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1.
A novel α-l-fucosidase was found in the culture broth of Fusarium oxysporum isolated from a soil sample when the fungus was cultivated on a liquid active sludge hydrolyzate medium. The enzyme was not found in the culture broth of the fungus grown on glucose medium. The α-l-fucosidase from the fungus was purified to homogeneity by Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after ammonium sulfate fractionation and successive column chromatographies on DEAE-Sephadex A-50, hydroxylapatite, Sephadex G-150 and Con A-Sepharose 4B. The molecular weight was estimated to be about 80,000 by gel filtration, and the optimum pH was found to be 4.5. The enzyme was relatively stable in the pH range of 4~8 and up to 45°C on 10min incubation. The Km value for p-nitrophenyl α-l-fucoside was 0.87 mm. The enzyme showed a novel substrate specificity in that it could hydrolyze porcine mucin and blood group substances of human saliva besides nitrophenyl compounds. Such a specificity has not been found for any other α-l-fucosidase from various sources.  相似文献   

2.
Acremonium sp. 15 a fungus isolated from soil, produces an extracellular enzyme system degrading cyclic (1→2)-β-d-glucan. This enzyme was found to be a mixture of endo-(1→2)-β-d-glucanase and β-d-glucosidase. The (1→2)-β-d-glucanase was purified to homogeneity shown by disc-electrophoresis after SP-Sephadex column chromatography, Sephadex G-75 gel filtration, and rechromatography on SP-Sephadex. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 3.6 × 104 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was pH 9.6. The enzyme was most active at pH 4.0—4.5, and stable up to 40°C in 20 mm acetate buffer (pH 5.0) for 2 hr of incubation. This enzyme hydrolyzed only (l→2)-β-d-glucan and did not hydrolyze laminaran, curdlan, or CM-cellulose. The hydrolysis products from cyclic (1→2)-β-d-glucan were mainly sophorose.

The β-d-glucosidase was purified about 4000-fold. The rate of hydrolysis of the substrates by this β-d-glucosidase decreased in the following order: β-nitrophenyl-β-d-glucoside, sophorose, phenyl-β-d-glucoside, laminaribiose, and salicin. This enzyme has strong transfer action even at the low concentration of 0.75 mm substrate.  相似文献   

3.
N-Benzoyl-l-alanine amidohydrolase was purified from a cell-free extract of Corynebacterium equi H-7 which was grown in a medium containing hippuric acid as the sole carbon source. The purified enzyme was homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight was 230,000 and the enzyme consisted of six subunits, identical in molecular weight (approximately 40,000). The isoelectric point of the enzyme was pH 4.6. The optimum pH of the enzyme reaction was 8.0 and the enzyme was stable from pH 7.0 to 8.0. The enzyme hydrolyzed N-benzoyl-l-alanine, N-benzoylglycine, and N-benzoyl-l-aminobutyric acid. The Km values for these substrates were 4.3 mm, 6.7 mm, and 4.3 mm, respectively. The enzyme was activated by Co2+.  相似文献   

4.
l-Fucose (l-galactose) dehydrogenase was isolated to homogeneity from a cell-free extract of Pseudomonas sp. No 1143 and purified about 380-fold with a yield of 23 %. The purification procedures were: treatment with polyethyleneimine, ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatographies on phenyl-Sepharose and DEAE-Sephadex, preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. The enzyme had a molecular weight of about 34,000. The optimum pH was at 9 — 10.5 and the isoelectric point was at pH 5.1. l-Fucose and l-galactose were effective substrates for the enzyme reaction, but d-arabinose was not so much. The anomeric requirement of the enzyme to l-fucose was the β-pyranose form, and the reaction product from l-fucose was l-fucono- lactone. The hydrogen acceptor for the enzyme reaction wasNADP+, and NAD + could be substituted for it to a very small degree. Km values were 1.9mm, 19mm, 0.016mm, and 5.6mm for l-fucose, l- galactose, NADP+, and NAD+, respectively. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by Hg2 +, Cd2 +, and PCMB, but metal-chelating reagents had almost no effect. In a preliminary experiment, it was indicated that the enzyme may be usable for the measurement of l-fucose.  相似文献   

5.
D-Galacturonic acid reductase, a key enzyme in ascorbate biosynthesis, was purified to homogeneity from Euglena gracilis. The enzyme was a monomer with a molecular mass of 38–39 kDa, as judged by SDS–PAGE and gel filtration. Apparently it utilized NADPH with a Km value of 62.5±4.5 μM and uronic acids, such as D-galacturonic acid (Km=3.79±0.5 mM) and D-glucuronic acid (Km=4.67±0.6 mM). It failed to catalyze the reverse reaction with L-galactonic acid and NADP+. The optimal pH for the reduction of D-galacturonic acid was 7.2. The enzyme was activated 45.6% by 0.1 mM H2O2, suggesting that enzyme activity is regulated by cellular redox status. No feedback regulation of the enzyme activity by L-galactono-1,4-lactone or ascorbate was observed. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis revealed that the enzyme is closely related to the malate dehydrogenase families.  相似文献   

6.
d-Arabinose(l-fucose) isomerase (d-arabinose ketol-isomerase, EC 5.3.1.3) was purified from the extracts of d-arabinose-grown cells of Aerobacter aerogenes, strain M-7 by the procedure of repeated fractional precipitation with polyethylene glycol 6000 and isolating the crystalline state. The crystalline enzyme was homogeneous in ultracentrifugal analysis and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Sedimentation constant obtained was 15.4s and the molecular weight was estimated as being approximately 2.5 × 105 by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200.

Optimum pH for isomerization of d-arabinose and of l-fucose was identical at pH 9.3, and the Michaelis constants were 51 mm for l-fucose and 160 mm for d-arabinose. Both of these activities decreased at the same rate with thermal inactivation at 45 and 50°C. All four pentitols inhibited two pentose isomerase activities competitively with same Ki values: 1.3–1.5 mm for d-arabitol, 2.2–2.7 mm for ribitol, 2.9–3.2 mm for l-arabitol, and 10–10.5 mm for xylitol. It is confirmed that the single enzyme is responsible for the isomerization of d-arabinose and l-fucose.  相似文献   

7.
A new enzyme, N-acetyl- d-hexosamine dehydrogenase (N-acety 1-α-d-hexosamine: NAD+ 1-oxidoreductase), was purified to homogeneity on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis from a strain of Pseudomonas sp. about 900-fold with a yield of 12 %. The molecular weight of the enzyme was about 124,000 on gel filtration and 30,000 on SD S-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, respectively. Its isoelectric point was 4.7. The optimum pH was about 10.0. The enzyme was most stable between pH 8.0 and pH 10.5. The highest enzyme activity was observed with N-acetyl-d-glucosamine (Km = 5.3mm) and N-acetyl-d-galactosamine (Km = 0.8mm) as the sugar substrate. But it was not so active on N-acetyl-d-mannosamine. NAD+ was used specifically as the hydrogen acceptor. The anomeric requirement of the enzyme for N-acetyl-d-glucosamine was the α-pyranose form, and the reaction product was N-acetyl-d-glucosaminic acid. The enzyme activity was inhibited by Hg and SDS, but many divalent cations, metal-chelating reagents, and sulfhydryl reagents had no effect.  相似文献   

8.
Branched chain amino acid aminotransferase was partially purified from Pseudomonas sp. by ammonium sulfate fractionation, aminohexyl-agarose and Bio-Gel A-0.5 m column chromatography.

This enzyme showed different substrate specificity from those of other origins, namely lower reactivity for l-isoleucine and higher reactivity for l-methionine.

Km values at pH 8.0 were calculated to be 0.3 mm for l-leucine, 0.3 mm for α-ketoglutarate, 1.1 mm for α-ketoisocaproate and 3.2 mm for l-glutamate.

This enzyme was activated with β-mercaptoethanol, and this activated enzyme had different kinetic properties from unactivated enzyme, namely, Km values at pH 8.0 were calculated to be 1.2 mm for l-leucine, 0.3 mm for α-ketoglutarate.

Isocaproic acid which is the substrate analog of l-leucine was competitive inhibitor for pyridoxal form of unactivated and activated enzymes, and inhibitor constants were estimated to be 6 mm and 14 mm, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
An N-carbamyl-L-amino acid amidohydrolase was purified from cells of Escherichia coli in which the gene for N-carbamyl-L-amino acid amidohydrolase of Pseudomonas sp. strain NS671 was expressed. The purified enzyme was homogeneous by the criterion of SDS–polyacrvlamide gel electrophoresis. The results of gel filtration chromatography and SDS–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis suggested that the enzyme was a dimeric protein with 45-kDa identical subunits. The enzyme required Mn2+ ion (above 1 mM) for the activity. The optimal pH and temperature were 7.5 and around 40°C, respectively, with N-carbamyl-L-methionine as the substrate. The enzyme activity was inhibited by ATP and was iost completely with p-chloromercuribenzoate (1 mM). The enzyme was strictly L-specific and showed a broad substrate specificity for N-carbamyl-L-α-amino acids.  相似文献   

10.
An α-d-galactosidase was purified from the culture filtrate of Corticium rolfsii IFO 6146 by a combination of QAE-Sephadex A-50 and SE-Sephadex C-50 chromatography. The purified enzyme was demonstrated to be free of other possibly interfering glycosidases and glycanases. The maximum activity of the enzyme towards p-nitrophenyl α-d-galactopyrano-side was found to be at pH 2.5 to 4.5, and the enzyme was fairly active at pH 1.1 to 2.0. The enzyme was stable over a pH range 4.0 to 7.0 at 5°C for 72 hr and relatively unstable at pH 1.1 to 2.0 as compared with endo-polygalacturonase, α-l-arabinofuranosidase and β-d-galactosidase produced by C. rolfsii. The enzymic activity was completely inhibited by Hg2+ and Ag+ ions, respectively. Km values were determined to be 0.16 × 10?3 m for p-nitrophenyl α-d-galactopyranoside and 0.26 × 10?3m for o-nitrophenyl α-d-galactopyranoside. The values of Vmax were also determined to be 26.6 μmoles and 28.6 μmoles per min per mg for p- and o-nitrophenyl α-d-galactopyranoside, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
The β-d-glucosidase (EC. 3.2.1.21) activity of Bifidobacterium breve 203 was increased by acclimation with cellobiose, and the enzyme was purified to homogeneity from cell-free extracts of an acclimatized strain of B. breve clb, by ammonium sulfate fractionation and column chromatographies of anion-exchange, gel filtration, Gigapaite, and hydrophobic interaction. This enzyme had not only β- d-glucosidase activity but also β- d-fucosidase activity, which is specific to Bifidobacteria in intestinal flora. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 47,000–48,000 and the enzyme was assumed to be a monomeric protein. The optimum pH and temperature of the enzyme were around 5.5 and 45°C, respectively. The enzyme was stable up to 40°C and between pH 5 and 8. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 4.3 and the Km values for p-nitrophenyl-β-d-glucoside and p-nitrophenyl-β-d-fucoside were 1.3mm and 0.7 mm, respectively. This enzyme had also transferase activity for the β-d-fucosyl group but not for the β-d-glucosyl group. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of this enzyme was similar to those of β-d-glucosidase from other bacteria, actinomycetes, and plants.  相似文献   

12.
NADP-dependent maltose dehydrogenase (NADP-MalDH) was completely purified from the cell free extract of alkalophilic Corynebacterium sp. No. 93–1. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated as 45,000~48,000. The enzyme did not have a subunit structure. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was estimated as pH 4.48. The pH optimum of the enzyme activity was pH 10.2, and it was stable at pH 6 to 8. The temperature optimum was 40°C, and the enzyme was slightly protected from heat inactivation by 1 mm NADP. The enzyme oxidized d-xylose, maltose and maltotriose, and the Km values for these substrates were 150mm, 250 mm and 270 mm, respectively. Maltotetraose and maltopentaose were suitable substrates. The Km value for NADP was 1.5 mm with 100mm maltose as substrate. The primary product of this reaction from maltose was estimated as maltono-δ-lactone, and it was hydrolyzed non-enzymatically to maltobionic acid. The enzyme was inhibited completely by PCMB, Ag+ and Hg2+.  相似文献   

13.
An aminopeptidase was purified from Aspergillus sojae X–816. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 220,000. The isoelectric point was at pH 5.3. The optimum pH for l-leucylglycylglycine was 7.5. The enzyme was stable up to 37°C against temperature treatment for 15 min. Some chelating agents inhibited the enzyme activity. The Km value for l-leucylglycylglycine at pH 7.5 and 37°C was 45 mm. The Km value for l-leucyl-β-naphthylamide at pH 7.0 and 37°C was 2.2 mm.  相似文献   

14.
An aminopeptidase was purified from an aqueous extract of mullet roe in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol by fractionation with ammonium sulfate and column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-200. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 184,000 by gel filtration, and the enzyme appeared to consist of two homogenous subunits. The optimal pH and optimal temperature for activity were 7.4 and 45°C, respectively. Puromycin, p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, and o-phenanthroline inhibited the enzyme n on-competitively (their Ki = 1.34 μm, 0.113mm and 0.145 mm, respectively), while 2-mercaptoethylamine was competitive (Ki = 0.056 mm). The enzyme was also inhibited by l-amino acids, in particular glutamic acid. The enzyme could hydrolyze a variety of α-aminoacyl β-naphthylamides and was most active on l-alanyl-β-naphthylamide. Judging from these properties, the mullet roe aminopeptidase resembles soluble alanyl amino-peptidase [EC 3.4.11.14].  相似文献   

15.
d-Glucose-isomerizing enzyme has been extracted in high yield from d-xylose-grown cells of Bacillus coagulans, strain HN-68, by treating with lysozyme, and purified approximately 60-fold by manganese sulfate treatment, fractionation with ammonium sulfate and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex column. The purified d-glucose-isomerizing enzyme was homogeneous in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and ultracentrifugation and was free from d-glucose-6-phosphate isomerase. Optimum pH and temperature for activity were found to be pH 7.0 and 75°C, respectively. The enzyme required specifically Co++ with suitable concentration for maximal activity being 10?3 m. In the presence of Co++, enzyme activity was inhibited strongly by Cu++, Zn++, Ni++, Mn++ or Ca++. At reaction equilibrium, the ratio of d-fructose to d-glucose was approximately 1.0. The enzyme catalyzed the isomerization of d-glucose, d-xylose and d-ribose. Apparent Michaelis constants for d-glucose and d-xylose were 9×10?2 m and 7.7×10?2 m, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
A tetrathionate-decomposing enzyme that catalyzes the decomposition of tetrathionate into thiosulfate and sulfate was purified to homogeneity from tetrathionate-grown Thiobacillus thiooxidans. The enzyme had an apparent molecular weight of 104,000, and was composed of two identical subunits (MW = 58,000) as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme had an isoelectric point at 9.6 and was most active at pH 3.0–3.5 and 40°C. Enzyme activity was increased approximately 100-fold in the presence of 400 mm sulfate ion. The Michaelis constant of this enzyme for tetrathionate in the presence of 20, 50, and 200 mm of sulfate ion was 2.4 mm. Mercuric and ferric ions completely inhibited the enzyme activity at 1 mm. Though cupric ion up to 0.01 mm markedly stimulated the activity in the presence of 20 mm sulfate ion, a higher concentration (1 mm) rather strongly inhibited the activity. Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) strongly inhibited the activity, but this inhibiton was completely restored by cupric ion.  相似文献   

17.
ω-Amino acid: pyruvate aminotransferase, purified to homogeneity and crystallized from a Pseudomonas sp. F–126, has a molecular weight of 172,000 or 167,000±3000 as determined by the gel-filtration or sedimentation equilibrium method, respectively. The enzyme catalyzes the transamination between various ω-amino acids or amines and pyruvate which is the exclusive amino acceptor. α-Amino acids except l-α-alanine are inert as amino donor. The Michaelis constants are 3.3 mm for β-alanine, 19 mm for 2-aminoethane sulfonate and 3.3 mm for pyruvate. The enzyme has a maximum activity in the pH range of 8.5~10.5. The enzyme is stable at pH 8.0~10.0 and at up to 65°C at pH 8.0. Carbonyl reagents strongly inhibit the enzyme activity. Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate and pyridoxamine 5′-phosphate reactivate the enzyme inactivated by carbonyl reagents. The inhibition constants were determined to be 0.73 mm for d-penicillamine and 0.58 mm for d-cycloserine. Thiol reagents, chelating agents and l-α-amino acids showed no effect on the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

18.
Alcaligenes xylosoxydans subsp. xylosoxydans A-6 (Alcaligenes A-6) produced N-acyl-D-aspartate amidohydrolase (D-AAase) in the presence of N-acetyl-D-aspartate as an inducer. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme had a molecular mass of 56 kDa and was shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to be a monomer. The isoelectric point was 4.8. The enzyme had maximal activity at pH 7.5 to 8.0 and 50°C, and was stable at pH 8.0 and up to 45°C. N-Formyl (Km=12.5 mM), N-acetyl (Km=2.52 mM), N-propionyl (Km=0.194 mM), N-butyryl (Km=0.033 mM), and N-glycyl (Km =1.11 mM) derivatives of D-aspartate were hydrolyzed, but N-carbobenzoyl-D-aspartate, N-acetyl-L-aspartate, and N-acetyl-D-glutamate were not substrates. The enzyme was inhibited by both divalent cations (Hg2+, Ni2+, Cu2+) and thiol reagents (N-ethylmaleimide, iodoacetic acid, dithiothreitol, and p-chloromercuribenzoic acid). The N-terminal amino acid sequence and amino acid composition were analyzed.  相似文献   

19.
Biosynthetic threonine deaminase was purified to an apparent homogeneous state from the cell extract of Proteus morganii, with an overall yield of 7.5%. The enzyme had a s020,w of 10.0 S, and the molecular weight was calculated to be approximately, 228,000. The molecular weight of a subunit of the enzyme was estimated to be 58,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The enzyme seemed to have a tetrameric structure consisting of identical subunits. The enzyme had a marked yellow color with an absorption maximum at 415 nm and contained 2 mol of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate per mol. The threonine deaminase catalyzed the deamination of l-threonine, l-serine, l-cysteine and β-chloro-l-alanine. Km values for l-threonine and l-serine were 3.2 and 7.1 mm, respectively. The enzyme was not activated by AMP, ADP and ATP, but was inhibited by l-isoleucine. The Ki for l-isoleucine was 1.17 mm, and the inhibition was not recovered by l-valine. Treatment with mercuric chloride effectively protected the enzyme from inhibition by l-isoleucine.  相似文献   

20.
The best inducers for D-aminoacylase from Alcaligenes xylosoxydans subsp. xylosoxydans A-6 (Alcaligenes A-6) were a poor substrate, N-acetyl-;-methyl-D-leucine, and an inhibitor, N-acetyl-D-alloisoleucine. The enzyme has been homogeneously purified. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was estimated to be 58,000 by gel filtration. A subunit molecular weight of 52,000 was measured by SD8–PAGE, indicating that the native protein is a monomer. The isoelectric point was 5.2. The enzyme was specific to the D-isomer and hydrolyzed N-acetyl derivatives of D-leucine, D-phenylalanine, D-norleucine, D-methionine, and D-valine, and also N-formyl, N-butyryl, and N-propionyl derivatives of D-leucine. The Km for N-acetyl-D-leucine was 9.8mM. The optimum pH and temperature were 7.0 and 50°C, respectively. The stabilities of pH and temperature were 8.1 and 40°C. D-Aminoacylases from three species of the genus Alcaligenes differ in inducer and substrate specificities, but are similar with respect to molecular weight and N-terminal amino acid sequence.  相似文献   

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