. Addition of the substrate, l-tyrosine, or the competitive inhibitors, l-alanine and l-phenyl-alanine, to the holoenzyme causes appearance of a new absorption peak near 500 mμ which disappears as the substrate is decomposed but remains unchanged in the presence of the inhibitor.  相似文献   

12.
The properties of the tyrosinase from Pseudomonas melanogenum was investigated with the crude enzyme preparation. Optimum temperature and pH of the enzyme were 23°C and 6.8, respectively. l-Tyrosine, d-tyrosine, m-tyrosine, N-acetyl-l-tyrosine and l-DOPA were utilized as a substrate by the enzyme. The value for Km obtained were as follows: l-tyrosine 6.90 × 10?4 m, d-tyrosine 1.43 ×10?3 m and l-DOPA 9.90 × 10?4 m. The enzyme was inhibited by chelating agents of Cu2+ l-cysteine, l-homocysteine, thiourea and diethyl-dithiocarbamate and the inhibition was completely reversed by the addition of excess Cu2+ From these results it is concluded that the enzyme is a copper-containing oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
l-asparaginase (l-asparagine amino hydrolase, E.C.3.5.1.1) is an enzyme clinically accepted as an antitumor agent to treat acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphosarcoma. It catalyzes l-asparagine (Asn) hydrolysis to l-aspartate and ammonia, and Asn effective depletion results in cytotoxicity to leukemic cells. Microbial l-asparaginase (ASNase) production has attracted considerable attention owing to its cost effectiveness and eco-friendliness. The focus of this review is to provide a thorough review on microbial ASNase production, with special emphasis to microbial producers, conditions of enzyme production, protein engineering, downstream processes, biochemical characteristics, enzyme stability, bioavailability, toxicity and allergy potential. Some issues are also highlighted that will have to be addressed to achieve better therapeutic results and less side effects of ASNase use in cancer treatment: (a) search for new sources of this enzyme to increase its availability as a drug; (b) production of new ASNases with improved pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics and toxicological profiles, and (c) improvement of ASNase production by recombinant microorganisms. In this regard, rational protein engineering, directed mutagenesis, metabolic flux analysis and optimization of purification protocols are expected to play a paramount role in the near future.  相似文献   

14.
l-Fucose (l-galactose) dehydrogenase was isolated to homogeneity from a cell-free extract of Pseudomonas sp. No 1143 and purified about 380-fold with a yield of 23 %. The purification procedures were: treatment with polyethyleneimine, ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatographies on phenyl-Sepharose and DEAE-Sephadex, preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. The enzyme had a molecular weight of about 34,000. The optimum pH was at 9 — 10.5 and the isoelectric point was at pH 5.1. l-Fucose and l-galactose were effective substrates for the enzyme reaction, but d-arabinose was not so much. The anomeric requirement of the enzyme to l-fucose was the β-pyranose form, and the reaction product from l-fucose was l-fucono- lactone. The hydrogen acceptor for the enzyme reaction wasNADP+, and NAD + could be substituted for it to a very small degree. Km values were 1.9mm, 19mm, 0.016mm, and 5.6mm for l-fucose, l- galactose, NADP+, and NAD+, respectively. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by Hg2 +, Cd2 +, and PCMB, but metal-chelating reagents had almost no effect. In a preliminary experiment, it was indicated that the enzyme may be usable for the measurement of l-fucose.  相似文献   

15.
An inducible tryptophanase was crystallized from the cell extract of Proteus rettgeri grown in a medium containing l-tryptophan. The purification procedure included ammonium sulfate fractionation, heat treatment, DEAE-Sephadex and hydroxylapatite column chromatographies. Crystals were obtained from solutions of the purified enzyme by the addition of ammonium sulfate.

The crystalline enzyme preparation was homogeneous by the criteria of ultracentrifugation and zone electrophoresis. The molecular weight was determined to be approximately 210,000.

The crystalline enzyme catalyzed the degradation of l-tryptophan into indole, pyruvate and ammonia in the presence of added pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme also catalyzed pyruvate formation from 5-hydroxy-l-tryptophan, 5-methyl-l-tryptophan, S-methyl-l-cysteine and l- cysteine. l-, d-Alanine, l-phenylalanine and indole inhibited pyruvate formation from these substrates.  相似文献   

16.
The 7-keto-8-aminopelargonic acid (KAPA) synthetase activities of cell-free extracts from various bacteria were investigated. The experiments on the substrate specificity of KAPA synthetase, using crude cell-free extracts from bacteria having high enzyme activity, showed that l-serine and pyruvic acid could replace l-alanine, but that, when the enzyme was partially purified, these compounds were not effective. Many kinds of amino acids such as l-cysteine, l-serine, d-alanine, glycine, d-histidine, and l-histidine, inhibited the enzyme activity. This inhibition was found to be competitive with l-alanine. Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate, which is a cofactor of the enzyme, also inhibited the enzyme activity at high concentrations. The repression of KAPA synthetase by biotin occurred in Bacillus subtilis and B. sphaericus but not in Micrococcus roseus and Pseudomonas fluorescens, even at a concentration of 1000 mµg per ml of biotin.  相似文献   

17.
Homoserine dehydrogenases and aspartokinases in l-threonine- or l-threonine and l-lysine-producing mutants derived from Corynebacterium glutamicum KY 9159 (Met?) were studied with respect to the sensitivity to the inhibition by end products, l-threonine and l-lysine. The activities of homoserine dehydrogenases in the mutants which produced l-threonine or l-threonine and l-lysine were slightly less susceptible to the inhibition by l-threonine than the activity in the parent strain, KY 9159. The aspartokinases in the threonine-producing mutants, KY 10484 and KY 10230, which were resistant to α-amino-β-hydroxylvaleric acid (AHV, a threonine analog) and more sensitive to thialysine (a lysine analog) than the parent, were sensitive to the concerted feedback inhibition by l-lysine and l-threonine by about the same degree as KY 9159. The aspartokinase in an AHV- and thialysine-resistant mutant, KY 10440, which was derived from KY 10484 and produced about 14 mg/ml of l-threonine in a medium containing 10% glucose was less susceptible to the concerted feedback inhibition than KY 10484 or KY 9159, although the activity was still under the feedback control. In the parent strain, l-threonine activated aspartokinase activity in the absence of ammonium sulfate, an activator of the enzyme, but partially inhibited the activity in the presence of the salt. On the other hand, the enzyme of KY 10440 was activated by l-threonine either in the presence or in the absence of the salt. In another AHV- and thialysine-resistant mutant, KY 10251, which was derived from KY 10230 and produced both 9 mg/ml of l-threonine and 5/5 mg/ml of l-lysine, l-threonine and l-lysine simultaneously added hardly inhibited the activity of aspartokinase.

Implications of these results are discussed in relation to l-threonine or l-lysine production, AHV or thialysine resistance and regulation of l-threonine biosynthesis in these mutants.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the substrate specificity of α-l-rhamnosidase from Aspergillus niger, the following seven substrates were synthesized: methyl 3-O-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl-α-d-mannopyranoside (1), methyl 3-O-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl-α-l-xylopyranoside (2), methyl 3-0-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl-α-l-rhamnopyranoside (3), methyl 4-0-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl-α-d-galactopyranoside (4), methyl 4-O-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl-α-d-mannopyranoside (5), methyl 4-0-α-l-rhamnopyra-nosyl-α-d-xylopyranoside (6), and 6-0-β-l-rhamnopyranosyl-d-mannopyranose (7). Compounds 1~6 were well-hydrolyzed by the crude enzyme, but 7 was unaffected.  相似文献   

19.
The transglucosidation reaction of brewer’s yeast α-glucosidase was examined under the co-existence of l-sorbose and phenyl-α-glucoside. As the transglucosidation products, three kinds of new disaccharide were chromatographically isolated. It was presumed that these disaccharides consisting of d-glucose and l-sorbose were 1-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-sorbose ([α]D+89.0), 3-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-sorbose ([α]D+69.1) and 4-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-sorbose ([α]D+81.0). The principal product formed in the enzyme reaction was 1-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-sorbose.  相似文献   

20.
l-Alanine adding enzymes from Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus cereus which catalyzed l-alanine incorporation into UDPMurNAc were partially purified and the properties of the enzymes were examined. The enzyme from B. subtilis was markedly stimulated by reducing agents including 2-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, glutathione and cysteine. Mn2+ and Mg2+ activated l-alanine adding activity and their optimal concentrations were 2 to 5 mm and 10 mm, respectively. The optimum pH was 9.5 and the Km for l-alanine was 1.8×10?4m. l-Alanine adding reaction was strongly inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoate and N-ethyl-maleimide. Among glycine, l- and d-amino acids and glycine derivatives, glycine was the most effective inhibitor of the l-alanine adding reaction. The enzyme from B. cereus was more resistant to glycine than that from B. subtilis. Glycine was incorporated into UDPMurNAc in place of l-alanine, and the Ki for glycine was 4.2×l0?3m with the enzyme from B. subtilis. From these data, the growth inhibition of bacteria by glycine is discussed.  相似文献   

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