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1.
Abstract A specific detection of pullulanase type I which hydrolyzes the α-1,6-glycosidic linkages on pullulan and starch was developed using impregnation of gels with soluble starch and staining for amylose with iodine. It was a simple and highly sensitive zymogram method capable of detecting as little as 0.001 unit of pullulanase type I activity in polyacrylamide gels after electrophoresis. After fractionation of crude enzyme using DEAE ion exchange chromatography to avoid possible co-migration of amylolytic enzymes which disturb the interaction between amylose and iodine, the high and critical sensitivity of the detection was achieved. The specific detection is based on the fact that when pullulanase type I hydrolyzes the α-1,6-glycosidic bonds in soluble starch increased amounts of α-1,4-linked amylose is formed which yields more intensely blue colored conjugate with iodine. Thus, blue bands on the lighter background signal the presence of pullulanase type I. In contrast, amylolytic enzymes give 'white' bands on the lightly stained background because they remove amylose. This procedure is effective in enzyme screening to distinguish debranching enzyme (pullulanase type I) from other pullulan-degrading enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
Thermostable β-amylase and pullulanase, secreted by the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Clostridium thermosulfurogenes strain SV2, were purified by salting out with ammonium sulphate, DEAE-cellulose column chromatography, and gel filtration using Sephadex G-200. Maltose was identified as a major hydrolysis product of starch by β-amylase, and maltotriose was identified as a major hydrolysis product of pullulan by pullulanase. The molecular masses of native β-amylase and pullulanase were determined to be 180 and 100 kDa by gel filtration, and 210 and 80 kDa by SDS–PAGE, respectively. The temperature optima of purified β-amylase and pullulanase were 70 and 75°C, respectively, and both enzymes were completely stable at 70°C for 2h. The presence of starch further increased the stability of both the enzymes to 80°C and both displayed a pH activity optimum of 6.0. The starch hydrolysis products formed by β-amylase action had β-anomeric form.  相似文献   

3.
Summary A novel thermostable pullulanase, secreted by the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Clostridium thermosulfurogenes EM1, was purified and characterized. Applying anion exchange chromatography and gel filtration the enzyme was purified 47-fold and had a specific activity of 200 units/mg. The molecular mass of this thermostable enzyme was determined to be 102 000 daltons and consisted of a single subunit. The enzyme was able to attack specifically the -1,6-glycosidic linkages in pullulan and caused its complete hydrolysis to maltotriose. Surprisingly and unlike the enzyme from Klebsiella pneumoniae, the purified enzyme from this anaerobic thermophile exhibited, in addition to its debranching and pullulanase activity, an -1,4 hydrolysing activity as well. By the action of this single polypeptide chain various branched and linear polysaccharides were completely converted to two major products, namely maltose and maltotriose. The K m values of this enzyme for pullulan and amylose were determined to be 1.33 mg/ml and 0.38 mg/ml, respectively. This debranching enzyme displays a temperature optimum at 60°–65° C and a pH optimum at 5.5–6.0. The application of this new class of pullulanase (pullulanase type II) in industry will significantly enhance the starch saccharification process. Offprint requests to: G. Antranikian  相似文献   

4.
The growth of a thermophilic Clostridium sp. and the production of α-glucosidase, α-amylase and pullulanase were studied under anaerobic conditions using different carbon and nitrogen sources and varying pH values and temperatures. Growth and enzyme activities were highest with soybean meal as the nitrogen source. The optimum concentration was 2.5% [w/v] for the production of α-amylase as well as pullulanase and 2% [w/v] for α-glucosidase. The best carbon source proved to be soluble starch for α-amylase, and pullulanase and maltose for α-glucosidase. Growth and enzyme production reached their optimum at pH 6.5 to 7.0 and 70°C. Under these conditions, the enzyme activities followed exponential growth with maximum yields of α-glucosidase, α-amylase and pullulanase at 28, 36, and 44 h.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract Bacillus sp. ATCC 21591, an alkalophilic bacterium, produces 3 enzymes associated with degradation of starch-α-amylase, pullulanase and α-glucosidase. The latter reached a maximum after 24 h growth. Highest activities of α-glucosidase and pullulanase were obtained when the initial pH of the medium was 9.7 and although at pH 10.4 highest biomass was attained after 48 h no α-glucosidase was present. The pH optimum for activity with maltose as substrate was 7.0, which is surprisingly low for an alkalophilic organism. The enzyme was substrate specific for p -nitrophenyl- α -D-glucoside, maltose and maltotriose in that order. Forty eight times the activity was located in the cell-free supernatant, relative to that found intracellulary. Transferase activity was detected - the major end-product formed from maltose was a compound with an R f -value similar to isomaltose.  相似文献   

6.
A gene coding for a pullulanase from the obligately anaerobic, extremely thermophilic bacterium Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus has been cloned in Escherichia coli. It consists of an open reading frame (pulA) of 2478 bp which codes for an enzyme of 95 732 Da and is flanked by two other open reading frames. A truncated version of the gene which lacks 381 bp of 5′-sequence also has pullulanase activity and it appears that the amino-terminal portion of the gene is not essential for either activity or thermostability. Amino acid sequence comparisons with other published amylases and pullulanases showed that it possesses homology to the four key regions common to these enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Using a pUC19-based genomic library of the anaerobic thermophilic bacterium C. thermohydrosulfuricum a DNA fragment that confers pullulanase activity to E. coli cells has been identified. Subcloning and restriction mapping procedures was carried out and the primary structure of the 5'-region of the pullulanase gene (pul) was determined. The pul enzyme was shown to be a protein with molecular weight of approximately 60,000. It was found that both pullulanase and glucoamylase activities resides in pullulanase. The intracellular distribution of pullulanase was studied. An E. coli strain that produces large amounts of thermostable pullulanase has been constructed.  相似文献   

8.
The extremely thermophilic archaeon Thermococcus hydrothermalis, isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent in the East Pacific Rise at 21°N, produced an extracellular pullulanase. This enzyme was purified 97-fold to homogeneity from cell-free culture supernatant. The purified pullulanase was composed of a single polypeptide chain having an estimated molecular mass of 110 kDa (gel filtration) or 128 kDa (sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacryl amide gel electrophoresis). The enzyme showed optimum activity at pH 5.5 and 95 °C. The thermostability and the thermoactivity were considerably increased in the presence of Ca2+. The enzyme was activated by 2-mercaptoethanol and dithiothreitol, whereas N-bromosuccinimide and α-cyclodextrin were inhibitors. This enzyme was able to hydrolyze, in addition to the α-1,6-glucosidic linkages in pullulan, α-1,4-glucosidic linkages in amylose and soluble starch, and can therefore be classified as a type II pullulanase or an amylopullulanase. The purified enzyme displayed Michaelis constant (K m) values of 0.95 mg/ml for pullulan and 3.55 mg/ml for soluble starch without calcium and, in the presence of Ca2+, 0.25 mg/ml for pullulan and 1.45 mg/ml for soluble starch. Received: 19 November 1997 / Received revision: 9 March 1998 / Accepted: 14 March 1998  相似文献   

9.
The gene encoding a new extracellular amylopullulanase (type II pullulanase) was cloned from an extremely thermophilic anaerobic archaeon Thermococcus siculi strain HJ21 isolated previously from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent. The functional hydrolytic domain of the amylopullulanase (TsiApuN) and its MalE fusion protein (MTsiApuN) were expressed heterologously. The complete amylopullulanase (TsiApu) was also purified from fermentation broth of the strain. The pullulanase and amylase activities of the three enzymes were characterized. TsiApu had optimum temperature of 95°C for the both activities, while MTsiApuN and TsiApuN had a higher optimum temperature of 100°C. The residual total activities of MTsiApuN and TsiApuN were both 89% after incubation at 100°C for 1 h, while that of TsiApu was 70%. For all the three enzymes the optimum pHs for amylase and pullulanase activities were 5.0 and 6.0, respectively. By analyzing enzymatic properties of the three enzymes, this study suggests that the carboxy terminal region of TsiApu might interfere with the thermoactivity. The acidic thermoactive amylopullulanases MTsiApuN and TsiApuN could be further employed for industrial saccharification of starch.  相似文献   

10.
The gene encoding the type I pullulanase from the extremely thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Fervidobacterium pennavorans Ven5 was cloned and sequenced in Escherichia coli. The pulA gene from F. pennavorans Ven5 had 50.1% pairwise amino acid identity with pulA from the anaerobic hyperthermophile Thermotoga maritima and contained the four regions conserved among all amylolytic enzymes. The pullulanase gene (pulA) encodes a protein of 849 amino acids with a 28-residue signal peptide. The pulA gene was subcloned without its signal sequence and overexpressed in E. coli under the control of the trc promoter. This clone, E. coli FD748, produced two proteins (93 and 83 kDa) with pullulanase activity. A second start site, identified 118 amino acids downstream from the ATG start site, with a Shine-Dalgarno-like sequence (GGAGG) and TTG translation initiation codon was mutated to produce only the 93-kDa protein. The recombinant purified pullulanases (rPulAs) were optimally active at pH 6 and 80 degrees C and had a half-life of 2 h at 80 degrees C. The rPulAs hydrolyzed alpha-1,6 glycosidic linkages of pullulan, starch, amylopectin, glycogen, alpha-beta-limited dextrin. Interestingly, amylose, which contains only alpha-1,4 glycosidic linkages, was not hydrolyzed by rPulAs. According to these results, the enzyme is classified as a debranching enzyme, pullulanase type I. The extraordinary high substrate specificity of rPulA together with its thermal stability makes this enzyme a good candidate for biotechnological applications in the starch-processing industry.  相似文献   

11.
The extracellular enzymatic activity of a mixed culture of anaerobic marine bacteria enriched on pullulan [alpha(1,6)-linked maltotriose units] was directly assessed with a combination of gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). Hydrolysis products of pullulan were separated by GPC into three fractions with molecular weights of > or = 10,000, approximately 5,000, and < or = 1,200. NMR spectra of these fractions demonstrated that pullulan was rapidly and specifically hydrolyzed at alpha(1,6) linkages by pullulanase enzymes, most likely type II pullulanase. Although isolated pullulanase enzymes have been shown to hydrolyze pullulan completely to maltotriose (S. H. Brown, H. R. Costantino, and R. M. Kelly, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 56:1985-1991, 1990; M. Klingeberg, H. Hippe, and G. Antranikian, FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 69:145-152, 1990; R. Koch, P. Zablowski, A. Spreinat, and G. Antranikian, FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 71:21-26, 1990), the smallest carbohydrate detected in the bacterial cultures consisted of two maltotriose units linked through one alpha(1,6) linkage. Either the final hydrolysis step was closely linked to substrate uptake, or specialized porins similar to maltoporin might permit direct transport of large oligosaccharides into the bacterial cell. This is the first report of pullulanase activity among mesophilic marine bacteria. The combination of GPC and NMR could easily be used to assess other types of extracellular enzyme activity in bacterial cultures.  相似文献   

12.
The gene encoding a type I pullulanase was identified from the genome sequence of the anaerobic thermoalkaliphilic bacterium Anaerobranca gottschalkii. In addition, the homologous gene was isolated from a gene library of Anaerobranca horikoshii and sequenced. The proteins encoded by these two genes showed 39% amino acid sequence identity to the pullulanases from the thermophilic anaerobic bacteria Fervidobacterium pennivorans and Thermotoga maritima. The pullulanase gene from A. gottschalkii (encoding 865 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 98 kDa) was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) so that the protein did not have the signal peptide. Accordingly, the molecular mass of the purified recombinant pullulanase (rPulAg) was 96 kDa. Pullulan hydrolysis activity was optimal at pH 8.0 and 70 degrees C, and under these physicochemical conditions the half-life of rPulAg was 22 h. By using an alternative expression strategy in E. coli Tuner(DE3)(pLysS), the pullulanase gene from A. gottschalkii, including its signal peptide-encoding sequence, was cloned. In this case, the purified recombinant enzyme was a truncated 70-kDa form (rPulAg'). The N-terminal sequence of purified rPulAg' was found 252 amino acids downstream from the start site, presumably indicating that there was alternative translation initiation or N-terminal protease cleavage by E. coli. Interestingly, most of the physicochemical properties of rPulAg' were identical to those of rPulAg. Both enzymes degraded pullulan via an endo-type mechanism, yielding maltotriose as the final product, and hydrolytic activity was also detected with amylopectin, starch, beta-limited dextrins, and glycogen but not with amylose. This substrate specificity is typical of type I pullulanases. rPulAg was inhibited by cyclodextrins, whereas addition of mono- or bivalent cations did not have a stimulating effect. In addition, rPulAg' was stable in the presence of 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 20% Tween, and 50% Triton X-100. The pullulanase from A. gottschalkii is the first thermoalkalistable type I pullulanase that has been described.  相似文献   

13.
一个新型耐热普鲁兰酶的结构与功能   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
新型普鲁兰酶的研究对于普鲁兰酶制剂的国产化、打破国外垄断具有非常重要的意义。从我国云南腾冲地区轮马热泉的淤泥中分离获得了一株耐热普鲁兰酶产生菌LM 18-11,经16S rDNA序列系统进化树分析,确定该菌为厌氧芽胞杆菌Anoxybacillus属种,并从中克隆获得了耐热普鲁兰酶的编码基因,该酶在55℃-60℃、pH 5.6-6.4的范围内具有最大的反应活性。此外,该酶具有较好的热稳定性,在60℃下处理48 h,仍可保持50%以上的活力;动力学分析该酶的Vmax和Km分别为750 U/mg和1.47 mg/mL,是目前文献报道中比活力最高的耐热普鲁兰酶。同时还对该酶进行了晶体结构分析,结果显示该酶具有?-淀粉酶家族中典型的结构,在N端具有一个特殊的底物结合域,该结构域的缺失导致比活力和底物结合力都有相应降低,Vmax和Km分别为324 U/mg和1.95 mg/mL。同时,将该普鲁兰酶编码基因导入枯草芽胞杆菌中,在P43启动子的控制下,普鲁兰酶基因获得了高效表达,胞外酶活可达42 U/mL,相比初始菌种,表达活力提高40倍以上。研究表明该普鲁兰酶具有很好的应用前景。  相似文献   

14.
A gene encoding amylopullulanase (gt-apu) of the extremely thermophilic Geobacillus thermoleovorans NP33 was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The gene has an open reading frame of 4,965 bp that encodes a protein of 1,655 amino acids with molecular mass of 182 kDa. The six conserved regions, characteristic of GH13 family, have been detected in gt-apu. The recombinant enzyme has only one active site for α-amylase and pullulanase activities based on the enzyme kinetic analyses in a system that contains starch as well as pullulan as competing substrates and response to inhibitors. The end-product analysis confirmed that this is an endoacting enzyme. The specific enzyme activities for α-amylase and pullulanase of the truncated amylopullulanase (gt-apuT) are higher than gt-apu. Both enzymes exhibited similar temperature (60 °C) and pH (7.0) optima, although gt-apuT possessed a higher thermostability than gt-apu. The overall catalytic efficiency (K cat/K m) of gt-apuT is greater than that of gt-apu, with almost similar substrate specificities. The C-terminal region of gt-apu appeared to be non-essential, and furthermore, it negatively affects the substrate binding and stability of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Extremely thermophilic anaerobic fermentative bacteria growing at temperatures between 50 and 80(deg)C (optimum, 65 to 70(deg)C) were isolated from mud samples collected at Abano Terme spa (Italy). The cells were gram-negative motile rods, about 1.8 (mu)m in length and 0.6 (mu)m in width, occurring singly and in pairs. Cells commonly formed spheroids at one end similar to Fervidobacterium islandicum and Fervidobacterium nodosum. The new isolate differs from F. nodosum by the 7% higher G+C content of its DNA (40.6 mol%) but is similar to Fervidobacterium pennavorans and F. islandicum in its G+C content and phenotypic properties. The phylogenetic dendrogram indicates that strain Ven5 belongs to the order Thermotogales and shows the highest 16S ribosomal DNA sequence similarity to F. pennavorans, F. islandicum, and F. nodosum, with similarities of 99.0, 98.6, and 96.0%, respectively. During growth on starch the strain produced a thermostable pullulanase of type I which preferentially hydrolyzed (alpha)-1,6 glucosidic linkages. The enzyme was purified 65-fold by anion-exchange, gel permeation, and hydrophobic chromatography. The native pullulanase has a molecular mass of 240,000 Da and is composed of three subunits, each with a molecular mass of 77,600 Da as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Optimal conditions for the activity and stability of the purified pullulanase were pH 6.0 and 85(deg)C. At pH 6.0, the half-life of the enzyme was over 2 h at 80(deg)C and 5 min at 90(deg)C. This is the first report on the presence of pullulanase type I in an anaerobic bacterium.  相似文献   

16.
Thermostable dextranase (1,6-α- d -glucan 6-glucanohydrolysase) from a thermophilic anaerobic bacterium strain Rt364, isolated from a New Zealand hot spring, was partially purified from the cell-free supernatant fluid by adsorption onto Sephacryl S-300, a dextran-based chromatographic resin. It was competitively eluted with 2% T10 dextran, dialysed, concentrated and examined by SDS–PAGE. The overall recovery was 47% and the increase in specific activity by this procedure was 25-fold. The Rt364 dextranase had previously been found to have an optimum temperature of 80 °C and hydrolysed both α-1,6 and α-1,4 glucosidic bonds. Sephacryl S-300 adsorption is a simple, useful step with general application for concentrating and purifying bacterial enzymes that hydrolyse dextrans.  相似文献   

17.
The gene encoding a type I pullulanase was identified from the genome sequence of the anaerobic thermoalkaliphilic bacterium Anaerobranca gottschalkii. In addition, the homologous gene was isolated from a gene library of Anaerobranca horikoshii and sequenced. The proteins encoded by these two genes showed 39% amino acid sequence identity to the pullulanases from the thermophilic anaerobic bacteria Fervidobacterium pennivorans and Thermotoga maritima. The pullulanase gene from A. gottschalkii (encoding 865 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 98 kDa) was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) so that the protein did not have the signal peptide. Accordingly, the molecular mass of the purified recombinant pullulanase (rPulAg) was 96 kDa. Pullulan hydrolysis activity was optimal at pH 8.0 and 70°C, and under these physicochemical conditions the half-life of rPulAg was 22 h. By using an alternative expression strategy in E. coli Tuner(DE3)(pLysS), the pullulanase gene from A. gottschalkii, including its signal peptide-encoding sequence, was cloned. In this case, the purified recombinant enzyme was a truncated 70-kDa form (rPulAg′). The N-terminal sequence of purified rPulAg′ was found 252 amino acids downstream from the start site, presumably indicating that there was alternative translation initiation or N-terminal protease cleavage by E. coli. Interestingly, most of the physicochemical properties of rPulAg′ were identical to those of rPulAg. Both enzymes degraded pullulan via an endo-type mechanism, yielding maltotriose as the final product, and hydrolytic activity was also detected with amylopectin, starch, β-limited dextrins, and glycogen but not with amylose. This substrate specificity is typical of type I pullulanases. rPulAg was inhibited by cyclodextrins, whereas addition of mono- or bivalent cations did not have a stimulating effect. In addition, rPulAg′ was stable in the presence of 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 20% Tween, and 50% Triton X-100. The pullulanase from A. gottschalkii is the first thermoalkalistable type I pullulanase that has been described.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Two strains (NCIB 11412 and NCIB 10814) of the thermophilic organism Bacillus stearothermophilus were found to produce complex carbohydrase systems. The enzyme activities in each system include -amylase as the major component, maltase, pullulanase, a minor amylase and cyclodextrinase. The latter three activities are produced in low yield in both strains. A crude enzyme preparation from each strain possessed maltogenic properties on hydrolysis of soluble starch. Following rigorous purification procedures, the purified major -amylase from either strain did not produce maltose as a major end-product of starch hydrolysis. However, a partially purified mixture of pullulanase, minor amylase and cyclodextrinase activities from NCIB 11412 and NCIB 10814 produced 56.4% and 62.0% maltose, respectively, from soluble starch.  相似文献   

19.
There is a considerable potential of cold-active biocatalysts for versatile industrial applications. A psychrophilic bacterial strain, Shewanella arctica 40-3, has been isolated from arctic sea ice and was shown to exhibit pullulan-degrading activity. Purification of a monomeric, 150-kDa pullulanase was achieved using a five-step purification approach. The native enzyme was purified 50.0-fold to a final specific activity of 3.0 U/mg. The enzyme was active at a broad range of temperature (10–50 °C) and pH (5–9). Optimal activity was determined at 45 °C and pH 7. The presence of various metal ions is tolerated by the pullulanase, while detergents resulted in decreased activity. Complete conversion of pullulan to maltotriose as the sole product and N-terminal amino acid sequence indicated that the enzyme is a type-I pullulanase and belongs to rarely characterized pullulan-degrading enzymes from psychrophiles.  相似文献   

20.
A dual enzyme system of exo-maltotetraohydrolase [EC 3.2.1.60] and pullulanase [EC 3.2.1.41] was studied for the continuous production of maltotetraose. Porous chitosan beads were selected from among many carriers as the best carrier to immobilize both enzymes.

The properties of the immobilized enzymes were examined and compared with those of the native enzymes. For exo-maltotetraohydrolase, the optimum pH of the immobilized enzyme shifted slightly to the acidic side and the pH stability was improved on the alkaline side. The optimum temperature of the immobilized enzyme increased by about 15°C and thermostability was improved by about 10°C. As for pullulanase, very little difference in thermostability was observed.

The effects of operating conditions on the continuous production of maltotetraose using exo- maltotetraohydrolase immobilized on the porous chitosan beads were examined. Porous chitosan beads were recognized to be superior to Diaion HP-50.

The continuous production of maltotetraose was accomplished using the dual immobilized enzyme system. The dual enzyme system proved to be effective to increase the maltotetraose content in the product. A stable operation was successfully continued for more than 60 days.  相似文献   

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