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1.
A gene encoding an ADP-dependent phosphofructokinase homologue has been identified in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Methanococcus jannaschii via genome sequencing. The gene encoded a protein of 462 amino acids with a molecular weight of 53,361. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene showed 52 and 29% identities to the ADP-dependent phosphofructokinase and glucokinase from Pyrococcus furiosus, respectively. The gene was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and the produced enzyme was purified and characterized. To our surprise, the enzyme showed high ADP-dependent activities for both glucokinase and phosphofructokinase. A native molecular mass was estimated to be 55 kDa, and this indicates the enzyme is monomeric. The reaction rate for the phosphorylation of D-glucose was almost 3 times that for D-fructose 6-phosphate. The K(m) values for D-fructose 6-phosphate and D-glucose were calculated to be 0.010 and 1.6 mm, respectively. The K(m) values for ADP were 0.032 and 0.63 mm when D-glucose and D-fructose 6-phosphate were used as a phosphoryl group acceptor, respectively. The gene encoding the enzyme is proposed to be an ancestral gene of an ADP-dependent phosphofructokinase and glucokinase. A gene duplication event might lead to the two enzymatic activities.  相似文献   

2.
AIMS: The key enzyme in the fructose-6-phosphate shunt in bifidobacteria, Fructose-6-phosphate phosphoketolase (F6PPK; E.C. 4.1.2.22.), was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity for the first time from Bifidobacterium longum (BB536). METHODS AND RESULTS: A three-step procedure comprising acetone fractionation followed by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) resulted in a 30-fold purification. The purified enzyme had a molecular mass of 300 +/- 5 kDa as determined by gel filtration. It is probably a tetramer containing two different subunits with molecular masses of 93 +/- 1 kDa and 59 +/- 0.5 kDa, as determined by SDS-PAGE. CONCLUSION: The deduced N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two subunits revealed no significant similarity between them and other proteins when compared to the data bases of EMBL and SWISS-PROT, indicating that this could be the first report on N-terminal amino acid sequence of F6PPK. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The data from this study will be used to design oligonucleotide probe specific for bifidobacteria and to study the gene encoded F6PPK.  相似文献   

3.
3,4-Dihydroxy-2-butanone 4-phosphate is biosynthesized from ribulose 5-phosphate and serves as the biosynthetic precursor for the xylene ring of riboflavin. The gene coding for 3,4-dihydroxy-2-butanone 4-phosphate synthase of Escherichia coli has been cloned and sequenced. The gene codes for a protein of 217 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 23,349.6 Da. The enzyme was purified to near homogeneity from a recombinant E. coli strain and had a specific activity of 1,700 nmol mg-1 h-1. The N-terminal amino acid sequence and the amino acid composition of the protein were in agreement with the deduced sequence. The molecular mass as determined by ion spray mass spectrometry was 23,351 +/- 2 Da, which is in agreement with the predicted mass. The previously reported loci htrP, "luxH-like," and ribB at 66 min of the E. coli chromosome are all identical to the gene coding for 3,4-dihydroxy-2-butanone 4-phosphate synthase, but their role had not been hitherto determined. Sequence homology indicates that gene luxH of Vibrio harveyi and the central open reading frame of the Bacillus subtilis riboflavin operon code for 3,4-dihydroxy-2-butanone 4-phosphate synthase.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase from Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis K1-23 (formerly Streptococcus lactis K1-23) has been purified 600-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity. Purification of the enzyme was achieved by DEAE-Sephacel, phosphocellulose P-11, and gel exclusion (Ultrogel AcA 54) chromatography. The purified enzyme (specific activity 31 units/mg) catalyzed the hydrolysis of both 6-O-phosphoryl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-1,2-beta-D-fructofuranoside (sucrose 6-phosphate) and sucrose (Km = 0.1 and 100 mM, respectively). Ultracentrifugal analysis of sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase indicated an Mr = 52,200. The purified enzyme migrated as a single protein during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Mr = 52,000). However, four distinct polypeptides were detected by analytical electrofocusing, and all four species hydrolyzed sucrose and sucrose 6-phosphate. The amino acid composition of sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase, and the sequence of the first 12 amino acids from the NH2 terminus, have been determined. Hybridization studies with oligonucleotide probes show that the genes for sucrose-6-phosphate hydrolase (scrB), Enzyme IIScr of the phosphoenolypyruvate-dependent sucrose:phosphotransferase system (scrA), and N5-(carboxyethyl)ornithine synthase (ceo) are encoded by the same approximately 20-kilobase EcoRI fragment. This fragment is part of a large transposon Tn5306 that also encodes the nisin precursor gene, spaN, and IS904. In L. lactis ATCC 11454, spaN, IS904, scrA, and scrB (but not ceo) are encoded on a related transposon, Tn5307.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Purification of xylulose 5-phosphate phosphoketolase (XpkA), the central enzyme of the phosphoketolase pathway (PKP) in lactic acid bacteria, and cloning and sequence analysis of the encoding gene, xpkA, from Lactobacillus pentosus MD363 are described. xpkA encodes a 788-amino-acid protein with a calculated mass of 88,705 Da. Expression of xpkA in Escherichia coli led to an increase in XpkA activity, while an xpkA knockout mutant of L. pentosus lost XpkA activity and was not able to grow on energy sources that are fermented via the PKP, indicating that xpkA encodes an enzyme with phosphoketolase activity. A database search revealed that there are high levels of similarity between XpkA and a phosphoketolase from Bifidobacterium lactis and between XpkA and a (putative) protein present in a number of evolutionarily distantly related organisms (up to 54% identical residues). Expression of xpkA in L. pentosus was induced by sugars that are fermented via the PKP and was repressed by glucose mediated by carbon catabolite protein A (CcpA) and by the mannose phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system. Most of the residues involved in correct binding of the cofactor thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) that are conserved in transketolase, pyruvate decarboxylase, and pyruvate oxidase were also conserved at a similar position in XpkA, implying that there is a similar TPP-binding fold in XpkA.  相似文献   

8.
The partial amino acid sequence and amino acid composition of acyl-(acyl-carrier-protein):glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase purified from squash cotyledons were determined. cDNAs encoding this enzyme were isolated from lambda gt 11 cDNA libraries made from poly(A)+ RNA of squash cotyledons by immunological selection and cross-hybridization. One of the resultant clones contained a cDNA insert of 1426 base pairs and an open reading frame of 1188 base pairs. The amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence matched the partial amino acid sequence determined for the enzyme. The results suggest that a precursor protein of 396 amino acid residues is processed to the mature enzyme of 368 amino acid residues, losing a leader peptide of 28 amino acid residues. Relative molecular masses of the precursor and mature proteins were calculated to be 43,838 and 40,929 Da, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Purification and molecular analysis of ribose-5-phosphate isomerase (EC5.3.1.6) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is described first time. The enzymewas enriched from a haploid deletion mutant containing the wild-type gene ona multicopy plasmid elaborating the following steps: ammonium sulphateprecipitation, interfacial salting out on Sepharose 6B, high performanceliquid chromatography on Fractogel EMD DEAE and on Resource Phenyl. Theenzyme activity was found to be rather unstable possibly caused by removalof stabilizing cofactors or proteins during the purification procedure.The purified enzyme showed a hyperbolic dependence on the substrateribose-5-phosphate with a Km-value of 1.6±0.3 mmol/l.For the native enzyme a molecular mass of 115±10 kDa was determinedas found by saccharose density gradient centrifugation, sedimentationequilibrium analysis, size exclusion chromatography and polyacrylamide gelelectrophoresis. Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresisand Western blotting revealed one band with a molecular mass of 31±2kDa. Thus, the native enzyme is composed of four subunits of identicalsize.The molecular mass of the subunit and the identified N-terminal sequenceof 33 amino acids fits well the 258 amino acid protein encoded by the S.cerevisiae RKI open reading frame, which was characterized previously onlyby increasing specific activities of ribose-5-phosphate isomerase in cellsafter cloning the gene. On the basis of the conserved amino acids analignment of the amino acid sequence of ribose-5-phosphate isomerase fromyeast with those of the enzyme from mouse, spinach and Escherichia coli ispresented.  相似文献   

10.
The galU gene of Escherichia coli, thought to encode the enzyme UTP:alpha-D-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, had previously been mapped to the 27-min region of the chromosome (J. A. Shapiro, J. Bacteriol. 92:518-520, 1966). By complementation of the membrane-derived oligosaccharide biosynthetic defect of strains with a galU mutation, we have now identified a plasmid containing the galU gene and have determined the nucleotide sequence of this gene. The galU gene is located immediately downstream of the hns gene, and its open reading frame would be transcribed in the direction opposite that of the hns gene (i.e., clockwise on the E. coli chromosome). The nucleotide sequences of five galU mutations were also determined. The enzyme UTP:alpha-D-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase was purified from a strain containing the galU gene on a multicopy plasmid. The amino-terminal amino acid sequence (10 residues) of the purified enzyme was identical to the predicted amino acid sequence (after the initiating methionine) of the galU-encoded open reading frame. The functional enzyme appears to be a tetramer of the galU gene product.  相似文献   

11.
A variety of Mycobacterium species contained the 5-deazaflavin coenzyme known as F420. Mycobacterium smegmatis was found to have a glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase that was dependent on F420 as an electron acceptor and which did not utilize NAD or NADP. The enzyme was purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation, phenyl-Sepharose column chromatography, F420-ether-linked aminohexyl-Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography, and quaternary aminoethyl-Sephadex column chromatography, and the sequence of the first 26 N-terminal amino acids has been determined. The response of enzyme activity to a range of pHs revealed a two-peak pattern, with maxima at pH 5.5 and 8.0. The apparent Km values for F420 and glucose-6-phosphate were, respectively, 0.004 and 1.6 mM. The apparent native and subunit molecular masses were 78,000 and approximately 40,000 Da, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Ketohexokinase (EC 2.7.1.3) was purified to homogeneity from human liver, and fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (EC 4.1.2.13) was partially purified from the same source. Ketohexokinase was shown, by column chromatography and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, to be a dimer of Mr 75000. Inhibition studies with p-chloromercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide indicate that ketohexokinase contains thiol groups, which are required for full activity. With D-xylulose as substrate, ketohexokinase and aldolase can catalyse a reaction sequence which forms glycolaldehyde, a known precursor of oxalate. The distribution of both enzymes in human tissues indicates that this reaction sequence occurs mainly in the liver, to a lesser extent in the kidney, and very little in heart, brain and muscle. The kinetic properties of ketohexokinase show that this enzyme can phosphorylate D-xylulose as readily as D-fructose, except that higher concentrations of D-xylulose are required. The kinetic properties of aldolase show that the enzyme has a higher affinity for D-xylulose 1-phosphate than for D-fructose 1-phosphate. These findings support a role for ketohexokinase and aldolase in the formation of glycolaldehyde. The effect of various metabolites on the activity of the two enzymes was tested to determine the conditions that favour the formation of glycolaldehyde from xylitol. The results indicate that few of these metabolites affect the activity of ketohexokinase, but that aldolase can be inhibited by several phosphorylated compounds. This work suggests that, although the formation of oxalate from xylitol is normally a minor pathway, under certain conditions of increased xylitol metabolism oxalate production can become significant and may result in oxalosis.  相似文献   

13.
A gene (ORF PH1035), annotated to encode an uncharacterized hypothetical protein in Pyrococcus horikoshii, was first cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant enzyme was purified to homogeneity by Ni-NTA affinity chromatography and its molecular mass was determined to be 49,871Da by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. When the purified enzyme was reacted with nucleoside diphosphate-glucoses including UDP-glucose as a donor and glucose, rather than glucose-6-phosphate, as an acceptor, it specifically created a free trehalose. The enzyme was also able to partly hydrolyze the trehalose to glucose. The optimum pH was 5.5 and the enzyme was highly stable from pH 6 to 8. The deduced amino acid sequence showed a high homology with that of the glycosyl transferase group 1 (Pfam00534) in the BLAST search. The results suggest that the enzyme is a novel glycosyltransferase catalyzing the synthesis of the trehalose in the archaeon.  相似文献   

14.
The NAD(+)-dependent cytosolic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH, EC 1.2.1.12) has been purified to homogeneity from skeletal muscle of the newt Pleurodeles waltl (Amphibia, Urodela). The purification procedure including ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by Blue Sepharose CL-6B chromatography resulted in a 24-fold increase in specific activity and a final yield of approximately 46%. The native protein exhibited an apparent molecular weight of approximately 146 kDa with absolute specificity for NAD(+). Only one GAPDH isoform (pI 7.57) was obtained by chromatofocusing. The enzyme is an homotetrameric protein composed of identical subunits with an apparent molecular weight of approximately 37 kDa. Monospecific polyclonal antibodies raised in rabbits against the purified newt GAPDH immunostained a single 37-kDa GAPDH band in extracts from different tissues blotted onto nitrocellulose. A 510-bp cDNA fragment that corresponds to an internal region of a GapC gene was obtained by RT-PCR amplification using degenerate primers. The deduced amino acid sequence has been used to establish the phylogenetic relationships of the Pleurodeles enzyme--the first GAPDH from an amphibian of the Caudata group studied so far--with other GAPDHs of major vertebrate phyla.  相似文献   

15.
B Haghighi  T G Flynn  H R Levy 《Biochemistry》1982,21(25):6415-6420
Interaction of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and sodium borohydride leads to inactivation and modification of two lysine residues per enzyme dimer that are thought to bind glucose 6-phosphate [Milhausen, M., & Levy, H.R. (1975) Eur. J. Biochem. 50, 453-461]. The amino acid sequence surrounding this lysine residue is reported. Following tryptic hydrolysis of the modified enzyme, two peptides, each containing one pyridoxyllysine residue, were purified to homogeneity and subjected to automated Edman degradation. The sequences revealed that one of these, a heptapeptide, was derived from the other, containing 11 amino acids. Supporting evidence for the role of the modified lysine is provided in the following paper [Haghighi, B., & Levy, H.R. (1982) Biochemistry (second paper of three in this issue)]. End-group analysis of the native enzyme revealed that valine is the N-terminal and glycine the C-terminal amino acid and provides support for the identity of the enzyme's two subunits.  相似文献   

16.
In pea leaves, the synthesis of 7,8-dihydropteroate, a primary step in folate synthesis, was only detected in mitochondria. This reaction is catalyzed by a bifunctional 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin pyrophosphokinase/7,8-dihydropteroate synthase enzyme, which represented 0.04-0.06% of the matrix proteins. The enzyme had a native mol. wt of 280-300 kDa and was made up of identical subunits of 53 kDa. The reaction catalyzed by the 7,8-dihydropteroate synthase domain of the protein was Mg2+-dependent and behaved like a random bireactant system. The related cDNA contained an open reading frame of 1545 bp and the deduced amino acid sequence corresponded to a polypeptide of 515 residues with a calculated M(r) of 56,454 Da. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence with the N-terminal sequence of the purified protein indicated that the plant enzyme is synthesized with a putative mitochondrial transit peptide of 28 amino acids. The calculated M(r) of the mature protein was 53,450 Da. Southern blot experiments suggested that a single-copy gene codes for the enzyme. This result, together with the facts that the protein is synthesized with a mitochondrial transit peptide and that the activity was only detected in mitochondria, strongly supports the view that mitochondria is the major (unique?) site of 7,8-dihydropteroate synthesis in higher plant cells.  相似文献   

17.
The glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophilic archaebacterium Pyrococcus woesei (optimal growth temperature, 100 to 103 degrees C) was purified to homogeneity. This enzyme was strictly phosphate dependent, utilized either NAD+ or NADP+, and was insensitive to pentalenolactone like the enzyme from the methanogenic archaebacterium Methanothermus fervidus. The enzyme exhibited a considerable thermostability, with a 44-min half-life at 100 degrees C. The amino acid sequence of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from P. woesei was deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the coding gene. Compared with the enzyme homologs from mesophilic archaebacteria (Methanobacterium bryantii, Methanobacterium formicicum) and an extremely thermophilic archaebacterium (Methanothermus fervidus), the primary structure of the P. woesei enzyme exhibited a strikingly high proportion of aromatic amino acid residues and a low proportion of sulfur-containing residues. The coding gene of P. woesei was expressed at a high level in Escherichia coli, thus providing an ideal basis for detailed structural and functional studies of that enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The arcA gene that encodes arginine deiminase (ADI, EC 3.5.3.6)--a key enzyme of the ADI pathway--was cloned from Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis ATCC 7962. The deduced amino acid sequence of the arcA gene showed high homology with the arcA gene from Lactobacillus plantarum (99%) and from Lactobacillus sakei (60%), respectively. The arcA gene from Lc. lactis spp. lactis ATCC 7962 was expressed in soluble fraction of recombinant Escherichia coli BL21. ADI produced from Lc. lactis spp. lactis ATCC 7962 (LADI) in E. coli BL21 (DE3) was purified using sequential Q-Sepharose anion exchange and Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration column chromatography. The final yield of LADI in the purification procedure was 63.5%, and the specific activity was 140.27 U/mg. The presence of purified LADI was confirmed by N-terminal sequencing and determination of the molecular mass. The LADI had a molecular mass of about 140 kDa, and comprised a homotrimer of 46 kDa in the native condition. LADI exhibited only 35% amino acid sequence homology with ADI from Mycoplasma arginini. However, LADI shared a similar three dimensional structure. The K(M) and V(max) values for arginine were 8.67+/-0.045 mM (mean+/-SD) and 344.83+/-1.79 micromol/min/mg, respectively, and the optimum temperature and pH for the production of LADI were 60 degrees C and 7.2.  相似文献   

19.
We purified to homogeneity an enzyme from Citrobacter sp. strain KCTC 18061P capable of decolorizing triphenylmethane dyes. The native form of the enzyme was identified as a homodimer with a subunit molecular mass of about 31 kDa. It catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of triphenylmethane dyes, with remarkable substrate specificity related to dye structure. Maximal enzyme activity occurred at pH 9.0 and 60 degrees C. The enzymatic reaction product of the triphenylmethane dye crystal violet was identified as its leuco form by UV-visible spectral changes and thin-layer chromatography. A gene encoding this enzyme was isolated based on its N-terminal and internal amino acid sequences. The nucleotide sequence of the gene has a single open reading frame encoding 287 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 30,954 Da. Although the deduced amino acid sequence displays 99% identity to the hypothetical protein from Listeria monocytogenes strain 4b H7858, it shows no overall functional similarity to any known protein in the public databases. At the N terminus, the amino acid sequence has high homology to sequences of NAD(P)H-dependent enzymes containing the dinucleotide-binding motif GXXGXXG. The enzyme was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, and the purified recombinant enzyme showed characteristics similar to those of the native enzyme. This is the first report of a triphenylmethane reductase characterized from any organism.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphoketolases are key enzymes of the phosphoketolase pathway of heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria, which include lactobacilli. In heterofermentative lactobacilli xylulose 5-phosphate phosphoketolase (X5PPK) is the main enzyme of the phosphoketolase pathway. However, activity of fructose 6-phosphate phosphoketolase (F6PPK) has always been considered absent in lactic acid bacteria. In this study, the F6PPK activity was detected in 24 porcine wild-type strains of Lactobacillus reuteri and Lactobacillus mucosae, but not in the Lactobacillus salivarius or in L. reuteri ATCC strains. The activity of F6PPK increased after treatment of the culture at low-pH and diminished after porcine bile-salts stress conditions in wild-type strains of L. reuteri. Colorimetric quantification at 505 nm allowed to differentiate between microbial strains with low activity and without the activity of F6PPK. Additionally, activity of F6PPK and the X5PPK gene expression levels were evaluated by real time PCR, under stress and nonstress conditions, in 3 L. reuteri strains. Although an exact correlation, between enzyme activity and gene expression was not obtained, it remains possible that the xpk gene codes for a phosphoketolase with dual substrate, at least in the analyzed strains of L. reuteri.  相似文献   

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