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1.
The regulation of the synthesis of four dissimilatory enzymes involved in methanol metabolism, namely alcohol oxidase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase and catalase was investigated in the yeasts Hansenula polymorpha and Kloeckera sp. 2201. Enzyme profiles in cell-free extracts of the two organisms grown under glucose limitation at various dilution rates, suggested that the synthesis of these enzymes is controlled by derepression — represion rather than by induction — repression. Except for alcohol oxidase, the extent to which catabolite repression of the catabolic enzymes was relieved at low dilution rates was similar in both organisms. In Hansenula polymorpha the level of alcohol oxidase in the cells gradually increased with decreasing dilution rate, whilst in Kloeckera sp. 2201 derepression of alcohol oxidase synthesis was only observed at dilution rates below 0.10 h–1 and occurred to a much smaller extent than in Hansenula polymorpha.Derepression of alcohol oxidase and catalase in cells of Hansenula polymorpha was accompanied by synthesis of peroxisomes. Moreover, peroxisomes were degraded with a concurrent loss of alcohol oxidase and catalase activities when excess glucose was introduced into the culture. This process of catabolite inactivation of peroxisomal enzymes did not affect cytoplasmic formaldehyde dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
A comparative study was made of the regulation of the synthesis of methanol dissimilating enzymes inkloeckera sp. 2201 andHansenula polymorpha using chemostat and batch growth conditions and methanol or glucose as carbon sources. During growth in methanol-limited chemostat cultures similar enzyme patterns for alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase in the two yeasts were found. When growing in batch culture with glucoseH. polymorpha, but notKloeckera sp. 2201, was found to produce ethanol which might affect the synthesis of these enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Degradation of microbiodies in the methanolutilizing yeastCandida boidinii was mainly studies by electron microscopical observation. The yeast cells precultured on methanol medium contained five to six microbodies per section and showed high activities of alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase. When the precultured cells were transferred into an ethanol medium the number of microbodies and concomitantly the activities of alcohol oxidase and catalase decreased. After 6 h of cultivation microbodies were hardly detected. Also the activity of alcohol oxidase was not measurable and catalase activity was reduced to one tenth, whereas the activities of formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase decreased only to about 70%. Experiments with methanol-grown cells transferred into an ethanol medium without nitrogen source indicated that the inactivation of alcohol oxidase and catalase does not require protein synthesis. However, the reappearance of these enzymes is presumably due to de novo protein synthesis as shown by experiments with cycloheximide.  相似文献   

4.
The growth of Hansenula polymorpha and Kloeckera sp. 2201 with a mixture of glucose and methanol (38.8%/61.2%, w/w) and the regulation of the methanol dissimilating enzymes alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase were studied in chemostat culture, as a function of the dilution rate. Both organisms utilized and assimilated glucose and methanol simultaneously up to dilution rates of 0.30 h-1 (H. polymorpha) and 0.26h-1, respectively (Kloeckera sp. 2201) which significantly exceeded max found for the two yeasts with methanol as the only source of carbon. At higher dilution rates methanol utilisation ceased and only glucose was assimilated. Over the whole range of mixed-substrate growth both carbon sources were assimilated with the same efficiency as during growth with glucose or methanol alone.In cultures of H. polymorpha, however, the growth yield for glucose was lowered by the unmetabolized methanol at high dilution rates. During growth on both carbon sources the repression of the synthesis of all catabolic methanol enzymes which is normally caused by glucose was overcome by the inductive effect of the simultaneously fed methanol. In both organisms the synthesis of alcohol oxidase was found to be regulated differently as compared to catalase, formaldehyde and formate dehydrogenase. Whereas increasing repression of the synthesis of alcohol oxidase was found with increasing dilution rates as indicated by gradually decreasing specific activities of this enzyme in cell-free extracts, the specific activities of this enzyme in cell-free extracts, the specific activities of catalase and the dehydrogenases increased with increasing growth rates until repression started. The results indicate similar patterns of the regulation of the synthesis of methanol dissimilating enzymes in different methylotrophic yeasts.Abbreviations and Terms C1 Methanol - C6 glucose; D dilution rate (h-1) - D c critical dilution rate (h-1) - q s specific, rate of substrate consumption (g substrate [g cell dry weight]-1 h-1) - q CO2 and q O2 are the specific rates of carbon dioxide release and oxygen consumption (mmol [g cell dry weight]-1 h-1) - RQ respiration quotient (q CO2 q O2 1 ) - s 0(C1) and s 0(C6) are the concentrations of methanol and glucose in the inflowing medium (g l-1) - s residual substrate concentration in the culture liquid (g l-1) - Sp. A. enzyme specific activity - x cell dry weight concentration (gl-1) - Y X/C6 growth yield on glucose (g cell dry weight [g substrate]-1  相似文献   

5.
A methanol-utilizing yeast Kloeckera sp. No. 2201, when grown with methanol as a sole carbon and energy source, accumulated about three times much flavin as those grown with glucose, ethanol, or glycerol. A high proportion of the total flavin was FAD in methanol-grown cells. A remarkable derepression of FAD pyrophosphorylase accompanied by an inducible formation of an FAD-dependent alcohol oxidase which catalyzes oxidation of methanol, the first step in the oxidation sequence, was observed during growth of the yeast on methanol. Significant elevations of riboflavin synthetase and flavokinase were also found. Formate, as well as methanol, effectively induced both FAD pyrophosphorylase and methanol-oxidizing enzymes (alcohol oxidase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, and catalase). Observations with other methanol-utilizing yeasts also gave essentially same results. These results led to the conclusion that cellular flavin level might be under control with level of flavoprotein physiologically required.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The inactivation of the peroxisomal enzyme alcohol oxidase and the cytoplasmic enzymes fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, malate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was found to occur after addition of glucose to methanol-grown cells of the yeastHansenula polymorpha. The concentration of cyclic AMP increased nearly twofold within 3 min under the same conditions. In crude extracts ofH. polymorpha about 20 proteins are phosphorylated by cyclic AMP dependent protein kinases, among them also fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase. No phosphorylation of the alcohol oxidase protein could be detected. From this fact, it was concluded that the inactivation of the peroxisomal alcohol oxidase is independent of cyclic AMP-dependent protein phosphorylation.  相似文献   

8.
The regulation of the synthesis of alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase was investigated in the methanol-utilizing yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The organism was found to synthesize immunologically identical alcohol oxidases during growth on glycerol and methanol. Growth on glycerol, however, was not dependent on the alcohol oxidase, as was shown with a mutant without alcohol oxidase protein. Similarly it was shown with a catalase activity negative mutant that high catalase activity during growth on glycerol was not a prerequisite for the utilization of this substrate, though absolutely required for growth on methanol.Experiments were conducted with mixed substrates to study the influence of methanol on alcohol oxidase synthesis. In batch cultures, growth on ribose plus methanol resulted in an enhanced rate of alcohol oxidase synthesis as compared to ribose alone. In continuous cultures, (D=0.1 h-1) addition of methanol to glycerol-, glucose-, or sorbose-limited cultures gave rise to increased alcohol oxidase activity of up to 20 U/mg, which is about by 2 times higher than the specific activity used for growth on methanol alone. The increase in specific activity of the dissimilatory enzymes on the mixed substrates is partly due to methanol per se, as was shown by a mutant unable to dissimilate or assimilate methanol.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The regulation of the synthesis of alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase, and formate dehydrogenase was investigated in the methanol-utilizing yeastHansenula polymorpha during growth on different carbon and energy sources. When cells were grown on glucose, the enzymes of the dissimilatory methanol metabolism were not detected during the exponential phase of growth, but were formed in the late stationary phase without addition of methanol. Moreover, the enzymes were synthesized during growth on sorbitol, glycerol, ribose, and xylose. It was shown that the carbon catabolite insensitivity of the synthesis of methanol-specific enzymes is not limited to substrates that are slowly metabolized.  相似文献   

10.
Catalase functioned exclusively to degrade hydrogen peroxide in a reaction mixture containing methanol and hydrogen peroxide, while, when the enzyme was coupled with glucose oxidase, successful conversion of methanol to formaldehyde occurred at the optimized ratio of glucose oxidase to catalase: activity, 1.0 × 10 ?3; number of molecules, 1.3; protein content, 1. These values in the coupled system were very similar to the ratio of alcohol oxidase to catalase in peroxisomes, one of the subcellular organelles from a methanol-assimilating yeast, Kloeckera sp. 2201, in which these enzymes were coupled to metabolize methanol efficiently. The presence of the optimum ratio in the coupled system in vitro was confirmed by the kinetic analysis of the expression of the peroxidatic activity of catalase coupled with glucose oxidase. Construction of the immobilized system of the coupled enzymes at the optimum ratio demonstrated that the oxidation of methanol through the peroxidatic function of catalase could be continuously and stably operated, the results indicating the usefulness of the system as a model of yeast peroxisomes. Thus, the coupled reaction with glucose oxidase brought out the latent function of catalase, which could not be expected in the system including only catalase.  相似文献   

11.
Activities of the enzymes of formaldehyde (FA) catabolism in recombinant strains of the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha overproducing NAD+- and glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FADH) were studied under different cultivation conditions and at elevated FA content. Southern dot-blot analysis confirmed the presence of six to eight copies of the target FLD1 gene in stable recombinant clones of H. polymorpha. Under certain cultivation conditions, the transformants resistant to elevated FA concentrations were shown to produce FADH and other bioanalytically important enzymes: formate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, alcohol oxidase, and formaldehyde reductase. The optimal cultivation conditions for recombinants were determined, resulting in maximum synthesis of FADH: methanol as a carbon source, methylamine as a nitrogen source, FA as an inducer, temperature of 37°C, and cells in the early exponential phase of growth.  相似文献   

12.
Formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase were purified 45- and 16-fold, respectively, from Hansenula polymorpha grown on methanol. Formaldehyde dehydrogenase was strictly dependent on NAD and glutathione for activity. The K mvalues of the enzyme were found to be 0.18 mM for glutathione, 0.21 mM for formaldehyde and 0.15 mM for NAD. The enzyme catalyzed the glutathine-dependent oxidation of formaldehyde to S-formylglutathione. The reaction was shown to be reversible: at pH 8.0 a K mof 1 mM for S-formylglutathione was estimated for the reduction of the thiol ester with NADH. The enzyme did not catalyze the reduction of formate with NADH. The NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase of H. polymorpha showed a low affinity for formate (K mof 40 mM) but a relatively high affinity for S-formylglutathione (K mof 1.1 mM). The K mvalues of formate dehydrogenase in cell-free extracts of methanol-grown Candida boidinii and Pichia pinus for S-formylglutathione were also an order of magnitude lower than those for formate. It is concluded that S-formylglutathione rather than free formate is an intermediate in the oxidation of methanol by yeasts.  相似文献   

13.
Cells of Hansenula polymorpha growing exponentially on glucose generally contained a single peroxisome of small dimension, irregular in shape and located in close proximity to the cell wall. Crystalline inclusions in the peroxisomal matrix were not observed. Associations of the organelles with one or more strands of endoplasmic reticulum were evident. In stationary phase cells the size of the peroxisomes had increased considerably. They were more cubical in form and showed a partly or completely crystalline matrix.After the transfer of cells growing exponentially on glucose into media containing methanol, large peroxisomes with a partly crystalline matrix developed in the cells within 6 h. These organelles originated from the small peroxisomes in the glucose-grown cells. De novo synthesis of peroxisomes was not observed. Prolonged cultivation in the presence of methanol resulted in a gradual increase in the number of peroxisomes by means of separation of small peroxisomes from mature organelles. During growth of peroxisomes associations with the endoplasmic reticulum remained evident.The increase in volume density of peroxisomes in stationary phase cells grown on glucose and in methanol-grown cells was accompanied by the synthesis of the peroxisomal enzymes alcohol oxidase and catalase. Cytochemical staining techniques revealed that alcohol oxidase activity was only detected when the peroxisomes contained a crystalloid inclusion. Since in peroxisomes of an alcohol oxidase-negative mutant of Hansenula polymorpha crystalline inclusions were never detected, it is concluded that the development of crystalloids inside peroxisomes is due to the accumulation of alcohol oxidase in these organelles.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Yeast microbodies isolated from methanol-grown cells of Kloeckera sp. No. 2201 were immobilized by two types of entrapping techniques: photocrosslinking of liquid oligomers of suitable photosensitive resins and crosslinking of albumin molecules with glutaraldehyde. The apparent activities of catalase, alcohol oxidase, and D-amino acid oxidase in the gel-entrapped microbodies were 40–50, 70–80, and ca. 50% respectively as compared with those in the free microbodies. Alcohol oxidase in the immobilized microbodies, similarly to that in free ones, oxidized methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, n-butanol, n-amyl alcohol, and benzyl alcohol. Some properties of catalase and alcohol oxidase in the microbodies immobilized by the above-mentioned techniques were studied in comparison with those of the enzymes in the free microbodies.  相似文献   

15.
The localization of methanol oxidase activity in cells of methanol-limited chemostat cultures of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha has been studied with different cytochemical staining techniques. The methods were based on enzymatic or chemical trapping of the hydrogen peroxide produced by the enzyme during aerobic incubations of whole cells in methanol-containing media. The results showed that methanol-dependent hydrogen peroxide production in either fixed or unfixed cells exclusively occurred in peroxisomes, which characteristically develop during growth of this yeast on methanol. Apart from methanol oxidase and catalase, the typical peroxisomal enzymes d-aminoacid oxidase and l--hydroxyacid oxidase were also found to be located in the peroxisomes. Urate oxidase was not detected in these organelles. Phase-contrast microscopy of living cells revealed the occurrence of peroxisomes which were cubic of form. This unusual shape was also observed in thin sections examined by electron microscopy. The contents of the peroxisomes showed, after various fixation procedures, a completely crystalline or striated substructure. It is suggested that this substructure might represent the in vivo organization structure of the peroxisomal enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
The enzymology of methanol utilization in thermotolerant methylotrophic Bacillus strains was investigated. In all strains an immunologically related NAD-dependent methanol dehydrogenase was involved in the initial oxidation of methanol. In cells of Bacillus sp. C1 grown under methanol-limiting conditions this enzyme constituted a high percentage of total soluble protein. The methanol dehydrogenase from this organism was purified to homogeneity and characterized. In cell-free extracts the enzyme displayed biphasic kinetics towards methanol, with apparent K m values of 3.8 and 166 mM. Carbon assimilation was by way of the fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase cleavage and transketolase/transaldolase rearrangement variant of the RuMP cycle of formaldehyde fixation. The key enzymes of the RuMP cycle, hexulose-6-phosphate synthase (HPS) and hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase (HPI), were present at very high levels of activity. Failure of whole cells to oxidize formate, and the absence of formaldehyde-and formate dehydrogenases indicated the operation of a non-linear oxidation sequence for formaldehyde via HPS. A comparison of the levels of methanol dehydrogenase and HPS in cells of Bacillus sp. C1 grown on methanol and glucose suggested that the synthesis of these enzymes is not under coordinate control.Abbreviations RuMP ribulose monophosphate - HPS hexulose-6-phosphate synthase - HPI hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase - MDH methanol dehydrogenase - ADH acohol dehydrogenase - PQQ pyrroloquinoline, quinone - DTT dithiothreitol - NBT nitrobluetetrazolium - PMS phenazine methosulphate - DCPIP dichlorophenol indophenol  相似文献   

17.
We have studied the biogenesis and enzymic composition of microbodies in different yeasts during adaptation of cells to a new growth environment. After a shift of cells of Candida boidinii and Hansenula polymorpha from glucose to methanol/methylamine-containing media, newly synthesized alcohol oxidase and amine oxidase are imported in one and the same organelle together with catalase; as a consequence the cells contain one class of morphologically and enzymatically identical microbodies. Similar results were obtained when Candida utilis cells were transferred from glucose to ethanol/ethylamine-containing media upon which all cells formed microbodies containing amine oxidase and catalase.However, when methanol-limited cells of H. polymorpha were transferred from media containing ammonium sulphate to those with methylamine as the nitrogen source, newly synthesized amine oxidase was incorporated only in part of the microbodies present in these cells. This uptake was confined to the few smaller organelles generally present at the perimeter of the cells, which were considered not fully developed (immature) as judged by their size. Essentially similar results were obtained when stationary phase cells of C. boidinii or C. utilis — grown on methanol and ethanol plus ammonium sulphate, respectively — were shifted to media containing (m)ethylamine as the nitrogen source. These results indicate that mature microbodies may exist in yeasts which no longer are involved in the uptake of matrix proteins. Therefore, these yeasts may display heterogeneities in their microbody population.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Many of the potential technical applications of alcohol oxidase (MOX; EC 1.1.3.13) are limited by the presence of high activities of catalase in the enzyme preparations. In order to circumvent laborious and costly purification or inactivation procedures, the induction of MOX in a catalase-negative mutant of Hansenula polymorpha has been studied. Emphasis was laid on the induction of activities of MOX and the dissimilatory enzymes in continuous cultures grown on various mixtures of formate/glucose and formaldehyde/glucose. In continuous cultures of the catalase-negative mutant grown on these mixtures, MOX can be induced efficiently. To obtain a stable and productive process, the ratio of the substrates is of critical importance. The optimal ratios of the mixtures for the catalase-negative strain for formate/glucose and formaldehyde/glucose were 3:1 and 1–2:1, respectively. Under identical cultivation conditions the wild-type strain showed similar induction patterns for MOX and the dissimilatory enzymes formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FaDH) and formate dehydrogenase (FoDH). The MOX levels in the catalase-negative strain were approx. 50% of those in the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

19.
Profuse appearance of microbodies was observed in the cells of methanol-utilizing yeasts in connection with the enhanced catalase activity. These microbodies were isolated successfully by means of sucrose gradient centrifugation from the methanol-grown cells of Kloeckera sp. no. 2201. Localization of a flavin-dependent alcohol oxidase as well as characteristic microbody enzymes (catalase and D-amino acid oxidase) were ascertained in the isolated microbodies, whereas formaldehyde and formate dehydrogenases were detected in the cytoplasmic region. Localization of catalase in the isolated microbody was also demonstrated by the cytochemical technique with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine.  相似文献   

20.
Enzyme activities involved in the initial step of glycerol metabolism were determined in cells of methylotrophic yeasts grown on glycerol, methanol or glucose. In Candida boidinii (Kloeckera sp.) No. 2201, the activities of glycerol kinase and dihydroxyacetone kinase were detected in cells grown on glycerol and methanol, respectively. The activity of NAD+-linked glycerol dehydrogenase of Hansenula polymorpha dl-1 was induced by glycerol and methanol, while that of Hansenula ofunaensis was induced by glycerol. The enzymes of both strains were subject to catabolite repression by glucose.

The yeasts tested were divided into three groups as to the glycerol dissimilation patterns. Strains of the genera Candida, Saccharomyces, Pichia and Torulopsis had the phosphorylative pathway, in which glycerol is first phosphorylated. H. ofunaensis had the oxidative pathway, in which glycerol is first oxidized. H. polymorpha dl-1 had both the phosphorylative and oxidative pathways.  相似文献   

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