首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The transfer of the glucosyl moiety from uridine diphosphate glucose in the presence of Acetobacter xylinum cell-free extracts led to the formation of a mixture of alkali-soluble and -insoluble cellodextrins. Typical cellulose fibrils could not be detected by electron microscopy in this product. Immediately after release into the medium, cellulose formed by whole cells is in a "prefibrous" form which passes through Millipore filters of 0.45 and 0.8 µ pore diameter. Non-filtrable fibrils arise from this material probably by a process of crystallization involving no extracellular enzymes. Fibrils formed in shaken cell suspensions intertwine and form aggregates visible to the naked eye. In quiet suspensions pellicles are formed which float on the surface. Soluble Na-carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) is incorporated into cellulose fibrils formed in its presence, probably by a process of co-crystallization. Aggregation of fibrils containing CMC is delayed because of electrostatic repulsion between carboxylic groups. The aggregation time depends on the amount of CMC incorporated, its degree of substitution, the pH of the medium, and the ionic strength. The amount of CMC incorporated depends on the relative concentration CMC/cellulose and on the similarity of the CMC and the cellulose molecules i.e. in molecular weight and the number of carboxyl substitutions. Cellulose pellicles formed in the presence of CMC by unshaken cell suspensions consist of crossed, superimposed layers of parallel oriented cellulose fibrils. The same phenomenon is observed when phosphomannan, but not levan, is substituted for CMC. The biogenesis of oriented cellulose fibrils is envisaged as a process comprising the following steps: polymerization of the monomeric precursor, diffusion of the molecule to crystallization sites, crystallization, and orientation. It is proposed that charged polysaccharides play a role similar to that of CMC in affecting the orientation of cellulose fibrils in the plant cell wall.  相似文献   

2.
The cellulose-producing bacterium Acetobacter xylinum has been considered a strict aerobe, and it has been suggested that the function of cellulose is to hold cells in an aerobic environment. In this study, we showed that A. xylinum is capable of growing microaerophilically. Cellulose pellicles provided significant protection to A. xylinum cells from the killing effects of UV light. In experiments measuring colonization by A. xylinum, molds, and other bacteria on pieces of apple, cellulose pellicles enhanced colonization of A. xylinum on the substrate and provided protection from competitors which use the same substrate as a source of nutrients. Cellulose pellicles produced by A. xylinum may have multiple functions in the growth and survival of the organism in nature.  相似文献   

3.
The Gram-negative bacterium Acetobacter xylinum assembles a cellulse ribbon composed of a number of microfibrils in the longitudinal axis of its envelope. The zone of ribbon assembly was investigated by freeze-etch electron microscopy. Freeze-etching revealed, beneath the cellulose ribbons, a linear array of pores on the lipopolysaccharide membrane. These pores have a rim diameter of 120--150 A and a central hole or deepening of approximately 35 A. The axes of pore arrays closely coincide with linear arrays of 100 A particles on the E- and P-faces of the fractured lipopolysaccharide membranes. Pores and particles in the lipopolysaccharide membrane are probably congruent. The pores are hypothesized to be the export sites (penetration sites) for cellulose.  相似文献   

4.
Cell envelope fractions, capable of cellulose synthesis from uridine diphosphate glucose, α-glucose-1-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate and glucose, have been isolated from Acetobacter xylinum suspensions and various enzymatic properties examined.Essential enzymes were found to be distributed throughout the cell envelope region, with both inner (cytoplasmic) and outer (cell wall) membranes contributing to cellulose synthesis. The central role of UDPG in cellulose synthesis was confirmed and the results indicated that the nucleoside diphosphate sugar functions solely in the cell envelope region of whole cells. A comparison of properties of the cell envelope system with those of different preparations used by other workers, suggested that the method of cell disruption may influence substrate specificity.  相似文献   

5.
The cellulose component of native, minimally disturbed pellicles of Acetobacter sylinum has a three-dimensional, microfibrillar, interconnected, ‘brush-wood’ structure. This structure could not originate from a spinneret or extrusion mechanism of cellulose microfibril formation. It may be produced by a mechanism of spontaneous association and post factor crystallization of preformed, transient I → 4β glucans.  相似文献   

6.
Regulation of hexose phosphate metabolism in Acetobacter xylinum   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The metabolism of glucose and fructose was studied in resting succinate-grown cells of Acetobacter xylinum. From fructose only cellulose and CO(2) were formed by the cells, whereas from glucose, gluconate was formed much more rapidly than these two products. The molar ratio of sugar converted into cellulose to sugar converted into CO(2) was significantly greater than unity for both hexoses. The pattern of label retention in the cellulose formed by the cells from specifically (14)C-labelled glucose, fructose or gluconate corresponded to that of hexose phosphate in a pentose cycle. On the other hand, the isotopic configuration of cellulose arising from variously singly (14)C-labelled pyruvate did not agree with the operation of a pentose cycle on gluconeogenic hexose phosphate. Readily oxidizable tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates such as acetate, pyruvate or succinate promoted cellulose synthesis from fructose and gluconate although retarding their oxidation to CO(2). The incorporation into cellulose of C-1 of fructose was greatly increased in the presence of these non-sugar substrates, although its oxidation to CO(2) was greatly diminished. It is suggested that the flow of hexose phosphate carbon towards cellulose or through the pentose cycle in A. xylinum is regulated by an energy-linked control mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Different methylated glucose derivatives and cellobiose were examined as the carbon sources for growth and cellulose formation by Acetobacter xylinum. HPLC studies were carried out to gain information about the kinetics of the utilization of the C sources used. The type and yields of the synthesized cellulose were described. Besides glucose, cellobiose was a substrate for the synthesis of this polysaccharide by the bacteria. Other methylated derivatives of glucose were not accepted for a comparable synthesis of this polymer. An estimation of citrate in an unmodified culture liquid (SH medium) showed utilization in a late phase of cultivation. The influence of this organic acid on the pH value, cellulose synthesis and growth is described. By the application of citric acid as a sole carbon source “gel-like” forms of cellulose were formed generally.  相似文献   

8.
醋酸杆菌发酵生产细菌纤维素的研究进展   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
简要介绍醋酸杆菌发酵生产纤维素研究进展,内容包括:产纤维素的微生物、醋酸菌纤维素的结构特点、生物合成途径、一般提取处理及分析测定方法、商业用途、工业化发酵生产醋酸菌纤维素过程中存在的主要问题及发展前景。  相似文献   

9.
Factors affecting hexose phosphorylation in Acetobacter xylinum   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Fructose was oxidized and converted to cellulose by cells of Acetobacter xylinum grown on fructose or succinate, but not by cells grown on glucose. In resting fructose-grown cells, glucose strongly suppressed fructose utilization. Extracts obtained from fructose- or succinate-grown cells catalyzed the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent formation of the 6-phosphate esters of glucose and fructose, whereas glucose-grown cell extracts phosphorylated glucose but not fructose. Fructokinase and glucokinase activities were separated and partially purified from cells grown on glucose, fructose, or succinate. Whereas fructokinase phosphorylated fructose only, glucokinase was active towards glucose and less active towards mannose and glucosamine. The optimal pH for the fructokinase was 7.4 and for the glucokinase was 8.5. The K(m) values for the fructokinase were: fructose, 6.2 mm; and ATP, 0.83 mm. The K(m) values for the glucokinase were: glucose, 0.22 mm; and ATP, 4.2 mm. Fructokinase was inhibited by glucose, glucosamine, mannose, and deoxyglucose in a manner competitive with respect to fructose, with K(i) values of 0.1, 0.14, 0.5, and 7.5 mm, respectively. Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and adenosine monophosphate (AMP) inhibited both kinases noncompetitively with respect to ATP. The K(i) values were: 1.8 mm (ADP) and 2.1 mm (AMP) for fructokinase, and 2.2 mm (ADP) and 9.6 mm (AMP) for glucokinase. Fructose metabolism in A. xylinum appears to be regulated by the synthesis and activity of fructokinase.  相似文献   

10.
About 14.5 kb of DNA fragments from Acetobacter xylinum ATCC23769 and ATCC53582 were cloned, and their nucleotide sequences were determined. The sequenced DNA regions contained endo-beta-1,4-glucanase, cellulose complementing protein, cellulose synthase subunit AB, C, D and beta-glucosidase genes. The results from a homology search of deduced amino acid sequences between A. xylinum ATCC23769 and ATCC53582 showed that they were highly similar. However, the amount of cellulose production by ATCC53582 was 5 times larger than that of ATCC23769 during a 7-day incubation. In A. xylinum ATCC53582, synthesis of cellulose continued after glucose was consumed, suggesting that a metabolite of glucose, or a component of the medium other than glucose, may be a substrate of cellulose. On the other hand, cell growth of ATCC23769 was twice that of ATCC53582. Glucose is the energy source in A. xylinum as well as the substrate of cellulose synthesis, and the metabolic pathway of glucose in both strains may be different. These results suggest that the synthesis of cellulose and the growth of bacterial cells are contradictory.  相似文献   

11.
Acetobacter xylinum 1FO 13693 was selected as the best cellulose-producing bacterium among 41 strains belonging to the genus Acetobacter and Agrobacterium. Cellulose was found to be produced at the liquid surface in static liquid cultivation. The rate of cellulose production depended proportionally on the surface-area of the culture medium and was unaffected by the depth and volume of the medium. The optimum pH for cellulose production was 4.0 to 6.0. Glucose, fructose and glycerol were preferred carbon sources for cellulose production. The yield of cellulose, relative to the glucose consumed, decreased with an increase in initial glucose concentration, and gluconic acid accumulated at a high initial glucose concentration. The decrease in cellulose yield could be due to some glucose being metabolized to gluconic acid. However, the accumulated gluconic acid did not affect cellulose production. The culture conditions of the bacterium for cellulose production were optimized. The maximum production rate of cellulose was 36 g/d·m2, with a yield of 100% for added glucose under the optimal conditions.  相似文献   

12.
J. Ross Colvin 《Planta》1980,149(2):97-107
The mechanism of formation of cellulose-like microfibrils by a non-soluble, particulate enzyme and uridine diphosphoglucose (UDPG) in a cell-free system from Acetobacter xylinum was studied by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The suspension of particles to which the enzyme is adsorbed is composed of whole, dense ovoids, 50–250 nm long when wet, of fragments of the ovoids, and amorphous substance. There is a typical unit membrane around each ovoid but initially there is no trace of fibrillar material in the suspension. When the suspension of particles is incubated with UDPG, linear wisps of fibrils are produced which associate rapidly to form longer and wider threads, especially in 0.01 M NaCl. There is no visible attachment of the wisps to the particles. After 20 min incubation, threads with the typical morphology of cellulose microfibrils are formed that later tend to become entangled in clumps. The microfibrils are insoluble in hot, aqueous, alkaline solutions and resistant to the action of trypsin, but may be degraded by glusulase. After treatment with 1 M NaOH at 100° C or with cold 18% NaOH they show an X-ray diffraction pattern which resembles that of Cellulose II from mercerized, authentic bacterial cellulose. Incorporation of radioactive glucose into the insoluble residue is enhanced by drying of the cellulose microfibrils before alkaline digestion and especially by the addition of a gross excess of carrier cellulose after incubation. In this system there is no evidence for participation of linear, axial, synthesizing sites on the cell wall of the bacterium or for ordered, organized granules in the assembly of the microfibrils. That is, cellulose-like microfibrils may be formed in a cell-free system without the action of any of the previously suggested cell organelles. In addition, these observations are consistent with a previously described notion of a transient, hydrated, nascent, bacterial cellulose microfibril. The possibility that cellulose microfibrils of green plants may be formed in the same way is considered.N.R.C.C. 18314  相似文献   

13.
Summary Acetobacter aceti cells were immobilized using entrapment in Ca-alginate gel and adsorption on preformed cellulose beads. The cell number within the supports showed no significant alterations on changing temperature or pH, whereas the acetic acid production was slightly increased by immobilization.  相似文献   

14.
An analysis has been made of the low molecular weight fraction present in the region of cellulose synthesis in Acetobacter xylinum suspensions.A number of nucleic acid bases, nucleosides and nucleotides, together with α-glucose 1-phosphate and UDPG, were detected in various extracts of washed cells supplied with glucose. Since glucose-6-P could be detected in extracts of ultrasonically disrupted cells, but not in extracts of whole cells, it was concluded that separate pools of hexose phosphate exist in A. xylinum. Preferential release of α-glucose-1-P, UDPG and nucleotides was observed during ethanol and EDTA treatment of bacteria. Electron microscopic examination of treated and untreated cells revealed that extensive modification of the cell wall region occured during such treatments. The results support the proposal that α-glucose-1-P, UDPG and nucleotide pools are localised in the cell envelope region, possibly in the periplasm, and that A. xylinum possesses a second permeability barrier outside the cytoplasmic membrane. Nucleic acid bases and nucleosides were observed to diffuse freely through the cell wall and accumulate in the medium, probably as the result of nucleic acid breakdown. The results imply that the effects of cell damage caused by the isolation of the bacteria from the surface pellicle of the culture medium, together with nutrient deprivation, should be considered in work using the non-proliferating system. A study of the variation in concentration with time of α-glucose-1-P and UDPG, during cellulose synthesis, indicated that both components mau play an immediate role in cellulose synthesis.Glycosylated lipid compounds were detected in both cell wall extracts and supernatant fluid, but it is not certain whether these compounds are constituents of the supernatant fluid in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Exocellular fibrils, consisting of true cellulose, were found to be produced by many bacteria. These bacteria have been selected out of a large number of strains isolated from activated sludge on the basis of their flocculent growth habit in liquid medium.The amount of cellulose, present in the bacterial flocs, varied from 1.0 to 4.0%. In addition to strains isolated from activated sludge, like Pseudomonas, Achromobacter, Alcaligenes and Aerobacter, also strains of the genera Rhizobium, Agrobacterium and Azotobacter were found to give flocculent growth due to the formation of cellulose fibrils.Bacterial flocculation in pure cultures of the strains examined was mainly caused by the production of exocellular fibrils. Apparently, the formation of cellulose fibrils seems to be a common property of Gram-negative, floc-forming bacteria, and may not be restricted to Acetobacter xylinum.  相似文献   

16.
The attachment of virulent strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens to plant cells is the first step in the bacterial induction of tumors. Binding of A. tumefaciens to carrot tissue culture cells occurred as a two-step process. The initial step was the attachment of the bacteria to the plant cell wall. Living plant cells were not required. Bacterial attachment to heat-killed or glutaraldehyde-fixed carrot cells proceeded with only slightly altered kinetics and unaltered bacterial strain specificity. After the bacteria bound to the carrot cell surface, scanning electron microscopy showed that fibrils developed, surrounded the bacteria, and anchored them to the plant cell surface. These fibrils were synthesized by the bacteria and not by the plant cell since they were also made after the attachment of A. tumefaciens to dead carrot cells and since under some conditions the bacteria synthesized fibrils in the absence of plant cells. Calcofluor staining, acid hydrolysis, enzymatic digestion studies, and infrared spectroscopy showed that the fibrils were composed of cellulose. The formation of these cellulose fibrils occurred during the attachment of virulent strains of A. tumefaciens to plant cells in vitro. The fibrils anchored the bacteria to the plant cell surface and entrapped additional bacteria. The multiplication of entrapped and attached bacteria resulted in the formation of large clusters of bacteria held close to the plant cell wall and plasma membrane by cellulose fibrils. This high concentration of bacteria may facilitate transfer of Ti plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid to the plant cell resulting in the formation of tumors.  相似文献   

17.
Structure of Acetobacter cellulose composites in the hydrated state   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The structure of composites produced by the bacterium Acetobacter xylinus have been studied in their natural, hydrated, state. Small-angle X-ray diffraction and environmental scanning electron microscopy has shown that the ribbons have a width of 500 A and contain smaller semi-crystalline cellulose microfibrils with an essentially rectangular cross-section of approximately 10 x 160 A(2). Incubation of Acetobacter in xyloglucan or pectin results in no changes in the size of either the microfibrils or the ribbons. Changes in the cellulose crystals are seen upon dehydration of the material, resulting in either a reduction in crystal size or an increase in crystal disorder.  相似文献   

18.
During the attachment of Agrobacterium tumefaciens to carrot tissue culture cells, the bacteria synthesize cellulose fibrils. We examined the role of these cellulose fibrils in the attachment process by determining the properties of bacterial mutants unable to synthesize cellulose. Such cellulose-minus bacteria attached to the carrot cell surface, but, in contrast to the parent strain, with which larger clusters of bacteria were seen on the plant cell, cellulose-minus mutant bacteria were attached individually to the plant cell surface. The wild-type bacteria became surrounded by fibrils within 2 h after attachment. No fibrils were seen with the cellulose-minus mutants. Prolonged incubation of wild-type A. tumefaciens with carrot cells resulted in the formation of large aggregates of bacteria, bacterial fibrils, and carrot cells. No such aggregates were formed after the incubation of carrot cells with cellulose-minus A. tumefaciens. The absence of cellulose fibrils also caused an alteration in the kinetics of bacterial attachment to carrot cells. Cellulose synthesis was not required for bacterial virulence; the cellulose-minus mutants were all virulent. However, the ability of the parent bacterial strain to produce tumors was unaffected by washing the inoculation site with water, whereas the ability of the cellulose-minus mutants to form tumors was much reduced by washing the inoculation site with water. Thus, a major role of the cellulose fibrils synthesized by A. tumefaciens appears to be anchoring the bacteria to the host cells, thereby aiding the production of tumors.  相似文献   

19.
Intermediatry steps in cellulose synthesis in Acetobacter xylinum were studied with resting cells and particulate-membranous preparations of the wild-type strain and of a celluloseless mutant. Exogenously supplied [1-14C]glucose was rapidly converted by resting cells of both types into glucose 6-phosphate, glucose 1-phosphate, and uridine glucose 5'-diphosphate (UDP)-glucose and incorporated into lipid-, water-, and alkali-soluble cellular fractions. The decrease in the level of labeled hexose-phosphates and UDP-glucose upon depletion of the exogenous substrate was accounted for by a continuous incorporation of [14C]glucose into cellulose in the wild type and into the above-mentioned cellular components in the mutant. [14C]glucose retained in the alkali- and water-soluble fractions of pulse-labeled wild-type cells was quantitatively chased into cellulose. Sonic extracts of both strains catalyzed the transfer of glucose from UDP-glucose into lipid-, water-, and alkali-soluble materials, as well as into an alkali-insoluble cellulosic beta-1,4-glucan. The results strongly support the sequence glucose leads to glucose 6-phosphate leads to glucose 1-phosphate leads to UDP-glucose leads to cellulose and indicate that lipid- and protein-linked cellodextrins may function as intermediates between UDP-glucose and cellulose in A. xylinum.  相似文献   

20.
Biofilms have been successfully applied for biotransformation for decades, especially in the area of bioremediation due to the feature of harsh reaction condition resistance. Acetobacter xylinum is known for its cellulose pellicle forming capability. Like biofilm, A. xylinum cells are immobilized by simultaneously produced cellulose nanofibers in the pellicle. A recombinant A. xylinum was constructed with the expectation that the cells could be self-immobilized and achieve a desired and stable biotransformation. d-Amino acid oxidase (DAAO) of Rhodosporidium toruloides was used as the model enzyme to be expressed in the recombinant A. xylinum. The constructed recombinant A. xylinum not only successfully produced DAAO activity but also self-immobilized by cellulose nanofibers in both the static and shaken culture. Although self-immobilized cells demonstrated a DAAO activity approximately 10% of the cell crude extract activity, it provided the benefits of improved thermal stability, operational stability, and easy retrieval for repeated use.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号