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1.
Effects of some nitriles and amides, as well as glucose and ammonium, on the growth and the nitrile hydratase (EC 4.2.1.84) activity of the Rhodococcus sp. strain gt1 isolated from soil were studied. The activity of nitrile hydratase mainly depended on the carbon and nitrogen supply to cells. The activity of nitrile hydratase was high in the presence of glucose and ammonium at medium concentrations and decreased at concentrations of glucose of more than 0.3%. Saturated unsubstituted aliphatic nitriles and amides were found to be a good source of nitrogen and carbon. However, the presence of nitriles and amides in the medium was not absolutely necessary for the expression of the activity of nitrile hydratase of the Rhodococcus sp. strain gt1.  相似文献   

2.
The culture conditions for Rhodococcus sp. N-774 cells showing high nitrile hydratase activity and the reaction conditions for acrylamide production by the resting cells were optimized. Thiamine was essential for the growth of the strain. Yeast extract and Fe2 + or Fe3 + remarkably promoted the formation of nitrile hydratase of the cells. The reaction proceeded optimally at temperatures below 30°C. Incubation for 1 hr at above 40°C resulted in inactivation of the enzyme. Through reaction at a temperature as low as 0°C, the inhibition and inactivation of the enzyme activity by the substrate, acrylonitrile, and the product, acrylamide, were remarkably reduced, and higher accumulation of acrylamide could be attained. Under the optimal conditions, a more than 20% (w/v) acrylamide solution was obtained with a conversion yield of nearly 100%. Thus, the aqueous acrylamide solution obtained showed a high enough quality for use for the commercial preparation of polyacrylamide.  相似文献   

3.
Southern hybridization analysis using the genes encoding the α- and β-subunits of nitrile hydratase (NHase) from Rhodococcus sp. N-774 as probe suggested that two R. erythropolis strains, JCM6823 and JCM2892, among 31 strains mainly from Japan Culture of Microorganisms (JCM) have NHase genes. Restriction analysis of DNA fragments showing positive hybridization showed that each fragment carried a nucleotide sequence very similar to that of the NHase genes from Rhodococcus sp. N-774. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the DNA fragment cloned from R. erythropolis JCM6823 showed the presence of the genes encoding the α- and β-subunits of NHase, which show 94.7% and 96.2% identity in amino acid sequence to those of Rhodococcus sp. N-774, respectively, as well as a C-terminal portion of the amidase gene upstream from these genes. Despite the extremely high amino acid sequence similarity in both NHases and amidases from R. erythropolis JCM6823 and Rhodococcus sp. N-774, the NHases and amidases from R. erythropolis strains showed broader substrate specificity when compared to those from Rhodococcus sp. N-774. This suggests that a very limited number of amino acid residues are responsible for the difference in substrate specificity. Although the NHase of Rhodococcus sp. N-774 are constitutively produced, the NHases of both R. erythropolis strains were inducibly produced by addition of ε-caprolactam as an inducer.  相似文献   

4.
The biotransformation of acrylonitrile was investigated using thermophilic nitrilase produced from a new isolate Streptomyces sp. MTCC 7546 in both the free and immobilized state. Under optimal conditions, the enzyme converts nitriles to acids without the formation of amides. The whole cells of the isolate were immobilized in agar-agar and the beads so formed were evaluated for 25 cycles at 50°C. The enzyme showed a little loss of activity during reuse. Seventy-one per cent of 0.5 M acrylonitrile was converted to acid at 6 h of incubation at a very low density of immobilized cells, while 100% conversion was observed at 3 h by free cells.  相似文献   

5.
Strain ZJB-063, a versatile nitrile-amide-degrading strain, was newly isolated from soil in this study. Based on morphology, physiological tests, Biolog and the 16S rDNA sequence, strain ZJB-063 was identified as Bacillus subtilis. ZJB-063 exhibited nitrilase activity without addition of inducers, indicating that the nitrilase in B. subtilis ZJB-063 is constitutive. Interestingly, the strain exhibited nitrile hydratase and amidase activity with the addition of ɛ-caprolactam. Moreover, the substrate spectrum altered with the alteration of enzyme systems due to the addition of ɛ-caprolactam. The constitutive nitrilase was highly specific for arylacetonitriles, while the nitrile hydratase/amidase in B. subtilis ZJB-063 could not only hydrolyze arylacetonitriles but also other nitriles including some aliphatic nitriles and heterocyclic nitriles. Despite comparatively low activity, the amidase of hydratase/amidase system was effective in converting amides to acids. The versatility of this strain in the hydrolysis of various nitriles and amides makes it a potential biocatalyst in organic synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
The respiratory activity of Rhodococcus rhodochrousM8 cells containing nitrile hydratase and amidase was studied in the presence of nitriles and amides of carbonic acids. The culturing of cells with acrylonitrile and acrylamide yielding maximum respiratory activity was studied. The optimum conditions for measurements and maintenance of respiratory activity were found. Curves for the linear concentration dependence of cell respiratory activity on 0.01–0.5 mM acrylonitrile, 0.025–1.0 mM acetonitrile, and 0.01–0.1 mM acrylamide were plotted. The selectivity of cell respiratory activity for some substrates was analyzed.  相似文献   

7.
In this study, an amidohydrolase activity of amidase in whole cells of Rhodococcus sp. MTB5 has been used for the biotransformation of aromatic, monoheterocyclic and diheterocyclic amides to corresponding carboxylic acids. Benzoic acid, nicotinic acid and pyrazinoic acid are carboxylic acids which have wide industrial applications. The amidase of this strain is found to be inducible in nature. The biocatalytic conditions for amidase present in the whole cells of MTB5 were optimized against benzamide. The enzyme exhibited optimum activity in 50?mM potassium phosphate buffer pH 7.0. The optimum temperature and substrate concentrations for this enzyme were 50?°C and 50?mM, respectively. The enzyme was quite stable for more than 6?h at 30?°C. It showed substrate specificity against different amides, including aliphatic, aromatic and heterocyclic amides. Under optimized reaction conditions, the amidase is capable of converting 50?mM each of benzamide, nicotinamide and pyrazinamide to corresponding acids within 100, 160 and 120?min, respectively, using 5?mg dry cell mass (DCM) per mL of reaction mixture. The respective percent conversion of these amides was 95.02%, 98.00% and 98.44% achieved by whole cells. The amidase in whole cells can withstand as high as 383?mM concentration of product in a reaction mixture and above which it undergoes product feedback inhibition. The results of this study suggest that Rhodococcus sp. MTB5 amidase has the potential for large-scale production of carboxylic acids of industrial value.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Nitrilase fromRhodococcus rhodochrous J1 catalyses the hydrolysis of nitriles to acids without the formation of amides. TheRhodococcus nitrilase exhibited regiospecificity for dicyanobenzenes. Three- and 4-cyanobenzoic acids were synthesized from isophthalonitrile and terephthalonitrile, respectively, with conversion ratios of more than 90% using theRhodococcus nitrilase.  相似文献   

9.
Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165, a nitrile-transforming organism was isolated from temperate forest soil of Himalayas. The nitrilase (EC 3.5.5.2) activity of this organism had higher substrate specificity toward aromatic nitriles (benzonitrile, 3-cyanopyridine and 4-cyanopyridine) and unsaturated aliphatic nitrile (acrylonitrile) in comparison to saturated aliphatic nitriles (acetonitrile, propionitrile, butyronitrile and isobutyronitrile) nitrile and arylacetonitrile (phenylacetonitrile and indole-3-acetonitrile). The nitrilase of Rhodococcus sp. NDB 1165 was inducible in nature and propionitrile proved to be an efficient inducer. However, the salts of ferrous and cobalt ions had an inhibitory effect. Under optimized reaction conditions (pH 8.0 and temperature 45°C) the nitrilase activity of this organism was 2.39 ± 0.07 U/mg dry cell mass (dcm). The half-life of this enzyme was 150 min and 40 min at 45°C and 50°C respectively. However, it was quite stable at 40°C and around 58 % activity was retained even after 6 h at this temperature. The V max and K m value of this nitrilase were 1.67 μmol/ml min and 0.1 M respectively using 3-cyanopyridine as substrate. However, the decrease in V max and K m values (0.56 μmol/ml min and 0.02 M, respectively) were ␣observed at >0.05 M 3-cyanopyridine which revealed that this enzyme experienced uncompetitive inhibition at higher substrate concentrations. Under optimized reaction conditions, 1.6 M 3-cyanopyridine was successfully converted in to nicotinic acid using 2.0 mg resting cells (dcm)/ml reaction mixture in 11 h. This is the highest production of nicotinic acid i.e. 8.95 mg/mg resting cells (dcm)/h as compared to nitrilase systems reported hitherto.  相似文献   

10.
Biocatalytic transformations converting aromatic and arylaliphatic nitriles into the analogous related amide or acid were investigated. These studies included synthesis of the -substituted nitrile 3-hydroxy-3-phenylpropionitrile, subsequent enrichment and isolation on this substrate of nitrile-degrading microorganisms from the environment, and a comparative study of enzymatic reactions of nitriles by resting cell cultures and enzymes. Each biocatalyst exhibited a distinctive substrate selectivity profile, generally related to the length of the aliphatic chain of the arylaliphatic nitrile and the position of substituents on the aromatic ring or aliphatic chain. Cell-free nitrilases generally exhibited a narrower substrate range than resting whole cells of Rhodococcus strains. The Rhodococcus strains all exhibited nitrile hydratase activity and converted -hydroxy nitriles (but did not demonstrate enantioselectivity on this substrate). The biocatalysts also mediated the synthesis of a range of -hydroxy carboxylic acids or amides from aldehydes in the presence of cyanide. The use of an amidase inhibitor permits halting the nitrile hydratase/amidase reaction at the amide intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
A bacterial strain capable of utilizing E-pyridine-3-aldoxime as a nitrogen source was isolated from soil after a 4-month acclimation period and was identified as Rhodococcus sp. The strain contained a novel aldoxime dehydration activity that catalyzed a stoichiometric dehydration of E-pyridine-3-aldoxime to form 3-cyanopyridine. The enzyme activity was induced by various aldoximes and nitriles. The strain metabolized the aldoxime as follows: E-pyridine-3-aldoxime was dehydrated to form 3-cyanopyridine, which was converted to nicotinamide by a nitrile hydratase, and the nicotinamide was successively hydrolyzed to nicotinic acid by an amidase. Received: 21 January 1998 / Accepted: 12 May 1998  相似文献   

12.
To produce acrylamide from acrylonitrile by use of a new enzyme, nitrile hydratase, a number of nitrile-utilizing microorganisms were screened for the enzyme activity by an intact cell system. An isobutyronitrile-utilizing bacterium, strain B23, showed the best productivity among 186 strains tested. The strain was identified taxonomically as Pseudomonas chlor or aphis. The culture and reaction conditions for the production were studied for the strain. Under the optimum conditions, 400 grams/liter of acrylamide was produced in 7.5 hr. The yield was nearly 100% with a trace amount of acrylic acid. The cell-free extract of the strain showed strong activity of nitrile hydratase toward acrylonitrile and extremely low activity of amidase toward acrylamide.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Forty yeast strains were screened for nitrile-hydrolysing activity. Among them Kluyveromyces thermotolerans MGBY 37 exhibited highest nitrile-hydrolysing activity (0.030 μmol/h/mg dry cell weight). This yeast contained a two-enzyme system i.e. nitrile hydratase (NHase, EC 4.2.1.84) and amidase (EC 3.5.1.4) for the hydrolysis of nitriles/amides to corresponding acids and ammonia. However, these enzymes had more affinity for N-heterocyclic aromatic and aromatic nitriles/amides rather than unsaturated and saturated aliphatic nitriles/amides. The NHase–amidase activity was constitutively produced by K. thermotolerence MGBY 37. Addition of acetonitrile in the medium enhanced the production of this activity while other nitriles and amides lowered the production of NHase–amidase activity. This organism thus exhibited two types of amidase i.e. a constitutive amidase having affinity for N-heterocyclic aromatic, unsaturated and saturated aliphatic amides and another inducible amidase with affinity for aromatic amides. Formamide proved to be the best inducer of the latter amidase activity. This is the first report on nitrile- and amide-hydrolysing activity in Kluyveromyces.  相似文献   

14.
A fungus with the ability to utilize a metal-cyano compound, tetracyanonickelate (II) {K2[Ni (CN)4]; TCN}, as its sole source of nitrogen was isolated from soil and identified as Fusarium oxysporum N-10. Both intact mycelia and cell-free extract of the strain catalyzed hydrolysis of TCN to formate and ammonia and produced formamide as an intermediate, thereby indicating that a hydratase and an amidase sequentially participated in the degradation of TCN. The enzyme catalyzing the hydration of TCN was purified approximately ten-fold from the cell-free extract of strain N-10 with a yield of 29%. The molecular mass of the active enzyme was estimated to be 160 kDa. The enzyme appears to exist as a homotetramer, each subunit having a molecular mass of 40 kDa. The enzyme also catalyzed the hydration of KCN, with a cyanide-hydrating activity 2 × 104 times greater than for TCN. The kinetic parameters for TCN and KCN indicated that hydratase isolated from F. oxysporum was a cyanide hydratase able to utilize a broad range of cyano compounds and nitriles as substrates. Received: 9 August 1999 / Received revision: 13 September 1999 / Accepted: 24 September 1999  相似文献   

15.
Effects of some nitriles and amides, as well as glucose and ammonium, on the growth and the nitrile hydratase (EC 4.2.1.84) activity of the Rhodococcus sp. strain gt1 isolated from soil were studied. The activity of nitrile hydratase mainly depended on carbon and nitrogen supply to cells. The activity of nitrile hydratase was high in the presence of glucose and ammonium at medium concentrations and decreased at concentrations of glucose more than 0.3%. Saturated unsubstituted aliphatic nitriles and amides were found to be a good source of nitrogen and carbon. However, the presence of nitriles and amides in the medium was not absolutely necessary for the expression of the activity of nitrile hydratase isolated from the Rhodococcus sp. strain gt1.  相似文献   

16.
Summary TheBrevibacterium sp. R 312 strain possesses a nitrile-hydratase and an amidase, both with a wide substrate spectrum. These two enzymes can be used for the bioconversion of nitriles into the corresponding organic acids: the actions of three types of compounds (nitriles, amides and acids) on the activity of the amidase are reported in the present work.  相似文献   

17.
Microbial nitrilases are biocatalysts of interest and the enzyme produced using various inducers exhibits altered substrate specificity, which is of great interest in bioprocess development. The aim of the present study is to investigate the nitrilase-producing Alcaligenes faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) for its ability to transform various nitriles in the presence of different inducers after optimization of various parameters for maximum enzyme production and activity. The production of A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) nitrilase was optimum with glucose (1.0%), acrylonitrile (0.1%) at pH 7.0. The nitrilase activity of A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) was optimum at 35 °C, pH 8.0 and the enzyme was stable up to 6 h at 50 °C. The nitrilase enzyme produced using different inducers was investigated for substrate specificity. The enzyme hydrolyzed aliphatic, heterocyclic and aromatic nitriles with different substitutions. Acrylonitrile was the most preferred substrate (~40 U) as well as inducer. Benzonitrile was hydrolyzed with almost twofold higher relative activity than acrylonitrile when it was used as an inducer. The versatile nitrilase-producing A. faecalis MTCC 10757 (IICT-A3) exhibits efficient conversion of both aliphatic and aromatic nitriles. The aromatic nitriles, which show not much or no affinity towards nitrilase from A. faecalis, are hydrolyzed effectively with this nitrilase-producing organism. Studies are in progress to exploit this organism for synthesis of industrially important compounds.  相似文献   

18.
Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1, of which the high-Mr nitrile hydratase has been used for the industrial manufacture of acrylamide from acrylonitrile, produced at least two amidases differing in substrate specificity, judging from the effects of various amides on amidase activity in this strain. These amidases seemed to be inducible enzymes depending on amide compounds.  相似文献   

19.
A bacterial strain Paracoccus sp. SKG capable of utilizing acetonitrile as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen was isolated from the chemical waste samples. The molecular phylogram generated using the complete sequence of 16S rDNA of the strain SKG showed close links to the bacteria grouped under Brucellaceae family, that belongs to the class alphaproteobacteria. Specifically, the 16S rDNA sequence of strain SKG has shown 99% similarity to Paracoccus sp. This bacterium has also shown impressive growth on aliphatic nitriles like acetonitrile, propionitrile, acrylonitrile, valeronitrile and their corresponding amides. The nitriles degradation has led to the accumulation of ammonia and respective carboxylic acids. The acetonitrile grown cells showed the release of ammonia that contributes to the increase in pH of the medium. However, glucose grown cells failed to produce ammonia, thus indicating the inducible nature of acetonitrile degrading enzymes in Paracoccus sp. SKG. Nitrile hydratase and amidase are the two key enzymes involved in the degradation of acetonitrile. Degradation of acetonitrile in Paracoccus sp. SKG follows the bi-enzymatic pathway. Further, this strain is capable of degrading acetonitrile in the presence of other organic solvents such as methanol, ethanol and dimethylformamide. Therefore, this strain is efficiently used for the treatment of HPLC waste stream containing acetonitrile in the presence of other organic solvents.  相似文献   

20.
A nitrilase-producing strain ZJUTB06-99, capable of biotransforming acrylonitrile into acrylic acid, was newly isolated from soil samples. Based on the morphology, physiological tests, ATB system and its 16S rDNA sequence, strain ZJUTB06-99 was identified as Arthrobacter nitroguajacolicus. Optimal reaction conditions were investigated by the manipulation and measurement of various parameters including pH, temperature and certain cationic metals. The highest nitrilase activity was obtained when reaction was carried out at a pH of 6.5 phosphate buffer and in temperature of 40 °C water bath. The nitrilase of A. nitroguajacolicus ZJUTB06-99 exhibited excellent thermostability. Nitrilase activity was strongly inhibited by Hg2+, Ag+ and Cu2+, but Ni2+ and Ca2+ increased enzyme activity to 163% and 158%, respectively. The investigation of substrates spectrum showed that A. nitroguajacolicus ZJUTB06-99 exhibited the highest nitrilase activity towards aromatic nitriles such as phenylacetonitrile. However, no detectable activity was recorded when any of the tested amides were used as substrates.  相似文献   

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