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1.
A novel enzyme, l-carnitine amidase, was purified about 140-fold from a newly screened microorganism (DSM 6320) to yield a homogeneous protein. The native enzyme has a molecular mass of 125 kDa (gel filtration) and consists of two identical subunits as determined by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Edman degradation. The pH optimum was found around pH 8.5. Out of 60 chemicals tested as substrates (amides of various aliphatic and aromatic acids, nitriles, amino acid amides and dipeptide amides) the amidase hydrolysed only l-carnitine amide. The Michaelis constant (Km) was found to be 11.6 mm, and the pure protein had a specific activity of 328 units/mg. Complex kinetics were observed with the racemic mixture of d,l-carnitine amide as starting material during enzymatic hydrolysis. Correspondence to: M.-R. Kula  相似文献   

2.
A constitutively expressed thermoactive amidase from the thermophilic actinomycete Pseudonocardia thermophila was purified to homogeneity by applying hydrophobic interaction, anion exchange and gel filtration chromatography, giving a yield of 26% and a specific activity of 19.5 units mg–1. The purified enzyme has an estimated molecular mass of 108 kDa and an isoelectric point of 4.2. The amidase is active at a broad pH range (pH 4–9) and temperature range (40–80°C) and has a half-life of 1.2 h at 70°C. Inhibition of enzyme activity was observed in the presence of metal ions, such as Co2+, Hg2+, Cu2+, Ni2+, and thiol reagents. The amidase has a broad substrate spectrum, including aliphatic, aromatic and amino acid amides. The presence of a double bond or a methyl group near the carboxamide group of aliphatic and amino acid amides enhances the enzymatic activity. Among aromatic amides with substitutions at the o-, m-, or p-position, the p-substituted amides are the preferred substrates. The highest acyl transferase activity was detected with hexanoamide, isobutyramide and propionamide. The Km values for propionamide, methacrylamide, benzamide and 2-phenylpropionamide are 7.4, 9.2, 4.9 and 0.9 mM, respectively. The amidase is highly S-stereoselective for 2-phenylpropionamide; and the racemic amide was converted to the corresponding S-acid with an enantiomeric excess of >95% at 50% conversion of the substrate. In contrast, the d,l-tryptophanamide and d,l-methioninamide were converted to the corresponding d,l-acids at the same rate. This thermostable enzyme represents the first reported amidase from a thermophilic actinomycete.  相似文献   

3.
The peptide amidase (Pam) from the gram-negative bacterium Stenotrophomonas maltophilia catalyzes predominantly the hydrolysis of the C-terminal amide bond in peptide amides. Its gene ( pam) was isolated by Southern hybridization using a DNA probe derived from the known N-terminal amino acid sequence. Pam is a member of the amidase signature family and was identified as a periplasmic protein by an N-terminal signal peptide found in the gene. The processed protein consists of 503 amino acids with a molecular mass of 53.5 kDa. The recombinant enzyme with a C-terminal His(6) tag has a monomeric structure and its isoelectric point is 6.3. The dipeptide amide L-Ala- L-Phe-NH(2) is hydrolyzed in the absence of cofactors to L-Ala- L-Phe-OH and ammonia with V(max)=194 U/mg and K(m) <0.5 mM. The natural function of Pam remains unclear. Chymostatin ( K(i)<0.3 microM) and Pefabloc SC ( K(i) not determined) were identified as inhibitors. When the gene was expressed in Escherichia coli on a 12-l scale, the specific activity in the crude extract was 60 U/mg, compared to 0.24 U/mg in S. maltophilia. In the expression system, Pam made up about 31% of the total soluble cell protein. From 75 g wet cells, 2.1 g of >95% pure enzyme was obtained, which corresponds to a total activity of 416,000 units.  相似文献   

4.
Brevundimonas diminuta TPU 5720 produces an amidase acting l-stereoselectively on phenylalaninamide. The enzyme (LaaABd) was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by ammonium sulfate fractionation and four steps of column chromatography. The final preparation gave a single band on SDS-PAGE with a molecular weight of ≈53,000. The native molecular weight of the enzyme was about 288,000 based on gel filtration chromatography, suggesting that the enzyme is active as a homohexamer. It had maximal activity at 50°C and pH 7.5. LaaABd lost its activity almost completely on dialysis against potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0), and the amidase activity was largely restored by the addition of Co2+ ions. The enzyme was, however, inactivated in the presence of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid even in the presence of Co2+, suggesting that LaaABd is a Co2+-dependent enzyme. LaaABd had hydrolyzing activity toward a broad range of l-amino acid amides including l-phenylalaninamide, l-glutaminamide, l-leucinamide, l-methioninamide, l-argininamide, and l-2-aminobutyric acid amide. Using information on the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme, the gene encoding LaaABd was cloned from the chromosomal DNA of the strain and sequenced. Analysis of 4,446 bp of the cloned DNA revealed the presence of seven open-reading frames (ORFs), one of which (laaA Bd ) encodes the amidase. LaaABd is composed of 491 amino acid residues (calculated molecular weight 51,127), and the deduced amino acid sequence exhibits significant similarity to that of ORFs encoding hypothetical cytosol aminopeptidases found in the genomes of Caulobacter crescentus, Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Rhodopseudomonas palustris, Mesorhizobium loti, and Agrobacterium tumefaciens, and leucine aminopeptidases, PepA, from Rickettsia prowazekii, Pseudomonas putida ATCC 12633, and Escherichia coli K-12. The laaA Bd gene modified in the nucleotide sequence upstream from its start codon was overexpressed in an E. coli transformant. The activity of the recombinant LaaABd in cell-free extracts of the E. coli transformant was 25.9 units mg−1 with l-phenylalaninamide as substrate, which was 50 times higher than that of B. diminuta TPU 5720.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Foliar fertilization has received considerable attention in recent years. Because of the importance of amides and urea as N sources, this work was carried out to study the enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of these compounds in plant leaves. The methods developed for assay of these enzymes in plants involve determination by steam distillation of the NH4 +–N produced by amidase or urease activity when plant materials are incubated at 37°C with buffered (0.1M THAM pH 8.0) amide solution or buffered (0.1M THAM pH 7.5) urea solution, respectively. Amidase and urease were detected in 21 diverse plants in the families of Gramineae and Leguminosae. Results showed that amidase and urease have optimum activities at buffer pH values of 8.0 and 7.5, respectively. Both amidase and urease activities were decreased significantly upon freezing or air-drying of plant samples before enzyme assay. These differences were proportional to the original activities of fresh plant materials. Studies on the effect of temperature on amidase and urease activities showed that these enzymes are inactivated at temperatures above 60 and 70°C, respectively. The energy of activation of the reaction catalyzed by amidase and urease in plants, expressed in kJ·mole–1, ranged from 44.0 to 51.2 (avg.=47.1) and from 43.1 to 56.5 (avg.=51.2) when formamide and urea were used as substrates, respectively. The apparent Km constants of these enzymes varied among the plant samples studied. By using the Lineweaver-Burk plot, the Km values for amidase when formamide was used as a substrate ranged from 2.0 to 9.4 (avg.=5.8 mM) and for urease ranged from 0.4 to 1.6 (avg.=0.8 mM). The Vmax values of 7 plant samples, expressed in g of NH4 +–N produced/0.1 g of plant materials/2h, ranged from 137 to 514 for amidase and from 29 to 123 for urease. The importance of these enzymes in application of amides and urea to plant leaves is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
α-Chymotrypsin-catalyzed peptide synthesis was carried out between an N-protected D-amino acid ester and an L-amino acid amide (acyl donor, 10 mM; acyl acceptor, 50 mM; enzyme, 2 mg ml−1; pH 8). By using a highly reactive carbamoylmethyl (Cam) ester as acyl donor, the D-amino acid was incorporated into the N-terminus of the resulting dipeptide amide. N-Protected dipeptide amides bearing D-amino acids such as D-Phe, D-Leu and D-Ala at their N-terminus were synthesized in high yields (up to 80%) in 1–3 h.  相似文献   

7.
An enantioselective amidase from Rhodococcus erythropolis MP50 was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 480,000 and is composed of identical subunits with molecular weights of about 61,000. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence was significantly different from previously published sequences of bacterial amidases. The purified amidase hydrolyzed a wide range of aliphatic and aromatic amides, The highest enzyme activities were found with amides carrying hydrophobic residues, such as pentyl or naphthoyl. The purified enzyme converted racemic 2-phenylpropionamide, naproxen amide [2-(6-methoxy-2-naphthyl) propionamide], and ketoprofen amide [2-(3'-benzoylphenyl)propionamide] to the corresponding S-acids with an enantiomeric excess of >99% and an almost 50% conversion of the racemic amides. The enzyme also hydrolyzed different alpha-amino amides but without significant enantioselectivity.  相似文献   

8.
Biodegradation of toxic amides by immobilized Rhodococcus rhodochrous NHB-2 has been studied to generate data for future development of reactors for the treatment of simulated wastewater containing various toxic amides. The whole resting cells were immobilized in different matrices like agar, polyacrylamide and alginate. Agar gel beads were selected for the treatment of simulated wastewater containing 100mM each acetamide, propionamide, and 10mM of acrylamide and packed in a highly compact five-stage plug flow reactor. The immobilized bacterium worked well in a broad pH range from 5 to 10, with an optimum at 8.7. The apparent K m-value for the turnover of acetamide for the resting cells was determined to be around 40mM at pH 8.5 and 55°C, whereas the K m-value of the purified amidase was predicted to be about 20 mM. This organism exhibited greater turnover of aliphatic amides as compared to aromatic amides. Although these cells showed maximal amide-degrading activity at 55°C, simulated wastewater treatment was carried out at 45°C, because of the greater stability of the amidase activity at that temperature. Of note, indices for overall temperature stability, based on the temperature dependence of apparent first order kinetic temperature denaturation constants, were determined to be –7.9±1.1×10–4, and –13.7±1.3×10–4, –14.5±0.7×10–4, and –13.7±0.8×10–4°Cmin, for free cells and cells immobilized in alginate, agar and polyacrylamide respectively. After 250min the reactor showed maximum degradation of acetamide, propionamide and acrylamide of about 97, 100 and 90%, respectively by using 883 enzyme activity units per reactor stage. The results of this investigation showed that R. rhodochrous NHB-2 expressing thermostable amidase could be used for the efficient treatment of wastewater containing toxic amides. Therefore, we suggest that this microbe has a very high potential for the detoxification of toxic amides from industrial effluents and other wastewaters.  相似文献   

9.
The D-amino acid amidase-producing bacterium was isolated from soil samples using an enrichment culture technique in medium broth containing D-phenylalanine amide as a sole source of nitrogen. The strain exhibiting the strongest activity was identified as Delftia acidovorans strain 16. This strain produced intracellular D-amino acid amidase constitutively. The enzyme was purified about 380-fold to homogeneity and its molecular mass was estimated to be about 50 kDa, on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was active preferentially toward D-amino acid amides rather than their L-counterparts. It exhibited strong amino acid amidase activity toward aromatic amino acid amides including D-phenylalanine amide, D-tryptophan amide and D-tyrosine amide, yet it was not specifically active toward low-molecular-weight D-amino acid amides such as D-alanine amide, L-alanine amide and L-serine amide. Moreover, it was not specifically active toward oligopeptides. The enzyme showed maximum activity at 40 degrees C and pH 8.5 and appeared to be very stable, with 92.5% remaining activity after the reaction was performed at 45 degrees C for 30 min. However, it was mostly inactivated in the presence of phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride or Cd2+, Ag+, Zn2+, Hg2+ and As3+ . The NH2 terminal and internal amino acid sequences of the enzyme were determined; and the gene was cloned and sequenced. The enzyme gene damA encodes a 466-amino-acid protein (molecular mass 49,860.46 Da); and the deduced amino acid sequence exhibits homology to the D-amino acid amidase from Variovorax paradoxus (67.9% identity), the amidotransferase A subunit from Burkholderia fungorum (50% identity) and other enantioselective amidases.  相似文献   

10.

The D-amino acid amidase-producing bacterium was isolated from soil samples using an enrichment culture technique in medium broth containing D-phenylalanine amide as a sole source of nitrogen. The strain exhibiting the strongest activity was identified as Delftia acidovorans strain 16. This strain produced intracellular D-amino acid amidase constitutively. The enzyme was purified about 380-fold to homogeneity and its molecular mass was estimated to be about 50 kDa, on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was active preferentially toward D-amino acid amides rather than their L-counterparts. It exhibited strong amino acid amidase activity toward aromatic amino acid amides including D-phenylalanine amide, D-tryptophan amide and D-tyrosine amide, yet it was not specifically active toward low-molecular-weight D-amino acid amides such as D-alanine amide, L-alanine amide and L-serine amide. Moreover, it was not specifically active toward oligopeptides. The enzyme showed maximum activity at 40°C and pH 8.5 and appeared to be very stable, with 92.5% remaining activity after the reaction was performed at 45°C for 30 min. However, it was mostly inactivated in the presence of phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride or Cd2+, Ag+, Zn2+, Hg2+ and As3+ . The NH2 terminal and internal amino acid sequences of the enzyme were determined; and the gene was cloned and sequenced. The enzyme gene damA encodes a 466-amino-acid protein (molecular mass 49,860.46 Da); and the deduced amino acid sequence exhibits homology to the D-amino acid amidase from Variovorax paradoxus (67.9% identity), the amidotransferase A subunit from Burkholderia fungorum (50% identity) and other enantioselective amidases.

  相似文献   

11.
An amidase (EC 3.5.1.4) in branch 2 of the nitrilase superfamily, from the thermophilic strain Geobacillus pallidus RAPc8, was produced at high expression levels (20 U/mg) in small-scale fermentations of Escherichia coli. The enzyme was purified to 90% homogeneity with specific activity of 1,800 U/mg in just two steps, namely, heat-treatment and gel permeation chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and electron microscopic (EM) analysis of the homogenous enzyme showed the native enzyme to be a homohexamer of 38 kDa subunits. Analysis of the biochemical properties of the amidase showed that the optimal temperature and pH for activity were 50 and 7.0°C, respectively. The amidase exhibited high thermal stability at 50 and 60°C, with half-lives greater than 5 h at both temperatures. At 70 and 80°C, the half-life values were 43 and 10 min, respectively. The amidase catalyzed the hydrolysis of low molecular weight aliphatic amides, with d-selectivity towards lactamide. Inhibition studies showed activation/inhibition data consistent with the presence of a catalytically active thiol group. Acyl transfer reactions were demonstrated with acetamide, propionamide, isobutyramide, and acrylamide as substrates and hydroxylamine as the acyl acceptor; the highest reaction rate being with isobutyramide. Immobilization by entrapment in polyacrylamide gels, covalent binding on Eupergit C beads at 4°C and on Amberlite-XAD57 resulted in low protein binding and low activity, but immobilization on Eupergit C beads at 25°C with cross-linking resulted in high protein binding yield and high immobilized specific activity (80% of non-immobilized activity). Characterization of Eupergit C-immobilized preparations showed that the optimum reaction temperature was unchanged, the pH range was somewhat broadened, and stability was enhanced giving half-lives of 52 min at 70°C and 30 min at 80°C. The amidase has potential for application under high temperature conditions as a biocatalyst for d-selective amide hydrolysis producing enantiomerically pure carboxylic acids and for production of novel amides by acyl transfer.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A 0.1% Triton X-100 extract of human erythrocyte plasma membranes contained high proteolytic activity as determined by a very sensitive assay utilizing3H-acetylated hemoglobin (162 cpm/pmole) as a substrate. Two proteolytic enzymes having optimum activity at pH 3.4 and pH 7.4 were isolated from Sephadex G-100. The protease active at pH 3.4 was 75 times as active as the pH 7.4 enzyme and it was purified 182-fold over the original homogenate and characterized. A linear relationship for activity versus time and activity versus concentration of enzyme was found. The optimum temperature was 37°C and theK m was 1×10–5 m hemoglobin. No enzyme activation was observed with any cation studied and EDTA had no inhibitory effect; (10mm Fe+3 and Hg+2 were inhibitory). The pH 3.4 protease was stable indefinitely at –20°C in 0.1% Triton X-100. Gel electrophoresis was performed on a sodium dodecylsulfate-mercaptoethanol enzyme preparation and two protein bands (mol. wt. 33,000 and 54,000) were evident for the Sephadex G-200 eluate containing the pH 3.4 protease.  相似文献   

13.
An enzyme was identified in human serum which unlike lysozyme cleaved the amide bond between N-acetyl-muramic acid and l-alanine of the peptide side chain of the rigid layer (murein) of Escherichia coli. The N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase released all of the peptide side chains including those to which the lipoprotein is bound. A portion of the peptide side chains of the Micrococcus lysodeikticus murein was also hydrolysed from the polysaccharide chains. E. coli, M. lysodeikticus, Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus were not killed by the amidase. Treatment of E. coli with EDTA or osmotic shock rendered the cells sensitive to the amidase and they were killed. Possible biological functions of the amidase are discussed.The enzyme was separated from lysozyme in human serum. Gel permeation chromatography indicated a molecular weight of the active enzyme of 82,000 while gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate revealed a molecular weight of 75,000. Thus, the enzyme probably consists of a single polypeptide chain. Incubation with neuraminidase rendered the amidase more basic suggesting the release of sialic acid residues. The modified glycoprotein disclosed an increased activity to murein. Enzyme activity was inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate and ethyleneglycol-bis(2-aminomethyl) tetraacetate (EGTA) at 1 and 0.2 mM concentration, respectively, whereas EDTA up to 5 mM was without effect. The amidase was also inactivated by agents that reduce disulfide bridges.  相似文献   

14.
A novel amidase involved in bacterial cyclic imide metabolism was purified from Blastobacter sp. strain A17p-4. The enzyme physiologically functions in the second step of cyclic imide degradation, i.e., the hydrolysis of monoamidated dicarboxylates (half-amides) to dicarboxylates and ammonia. Enzyme production was enhanced by cyclic imides such as succinimide and glutarimide but not by amide compounds which are conventional substrates and inducers of known amidases. The purified amidase showed high catalytic efficiency toward half-amides such as succinamic acid (Km = 6.2 mM; kcat = 5.76 s−1) and glutaramic acid (Km = 2.8 mM; kcat = 2.23 s−1). However, the substrates of known amidases such as short-chain (C2 to C4) aliphatic amides, long-chain (above C16) aliphatic amides, amino acid amides, aliphatic diamides, α-keto acid amides, N-carbamoyl amino acids, and aliphatic ureides were not substrates for the enzyme. Based on its high specificity toward half-amides, the enzyme was named half-amidase. This half-amidase exists as a monomer with an Mr of 48,000 and was strongly inhibited by heavy metal ions and sulfhydryl reagents.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Isobutene production by Rhodotorula minuta IFO 1102 was studied. It was confirmed that the gas species produced by this yeast was isobutene from the result of analysis with a gas chromatograph mass spectrometer. Oxygen supply was essential to the microbial production of isobutene. The optimum pH was found to be approximately pH 6.0 and optimum temperature 25°–27° C. Isobutene production rate was maximal when l-leucine and l-phenylalanine in the medium were being uptaken by the yeast.The results from an investigation of the role of l-leucine and l-phenylalanine suggested that l-leucine was the precursor of isobutene and l-phenylalanine the inducer for the enzyme concerned with isobutene production.  相似文献   

16.
The xylitol dehydrogenase-encoding Arxula adeninivorans AXDH gene was isolated and characterized. The gene includes a coding sequence of 1107 bp encoding a putative 368 amino acid protein of 40.3 kDa. The identity of the gene was confirmed by a high degree of homology of the derived amino acid sequence to that of xylitol dehydrogenases from different sources. The gene activity was regulated by carbon source. In media supplemented with xylitol, D-sorbitol and D-xylose induction of the AXDH gene and intracellular accumulation of the encoded xylitol dehydrogenase was observed. This activation pattern was confirmed by analysis of AXDH promoter – GFP gene fusions. The enzyme characteristics were analysed from isolates of native strains as well as from those of recombinant strains expressing the AXDH gene under control of the strong A. adeninivorans-derived TEF1 promoter. For both proteins, a molecular mass of ca. 80 kDa was determined corresponding to a dimeric structure, an optimum pH at 7.5 and a temperature optimum at 35 °C. The enzyme oxidizes polyols like xylitol and D-sorbitol whereas the reduction reaction is preferred when providing D-xylulose, D-ribulose and L-sorbose as substrates. Enzyme activity exclusively depends on NAD+ or NADH as coenzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The gene for an enantioselective amidase was cloned from Rhodococcus erythropolis MP50, which utilizes various aromatic nitriles via a nitrile hydratase/amidase system as nitrogen sources. The gene encoded a protein of 525 amino acids which corresponded to a protein with a molecular mass of 55.5 kDa. The deduced complete amino acid sequence showed homology to other enantioselective amidases from different bacterial genera. The nucleotide sequence approximately 2.5 kb upstream and downstream of the amidase gene was determined, but no indications for a structural coupling of the amidase gene with the genes for a nitrile hydratase were found. The amidase gene was carried by an approximately 40-kb circular plasmid in R. erythropolis MP50. The amidase was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli and shown to hydrolyze 2-phenylpropionamide, α-chlorophenylacetamide, and α-methoxyphenylacetamide with high enantioselectivity; mandeloamide and 2-methyl-3-phenylpropionamide were also converted, but only with reduced enantioselectivity. The recombinant E. coli strain which synthesized the amidase gene was shown to grow with organic amides as nitrogen sources. A comparison of the amidase activities observed with whole cells or cell extracts of the recombinant E. coli strain suggested that the transport of the amides into the cells becomes the rate-limiting step for amide hydrolysis in recombinant E. coli strains.  相似文献   

18.
An l-amino amidase from Mycobacterium neoaurum ATCC 25795 responsible for the enantioselective resolution of dl-alpha-methyl valine amide was purified and characterized. The purification procedure included ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration, and anion-exchange chromatography, which resulted in a homogeneous preparation of the enzyme with a native molecular mass of 136 kDa and a subunit molecular mass of 40 kDa. The purified enzyme displayed the highest activity at 50 degrees C and at pH 8.0 and 9.5. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by the metal-chelating agent 1,10-phenanthroline, the disulfide-reducing agent dithiothreitol, and the cysteine proteinase inhibitor iodoacetamide. The purified amino amidase showed a unique l-enantioselective activity towards a broad range of both alpha-H- and alpha-alkyl-substituted amino acid amides, with the highest activity towards the cyclic amino acid amide dl-proline amide. No activity was measured with dl-mandelic acid amide nor with the dipeptide l-phenylalanine-l-leucine. The highest catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m) ratio) was measured with dl-alpha-allyl alanine amide, dl-alpha-methyl phenylalanine amide, and dl-alpha-methyl leucine amide.  相似文献   

19.
Summary 3-Hydroxykynureninase was purified from rat liver. The Michaelis constants for L-kynurenine and L-3-hydroxykynurenine were determined to be 2.33 × 10–4 m and 6.85 × 10–5 m, respectively, at pH 8.41 and 37°. With L-kynurenine as substrate, the enzyme was competitively inhibited by L-alanine, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, and several other compounds which contained structural features of either amino acid or aryl portions of the substrate. The effect of pH on the initial velocity, maximal velocity, and Michaelis constant, using L-kynurenine as substrate, was studied. Maximal velocity was strongly pH-dependent, with a maximum at pH 8.4. The Michaelis constant decreased from 11.4 × 10–4 m at pH 7.1 to 1.30 × 10–4 m at pH 9.0. Logarithmic plots of these data showed pKa's for functional groups ionizing in the enzyme-substrate complex and free enzyme active center of 7.6 and 8.5, respectively. Possible groups responsible for these ionizations were discussed.Supported in part by a Faculty Creative Endeavor Grant from Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan.  相似文献   

20.
Amidase is a promising synthesis tool for chiral amides and related derivatives. In the present study, the biochemical properties of the Delftia tsuruhatensis CCTCC M 205114 enantioselective amidase were determined for its potential application in chiral amides synthesis. D. tsuruhatensis CCTCC M 205114 amidase was purified 105.2 fold with total activity recovery of 4.26%. The enzyme is a monomer with a subunit of approximately 50 kDa by analytical gel filtration HPLC and SDS–PAGE. It had a broad substrate spectrum and displayed high enantioselectivity against R-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide and R-mandelic amide. The amidase was applied to enantioselective hydrolysis of R-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide from racemic (R, S)-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide to accumulate S-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide. This enzyme did not require metal ions for the hydrolysis reaction. Its optimal pH and temperature were 8.0 and 35°C, respectively. The K m and V max of the amidase for R-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide were 2.54 mM and 8.37 μmol min−1 mg protein−1, respectively. After 60 min of the reaction, R-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide was completely hydrolyzed, generating S-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide with a yield of 45.9% and an e.e. of above 99%. Therefore, this amidase can serve as a promising producer for S-2, 2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxamide and other amides.  相似文献   

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