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1.
Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-1299 dextrans are separated into two kinds: fraction L, which is precipitated by an ethanol concentration of 38%, and fraction S, which is precipitated at an ethanol concentration of 40%. Fraction S dextran contained 35% of -1,2 branch linkages, and fraction L contained 27% -1,2 branch linkage with 1% -1,3 branch linkages. We have isolated mutants constitutive for dextransucrase from L. mesenteroides NRRL B-1299 using ethyl methane sulfonate. The mutants produced extracellular as well as cell-associated dextransucrases on glucose media with higher activities (2.5–4.5 times) than what the parental strain produced on sucrose. Based on Penicillium endo-dextranase hydrolysis, mutant B-1299C dextransucrases produced slightly different dextrans when they were elaborated on a glucose medium and on a sucrose medium. Mutant B-1299CA dextransucrase elaborated on a glucose medium and on a sucrose medium synthesized the same dextran, although the dextran was different from those of other mutants and the parental strain. Mutant B-1299CB dextransucrase, elaborated on a glucose medium and on a sucrose medium, formed different dextrans. Differences in water solubility, susceptibility to endo-dextranase hydrolysis, and the physical appearance of the ethanol precipitated dextrans elaborated by different mutants grown on glucose media and sucrose media were found. All mutant dextransucrases elaborated on a glucose medium bound to Sephadex G-200. After activity staining of nondenaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate—polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis activity bands, 184 and 240 Kd for each enzyme preparation, although each dextransucrase formed different dextran(s).  相似文献   

2.
The industrial Leuconostoc strain B/110-1-2 producing dextran and dextran derivatives was taxonomically identified by 16S rRNA as L. citreum. Its dextransucrase enzymes were characterized according to their cellular location and reaction specificity. In the presence of sucrose, the strain B/110-1-2 produced two cell-associated dextransucrases (31.54% of the total glucosyltransferase activity) with molecular weights of 160 and 240 kDa and a soluble dextransucrase (68.46%) at 160–180 kDa. Two open reading frames (ORF) coding for L. citreum strain B/110-1-2 dextransucrases were identified. One of them shared a 52% identity with the alternansucrase ASR of L. citreum NRRL B-1355 and with a putative annotated alternansucrase sequence found in the genome of L. citreum KM20. The structural analysis (HPAEC-PAD, HPSEC, and 13C-NMR) of the polymer and oligodextrans produced by the B/110-1-2 dextransucrases suggest this novel glucansucrase has specificity similar to a dextransucrase but not to an alternansucrase, producing a soluble linear dextran with glucose molecules linked mainly in α-1,6 and α-1,3 with α-1,4 branches. These results enhance the understanding of this industrially significant strain and will aid in distinguishing between physiologically similar Leuconostoc spp. strains.  相似文献   

3.
The dextransucrase (EC 2.4.1.5) activity from cell-free culture supernatants of Streptococcus mutans strain 6715 has been purified approximately 1,500-fold by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and isoelectric focusing. The enzyme was eluted as a single peak of activity from hydroxylapatite, and isoelectric focusing of the resulting preparation gave a single band of dextransucrase activity which focused at a pH of 4.0. The final enzyme preparation contained two distinct, enzymatically active proteins as judged by assay in situ after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. One of the proteins represented 90% of the total dextransucrase activity and 53% of the total protein. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated by gel filtration to be 94,000. The temperature optimum of the enzyme was broad (34 to 42 C) and its pH range was rather narrow, with optimal activity at pH 5.5. The K(m) for sucrose was 3 mM, and fructose competitively inhibited the enzyme reaction with a K(i) of 27 mM.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of the native dextran produced by Streptococcus sanguis ATCC 10558 was analyzed by g.l.c.-m.s. of the methylated alditol acetates derived from the polymer. The results indicate that the polymer contains D-glucosyl residues substituted at C-6 or C-3, or both, as well as unsubstituted D-glucosyl residues. These data aially purified dextransucrase on sucrose. The proportion of D-glucosyl residues substituted at C-3 is diminished in this case. It is concluded that several enzymes are involved in the dextran synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Streptococcus mutans Dextransucrase: Requirement for Primer Dextran   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26       下载免费PDF全文
Dextran stimulation (priming) of the dextransucrase (EC 2.4.1.5) from Streptococcus mutans strain 6715 was studied. The dextransucrase activity in supernatant fluids from glucose-grown cultures was shown to be partially primer dependent. During extended storage at 4 C the enzyme retained its activity. However, the ability to make dextran became increasingly primer dependent. Hydroxylapatite-chromatographed enzyme preparations were completely dependent upon added dextran for rapid synthesis of methanol-insoluble glucan from sucrose. Half-maximal stimulation of new dextran synthesis occurred with dextran at a concentration of 2 to 3 muM and with a molecular weight of about 2,600. Neither glycogen, amylose, inulin, nor isomaltose functioned as primer. Studies with the dextransucrase activities detectable by in situ assay in polyacrylamide gels subjected to electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions revealed that the major activity was detectable in the presence of sucrose alone and was stimulated by addition of primer dextran. The minor activity was only detected when primer dextran was present. Homogeneous preparations of both enzymes contained 30 to 40% carbohydrate.  相似文献   

6.
Enzymes participating in glucan synthesis by Streptococcus mutans E49 were separated into two fractions with distinctly different activities by chromatography on DEAE Bio-Gel A. The insoluble glucan (IG) was revealed to be formed by the coupling reaction of these two enzymes, dextransucrase (SGE), which synthesizes soluble glucan from sucrose, and a glucan insolubilizing enzyme (IGE), which forms IG from soluble glucan.

Ribocitrin was found to inhibit IG synthesis by inhibiting SGE.  相似文献   

7.
The extracellular glycosyltransferases from Streptococcus mutans FA1 were purified by using the following procedures: ammonium sulfate precipitation, poly-(acrylamide) gel filtration, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and agarose-gel filtration. The dextransucrase and levansucrase activities were purified 350- and 500-fold, repsectively, and the ratio of the two activities remained almost constant throughout the purification. Both enzymes have a pH optimum of 6.0, a Km for sucrose of 55mM, and isoelectric points of 3.7 and 4.6. The enzymes are inactivated by repeated freezing and thawing, but retain partial activity even after heating at 100 degrees. The enzyme preparation contains a carbohydrate moiety which does not appear to be either bound levan or dextran.  相似文献   

8.
When grown in glucose or fructose medium in the absence of sucrose, Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1299 produces two distinct extracellular dextransucrases named glucose glucosyltransferase (GGT) and fructose glucosyltransferase (FGT). The production level of GGT and FGT is 10 to 20 times lower than that of the extracellular dextransucrase sucrose glucosyltransferase (SGT) produced on sucrose medium (traditional culture conditions). GGT and FGT were concentrated by ultrafiltration before sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. Their molecular masses were 183 and 186 kDa, respectively, differing from the 195 kDa of SGT. The structural analysis of the dextran produced from sucrose and of the oligosaccharides synthesized by acceptor reaction in the presence of maltose showed that GGT and FGT are two different enzymes not previously described for this strain. The polymer synthesized by GGT contains 30% alpha(1-->2) linkages, while FGT catalyzes the synthesis of a linear dextran only composed of alpha(1-->6) linkages.  相似文献   

9.
Streptococcus mutans Ingbritt (serotype c) was found to secrete basic glucosyltransferase (sucrose: 1,6-alpha-D-glucan 3-alpha and 6-alpha-glucosyltransferase). The enzyme preparation obtained by ethanol fractionation, DEAE Bio-Gel A chromatography, chromatofocusing and preparative isoelectric focusing was composed of three isozymes with slightly different isoelectric points (pI 8.1-8.4). The molecular weight was estimated to be 151000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific activity of the enzyme was 9.8 IU per mg of protein and the optimum pH was 6.5. The enzyme was activated 2.4-fold by commercial dextran T10, and had Km values of 7.1 micro M for the dextran and 4.3 mM for sucrose. Glucan was de novo synthesized from sucrose by the enzyme and found to be 1,6-alpha-D-glucan with 17.7% of 1,3,6-branching structure by a gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy.  相似文献   

10.
Initial rate kinetics of dextran synthesis by dextransucrase (sucrose:1,6-alpha-D-glucan-6-alpha-D-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.5) from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-512F showed that below 1 mM, Ca2+ activated the enzyme by increasing Vmax and decreasing the Km for sucrose. Above 1 mM, Ca2+ was a weak competitive inhibitor (Ki = 59 mM). Although it was an activator at low concentration, Ca2+ was not required for dextran synthesis, either of main chain or branch linkages. Neither was it required for sucrose hydrolysis, acceptor reactions, or enzyme renaturation after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A model for dextran synthesis is proposed in which dextransucrase has two Ca2+ sites, one activating and one inhibitory. Ca2+ at the inhibitory site prevents the binding of sucrose.  相似文献   

11.
When grown in glucose or fructose medium in the absence of sucrose, Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1299 produces two distinct extracellular dextransucrases named glucose glucosyltransferase (GGT) and fructose glucosyltransferase (FGT). The production level of GGT and FGT is 10 to 20 times lower than that of the extracellular dextransucrase sucrose glucosyltransferase (SGT) produced on sucrose medium (traditional culture conditions). GGT and FGT were concentrated by ultrafiltration before sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. Their molecular masses were 183 and 186 kDa, respectively, differing from the 195 kDa of SGT. The structural analysis of the dextran produced from sucrose and of the oligosaccharides synthesized by acceptor reaction in the presence of maltose showed that GGT and FGT are two different enzymes not previously described for this strain. The polymer synthesized by GGT contains 30% α(1→2) linkages, while FGT catalyzes the synthesis of a linear dextran only composed of α(1→6) linkages.  相似文献   

12.
Dextransucrases from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1416 and B-1375 strains were purified to electrophoretically homogeneous preparations. After successive column chromatographies, the enzyme fractions were treated with endodextranase, then subjected to preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified dextransucrase from each strain had a dimeric structure of molecular weight 130,000~133,000. Alkaline treatment (pH 10.5) dissociated these dimer forms into the respective monomer forms having molecular weight of 64,000~68,000. The two enzymes were closely similar to each other in optimum conditions and thermal and pH stabilities. The purified B-1416 enzyme was activated 4.35-fold by the addition of exogenous dextran (0.5%), while the B-1375 enzyme was activated 2.76-fold. In the absence of exogenous dextran, both enzymes gave 5~10 min lag periods for reaction, which were abolished by the clinical dextran.  相似文献   

13.
Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMC, a constitutive mutant for dextransucrase, was grown on glucose, fructose, or sucrose. The amount of cell-associated dextransucrase was about the same for the three sugars at different concentrations (0.6% and 3%). Enzyme produced in glucose medium was adsorbed on Sephadex G-100 and G-200, but much less enzyme was adsorbed when it was produced in sucrose medium. Sephadex adsorption decreased when the glucose-produced enzyme was preincubated with dextrans of molecular size greater than 10 kDa. The release of dextransucrase activity from Sephadex by buffer (20 mM acetate, pH 5.2) was the highest at 28°–30°C. The addition of dextran to the enzyme stimulated dextran synthesis but had very little effect on the temperature or pH stability. Dextransucrase purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydroxyapatite chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 adsorption did not contain any carbohydrate, and it synthesized dextran, showing that primers are not necessary to initiate dextran synthesis. The purified enzyme had a molecular size of 184 kDa on SDS-PAGE. On standing at 4°C for 30 days, the native enzyme was dissociated into three inactive proteins of 65, 62, and 57 kDa. However, two protein bands of 63 and 59 kDa were obtained on SDS-PAGE after heat denaturation of the 184-kDa active enzyme at 100°C. The amount of 63-kDa protein was about twice that of 59-kDa protein. The native enzyme is believed to be a trimer of two 63-kDa and one 59-kDa monomers.  相似文献   

14.
Water-insoluble, cell-free dextran biosynthesis from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-523 has been examined. Cell-bound dextransucrase is used to produce cell-free dextran in a sucrose-rich acetate buffer medium. A comparison between the soluble and insoluble dextrans is made for various sucrose concentrations, and 15% sucrose gave the highest amount of cell-free dextran for a given time. L. mesenteroides B-523 produces more insoluble dextran than soluble dextran. The near cell-free synthesis was validated in a batch reactor, by monitoring the cell growth which is a small (10(6)-10(7) CFU/mL) and constant value throughout the synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Weissella confusa and Weissella cibaria isolated from wheat sourdoughs produce, from sucrose, linear dextrans due to a single soluble dextransucrase. In this study, the first complete gene sequence encoding dextransucrase from a W. confusa strain (LBAE C39-2) along with the one from a W. cibaria strain (LBAE K39) were reported. Corresponding gene cloning was achieved using specific primers designed on the basis of the draft genome sequence of these species. Deduced amino acid sequence of W. confusa and W. cibaria dextransucrase revealed common structural features of the glycoside hydrolase family 70. Notably, the regions located in the vicinity of the catalytic triad (D, E, D) are highly conserved. However, comparison analysis also revealed that Weissella dextransucrases form a distinct phylogenetic group within glucansucrases of other lactic acid bacteria. We then cloned the W. confusa C39-2 dextransucrase gene and successfully expressed the mature corresponding enzyme in Escherichia coli. The purified recombinant enzyme rDSRC39-2 catalyzed dextran synthesis from sucrose with a K m of 8.6 mM and a V max of 20 μmol/mg/min. According to 1H and 13C NMR analysis, the polymer is a linear class 1 dextran with 97.2 % α-(1→6) linkages and 2.8 % α-(1→3) branch linkages, similar to the one produced by W. confusa C39-2 strain. The enzyme exhibited optimum catalytic activity for temperatures ranging from 35 to 40 °C and a pH of 5.4 in 20 mM sodium acetate buffer. This novel dextransucrase is responsible for production of dextran with predominant α-(1→6) linkages that could find applications as food hydrocolloids.  相似文献   

17.
Streptococcus mutans Ingbritt (serotype c) was found to secrete basic glucosyltranserase (sucrose: 1,6-α-D-glucan 3-α- and 6-α- glucosyltransferase). The enzyme preparation obtained by ethanol fractionation, DEAE Bio-Gel A chromatography, chromatofocusing and preparative isoelectric focusing was composed of three isozymes with slightly different isoelectric points (pI 8.1–8.4). The molecular weight was estimated to be 151 000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific activity of the enzyme was 9.8 IU per mg of protein and the optimum pH was 6.5. The enzyme was activated 2.4-fold by commercial dextran T10, and had Km values of 7.1 μM for the dextran and 4.3 mM for sucrose. Glucan was de novo synthesized from sucrose by the enzyme and found to be 1,6- α-D-glucan with 17.7% of 1,3,6-branching structure by a gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy.  相似文献   

18.
Wheat bran offers health benefits as a baking ingredient, but is detrimental to bread textural quality. Dextran production by microbial fermentation improves sourdough bread volume and freshness, but extensive acid production during fermentation may negate this effect. Enzymatic production of dextran in wheat bran was tested to determine if dextran-containing bran could be used in baking without disrupting bread texture. The Weissella confusa VTT E-90392 dextransucrase gene was sequenced and His-tagged dextransucrase Wc392-rDSR was produced in Lactococcus lactis. Purified enzyme was characterized using 14C-sucrose radioisotope and reducing value-based assays, the former yielding K m and V max values of 14.7 mM and 8.2 μmol/(mg∙min), respectively, at the pH optimum of 5.4. The structure and size of in vitro dextran product was similar to dextran produced in vivo. Dextran (8.1% dry weight) was produced in wheat bran in 6 h using Wc392-rDSR. Bran with and without dextran was used in wheat baking at 20% supplementation level. Dextran presence improved bread softness and neutralized bran-induced volume loss, clearly demonstrating the potential of using dextransucrases in bran bioprocessing for use in baking.  相似文献   

19.
In a model experiment, glucoamylase was shown to inhibit α-D-glucan synthesis as catalyzed by potato phosphorylase. Both glucoamylase and endodextranase inhibited dextran synthesis with dextransucrases of Leuconostoc mesenteroides. The inhibition could be ascribed to competition between glucoamylase and dextransucrase for the glucosyl groups at the non-reducing end of dextran. The inhibition caused by endodextranase may result from rapid and random hydrolysis of acceptor dextrans. Moreover, significantly low units of glucoamylase, as compared with endodextranase, effectively inhibited dextran synthesis. These results thus present evidence that bio-synthesis of dextran occurs by the addition of glucosyl groups at the non-reducing end of the growing dextran. The measurement of initial velocity suggested that the ping-pong Bi-Bi mechanism proposed for the levansucrase of Bacillus subtilis is also applicable to dextransucrase.  相似文献   

20.
Reactions of dextransucrase and sucrose in the presence of sugars (acceptors) of low molecular weight have been observed to give a dextran of low molecular weight and a series of oligosaccharides. The acceptor reaction of dextransucrase was examined in the absence and presence of sucrose by using d-[14C]glucose, d-[14C]fructose, and 14C-reducing-end labeled maltose as acceptors. A purified dextransucrase was pre-incubated with sucrose, and the resulting d-fructose and unreacted sucrose were removed from the enzyme by chromatography on columns of Bio-Gel P-6. The enzyme, which migrated at the void volume, was collected and referred to as “charged enzyme”. The charged enzyme was incubated with 14C-acceptor in the absence of sucrose. Each of the three acceptors gave two fractions of labeled products, a high molecular weight product, identified as dextran, and a product of low molecular weight that was an oligosaccharide. It was found that all three of the acceptors were incorporated into the products at the reducing end. Similar results were obtained when the reactions were performed in the presence of sucrose, but higher yields of labeled products were obtained and a series of homologous oligosaccharides was produced when d-glucose or maltose was the acceptor. We propose that the acceptor reaction proceeds by nucleophilic displacement of glucosyl and dextranosyl groups from a covalent enzyme-complex by a specific, acceptor hydroxyl group, and that this reaction effects a glycosidic linkage between the d-glucosyl and dextranosyl groups and the acceptor. We conclude that the acceptor reactions serve to terminate polymerization of dextran by displacing the growing dextran chain from the active site of the enzyme; the acceptors, thus, do not initiate dextran polymerization by acting as primers.  相似文献   

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