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1.
Alginates are (1→4)-linked structural copolyuronans consisting of β-d-mannuronic acid (M) and its C-5 epimer -l-guluronic acid (G). The residue sequence variation is introduced in a unique postpolymerisation step catalysed by a family of C-5 epimerases named AlgE enzymes. The seven known AlgE’s are composed of two modules, designated A and R, present in different number. The molecular details of the structure–function relationship of these seven epimerases, introducing specific residue sequences, are not understood. In this study, single-molecular pair interactions between alginate and AlgE enzymes were investigated using dynamic force spectroscopy. The AlgE enzymes AlgE4 and AlgE6, the recombinant construct PKA1 composed of A- and R-modules from various AlgE’s, as well as separate R- and A-modules were studied. The strength of the protein–mannuronan interaction, when applying a loading rate of 0.6 nN/s, varied from 73 pN (AlgE4) to 144 pN (A-module). The determined potential width, that is, the distance from the activation barrier to the bound substrate molecule, was 0.23 nm for AlgE4, 0.19 nm for AlgE6 and 0.1 nm for the A-module. No attraction was observed between the R-module and the substrate. The observations indicate that the A-module contains the substrate binding site and that the R-module modulates the enzyme–substrate binding strength. The observed AlgE4-polymer residence times, two orders of magnitude longer than expected from kcat reported for AlgE4, not observed for PKA1, led us to propose a processive mode of action of AlgE4.  相似文献   

2.
The bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii produces a family of seven secreted and calcium-dependent mannuronan C-5 epimerases (AlgE1–7). These epimerases are responsible for the epimerization of β-d-mannuronic acid (M) to α-l-guluronic acid (G) in alginate polymers. The epimerases display a modular structure composed of one or two catalytic A-modules and from one to seven R-modules having an activating effect on the A-module. In this study, we have determined the NMR structure of the three individual R-modules from AlgE6 (AR1R2R3) and the overall structure of both AlgE4 (AR) and AlgE6 using small angle x-ray scattering. Furthermore, the alginate binding ability of the R-modules of AlgE4 and AlgE6 has been studied with NMR and isothermal titration calorimetry. The AlgE6 R-modules fold into an elongated parallel β-roll with a shallow, positively charged groove across the module. Small angle x-ray scattering analyses of AlgE4 and AlgE6 show an overall elongated shape with some degree of flexibility between the modules for both enzymes. Titration of the R-modules with defined alginate oligomers shows strong interaction between AlgE4R and both oligo-M and MG, whereas no interaction was detected between these oligomers and the individual R-modules from AlgE6. A combination of all three R-modules from AlgE6 shows weak interaction with long M-oligomers. Exchanging the R-modules between AlgE4 and AlgE6 resulted in a novel epimerase called AlgE64 with increased G-block forming ability compared with AlgE6.  相似文献   

3.
Alginate biosynthesis involves C-5-mannuronan epimerases catalyzing the conversion of beta-D-mannuronic acid to alpha-L-guluronic acid at the polymer level. Mannuronan epimerases are modular enzymes where the various modules yield specific sequential patterns of the converted residues in their polymer products. Here, the interaction between the AlgE4 epimerase and mannuronan is determined by dynamic force spectroscopy. The specific unbinding between molecular pairs of mannuronan and AlgE4 as well as its two modules, A and R, respectively, was studied as a function of force loading rate. The mean protein-mannuronan unbinding forces were determined to be in the range 73-144 pN, depending on the protein, at a loading rate of 0.6 nN/s, and increased with increasing loading rate. The position of the activation barrier was determined to be 0.23 +/- 0.04 nm for the AlgE4 and 0.10 +/- 0.02 nm for its A-module. The lack of interaction observed between the R-module and mannuronan suggest that the A-module contains the binding site for the polymer substrate. The ratio between the epimerase-mannuronan dissociation rate and the catalytic rate for epimerization of single hexose residues suggests a processive mode of action of the AlgE4 epimerase yielding the observed sequence pattern in the uronan associated with the A-module of this enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Alginate epimerases are large multidomain proteins capable of epimerising C5 on β‐D ‐mannuronic acid (M) turning it into α‐L ‐guluronic acid (G) in a polymeric alginate. Azotobacter vinelandii secretes a family of seven epimerases, each of which is capable of producing alginates with characteristic G distribution patterns. All seven epimerases consist of two types of modules, denoted A and R, in varying numbers. Attempts to study these enzymes with solution‐state NMR are hampered by their size—the smallest epimerase, AlgE4, consisting of one A‐ and one R‐module, is 58 kDa, resulting in heavy signal overlap impairing the interpretation of NMR spectra. Thus we obtained segmentally 2H, 15N labeled AlgE4 isotopomeres (A‐[2H, 15N]‐R and [2H, 15N]‐A‐R) by protein trans‐splicing using the naturally split intein of Nostoc punctiforme. The NMR spectra of native AlgE4 and the ligated versions coincide well proving the conservation of protein structure. The activity of the ligated AlgE4 was verified by two different enzyme activity assays, demonstrating that ligated AlgE4 displays the same catalytic activity as wild‐type AlgE4.  相似文献   

5.
The Azotobacter vinelandii genome encodes a family of seven secreted Ca(2+)-dependent epimerases (AlgE1--7) catalyzing the polymer level epimerization of beta-D-mannuronic acid (M) to alpha-L-guluronic acid (G) in the commercially important polysaccharide alginate. AlgE1--7 are composed of two types of protein modules, A and R, and the A-modules have previously been found to be sufficient for epimerization. AlgE7 is both an epimerase and an alginase, and here we show that the lyase activity is Ca(2+)-dependent and also responds similarly to the epimerases in the presence of other divalent cations. The AlgE7 lyase degraded M-rich alginates and a relatively G-rich alginate from the brown algae Macrocystis pyrifera most effectively, producing oligomers of 4 (mannuronan) to 7 units. The sequences cleaved were mainly G/MM and/or G/GM. Since G-moieties dominated at the reducing ends even when mannuronan was used as substrate, the AlgE7 epimerase probably stimulates the lyase pathway, indicating a complex interplay between the two activities. A truncated form of AlgE1 (AlgE1-1) was converted to a combined epimerase and lyase by replacing the 5'-798 base pairs in the algE1-1 gene with the corresponding A-module-encoding DNA sequence from algE7. Furthermore, substitution of an aspartic acid residue at position 152 with glycine in AlgE7A eliminated almost all of both the lyase and epimerase activities. Epimerization and lyase activity are believed to be mechanistically related, and the results reported here strongly support this hypothesis by suggesting that the same enzymatic site can catalyze both reactions.  相似文献   

6.
The industrially important polysaccharide alginate is a linear copolymer of beta-D-mannuronic acid (M) and alpha-L-guluronic acid (G). It is produced commercially by extraction from brown seaweeds, although some of the bacteria belonging to the genera Azotobacter and Pseudomonas also synthesize alginates. Alginates are synthesized as mannuronan, and varying amounts of the M residues in the polymer are then epimerized to G residues by mannuronan C-5-epimerases. The gel-forming, water-binding, and immunogenic properties of the polymer are dependent on the relative amount and sequence distribution of M and G residues. A family of seven calcium-dependent, secreted epimerases (AlgE1-7) from Azotobacter vinelandii have now been characterized, and in this paper the properties of all these enzymes are described. AlgE4 introduces alternating M and G residues into its substrate, while the remaining six enzymes introduce a mixture of continuous stretches of G residues and alternating sequences. Two of the enzymes, AlgE1 and AlgE3, are composed of two catalytically active domains, each introducing different G residue sequence patterns in alginate. These results indicate that the enzymes can be used for production of alginates with specialized properties.  相似文献   

7.
Mannuronan C-5 epimerases are a family of enzymes that catalyze epimerization of alginates at the polymer level. This group of enzymes thus enables the tailor-making of various alginate residue sequences to attain various functional properties, e.g. viscosity, gelation and ion binding. Here, the interactions between epimerases AlgE4 and AlgE6 and alginate substrates as well as epimerization products were determined. The interactions of the various epimerase–polysaccharide pairs were determined over an extended range of force loading rates by the combined use of optical tweezers and atomic force microscopy. When studying systems that in nature are not subjected to external forces the access to observations obtained at low loading rates, as provided by optical tweezers, is a great advantage since the low loading rate region for these systems reflect the properties of the rate limiting energy barrier. The AlgE epimerases have a modular structure comprising both A and R modules, and the role of each of these modules in the epimerization process were examined through studies of the A- module of AlgE6, AlgE6A. Dynamic strength spectra obtained through combination of atomic force microscopy and the optical tweezers revealed the existence of two energy barriers in the alginate-epimerase complexes, of which one was not revealed in previous AFM based studies of these complexes. Furthermore, based on these spectra estimates of the locations of energy transition states (x β), lifetimes in the absence of external perturbation (τ 0) and free energies (ΔG #) were determined for the different epimerase–alginate complexes. This is the first determination of ΔG # for these complexes. The values determined were up to 8 kBT for the outer barrier, and smaller values for the inner barriers. The size of the free energies determined are consistent with the interpretation that the enzyme and substrate are thus not tightly locked at all times but are able to relocate. Together with the observed different affinities determined for AlgE4-polymannuronic acid (poly-M) and AlgE4-polyalternating alginate (poly-MG) macromolecular pairs these data give important contribution to the growing understanding of the mechanisms underlying the processive mode of these enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
The enzymes mannuronan C-5 epimerases catalyze conversion of beta-D-mannuronic acid to alpha-L-guluronic acid in alginates at the polymer level and thereby introduce sequences that have functional properties relevant to gelation. The enzymatic conversion by recombinant mannuronan C-5 epimerases AlgE4 and AlgE2 on alginate type substrates with different degree of polymerization and initial low fraction of alpha-L-guluronic acid was investigated. Essentially no enzymatic activity was found for fractionated mannuronan oligomer substrates with an average degree of polymerization, DP(n), less than or equal 6, whereas increasing the DP(n) yielded increased epimerization activity. This indicates that these enzymes have an active site consisting of binding domains for consecutive residues that requires interaction with 7 or more consecutive residues to show enzymatic activity. The experimentally determined kinetics of the reaction, and the residue sequence arrangement introduced by the epimerization, were modeled using Monte Carlo simulation accounting for the various competing intrachain substrates and assuming either a processive mode of action or preferred attack. The comparison between experimental data and simulation results suggests that epimerization by AlgE4 is best described by a processive mode of action, whereas the mode of action of AlgE2 appears to be more difficult to determine.  相似文献   

9.
AlgE2, AlgE4, and AlgE6 are members of a family of mannuronan C-5 epimerases encoded by Azotobacter vinelandii, and are active in the biosynthesis of alginate, where they catalyze the post-polymerization conversion of beta-D-mannuronic acid residues into alpha-L-guluronic acid residues. To study the kinetics and mode of action of these enzymes, homopolymeric mannuronan and other alginate samples with various composition were epimerized by letting the enzymatic reaction take place in an NMR tube. Series of 1H NMR spectra were recorded to obtain a time-resolved picture of the epimerization progress and the formation of specific monomer sequences. Starting from mannuronan, guluronic acid contents of up to 82% were introduced by the enzymes, and the product specificity, substrate selectivity, and reaction rates have been investigated. To obtain direct information of the GulA-block formation, similar experiments were performed using a 13C-1-enriched mannuronan as substrate. The NMR results were found to be in good agreement with data obtained by a radioisotope assay based on 3H-5-labeled substrates.  相似文献   

10.
The mannuronan C-5-epimerase AlgE2 is one of a family of Ca(2+)-dependent epimerases secreted by Azotobacter vinelandii. These enzymes catalyze the conversion of beta-D-mannuronic acid residues (M) to alpha-L-guluronic acid residues (G) in alginate. AlgE2 had a pH optimum between 6.5 and 7 and a temperature optimum around 55 degrees C. Addition of low molecular weight organic compounds, including buffers, amino acids and osmoprotective compounds, affected the activity of the enzyme. The charge, size and stereochemistry of the added compounds were important. The activity of AlgE2, dissolved in various buffers (same pH), decreased with increasing fraction of positively charged buffer ions. Mono- and divalent metal ions also influenced the activity. When Ca(2+) was omitted only Sr(2+), of the metal ions tested, supported some activity of AlgE2. At high concentration of Ca(2+) (3.3 mM) these ions had a negative effect on the activity, whereas at low Ca(2+) concentration (0.58 mM) the activity was enhanced by addition of Sr(2+), and to some degree also by addition of Mg(2+) and Mn(2+). During epimerization AlgE2 occasionally causes cleavage of the alginate chain. These chain breaks could not be prevented by changes in the conditions during the epimerization. The composition and sequential structure of epimerized alginate was not altered by changes in the epimerization conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The mannuronan C-5-epimerase AlgE2 is one of a family of Ca2+-dependent epimerases secreted by Azotobacter vinelandii. These enzymes catalyze the conversion of β- -mannuronic acid residues (M) to - -guluronic acid residues (G) in alginate. AlgE2 has been produced by fermentation with a recombinant strain of Escherichia coli, isolated and partially purified. Epimerization with AlgE2 increased the content of G-residues in different alginates from starting values of 0–45% up to approximately 70%. The new G-residues were mainly present in short blocks. Although G-residues may be introduced next to pre-existing G-residues, AlgE2 was not able to epimerize strictly alternating MG-structures. The epimerization with AlgE2 was greatly affected by the concentration of Ca2+. The type of alginate used as substrate affected the reaction rate and the reaction pattern especially at low Ca2+ concentration. AlgE2 appears to act by a preferred attack mechanism where the enzyme associates with different sequences in the alginate depending on the concentration of Ca2+. During epimerization, AlgE2 occasionally causes cleavage of the alginate chain. The observed frequency corresponds to 1–3 breaks per 1,000 M-units epimerized.  相似文献   

12.
The Azotobacter vinelandii mannuronan C-5 epimerases AlgE1-7 can be used to improve the properties of the commercially important polysaccharide alginate that is widely used in a variety of products, such as food and pharmaceuticals. Since lactic acid bacteria are generally regarded as safe, they are attractive candidates for production of the epimerases. A. vinelandii genes are GC-rich, in contrast to those of lactic acid bacteria, but we show here that significant expression levels of the epimerase AlgE6 can be obtained in Lactococcus lactis using the nisin-controlled expression system. A 1200-fold induction ratio was obtained resulting in an epimerase activity of 23900 dpm mg(-1) h(-1), using a tritiated alginate substrate. The epimerase was detected by Western blotting and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy analysis of its reaction product showed that the enzyme displayed catalytic properties similar to those produced in Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

13.
Alginate is a linear copolymer of beta-d-mannuronic acid and its C-5-epimer, alpha-l-guluronic acid. During biosynthesis, the polymer is first made as mannuronan, and various fractions of the monomers are then epimerized to guluronic acid by mannuronan C-5-epimerases. The Azotobacter vinelandii genome encodes a family of seven extracellular such epimerases (AlgE1 to AlgE7) which display motifs characteristic for proteins secreted via a type I pathway. Putative ATPase-binding cassette regions from the genome draft sequence of the A. vinelandii OP strain and experimentally verified type I transporters from other species were compared. This analysis led to the identification of one putative A. vinelandii type I system (eexDEF). The corresponding genes were individually disrupted in A. vinelandii strain E, and Western blot analysis using polyclonal antibodies against all AlgE epimerases showed that these proteins were present in wild-type culture supernatants but absent from the eex mutant supernatants. Consistent with this, the wild-type strain and the eex mutants produced alginate with about 20% guluronic acid and almost pure mannuronan (< or =2% guluronic acid), respectively. The A. vinelandii wild type is able to enter a particular desiccation-tolerant resting stage designated cyst. At this stage, the cells are surrounded by a rigid coat in which alginate is a major constituent. Such a coat was formed by wild-type cells in a particular growth medium but was missing in the eex mutants. These mutants were also found to be unable to survive desiccation. The reason for this is probably that continuous stretches of guluronic acid residues are needed for alginate gel formation to take place.  相似文献   

14.
AlgE1, AlgE5 and AlgE6 are members of a family of mannuronan C-5 epimerases encoded by the bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii, and are active in the biosynthesis of alginate, where they catalyse the post-polymerization conversion of beta-D-mannuronic acid (M) residues into alpha-L-guluronic acid residues (G). All enzymes show preference for introducing G-residues neighbouring a pre-existing G. They also have the capacity to convert single M residues flanked by G, thus 'condensing' G-blocks to form almost homopolymeric guluronan. Analysis of the length and distribution of G-blocks based on specific enzyme degradation combined with size-exclusion chromatography, electrospray ionization MS, HPAEC-PAD (high-performance anion-exchange chromatography and pulsed amperometric detection), MALDI (matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization)-MS and NMR revealed large differences in block length and distribution generated by AlgE1 and AlgE6, probably reflecting their different degree of processivity. When acting on polyMG as substrates, AlgE1 initially forms only long homopolymeric G-blocks >50, while AlgE6 gives shorter blocks with a broader block size distribution. Analyses of the AlgE1 and AlgE6 subsite specificities by the same methodology showed that a mannuronan octamer and heptamer respectively were the minimum substrate chain lengths needed to accommodate enzyme activities. The fourth M residue from the non-reducing end is epimerized first by both enzymes. When acting on MG-oligomers, AlgE1 needed a decamer while AlgE6 an octamer to accommodate activity. By performing FIA (flow injection analysis)-MS on the lyase digests of epimerized and standard MG-oligomers, the M residue in position 5 from the non-reducing end was preferentially attacked by both enzymes, creating an MGMGGG-sequence (underlined and boldface indicate the epimerized residue).  相似文献   

15.
Díaz N  Suarez D 《Biochemistry》2007,46(31):8943-8952
Herein we investigate the role played by the so-called "structural metal ions" in the catalytic domain of the matrix metalloproteinase 2 enzyme (MMP-2 or gelatinase A). We performed seven molecular dynamics simulations that differ in the number and position of the noncatalytic zinc and calcium ions bound to the MMP-2 catalytic domain. An additional simulation including the three fibronectin-type modules inserted into the catalytic domain was also carried out. The analysis of the trajectories confirms that the binding/removal of the structural ions does not perturb the secondary structure elements but influences the position of several solvent-exposed loop regions that are placed near the active site cleft. The position of these loops modulates the accessibility of important anchorage points for substrate binding that have been identified in the active site groove. On the basis of semiempirical quantum chemical calculations, we estimated the relative free energies of the MMP-2 models, obtaining thus that the binding of two zinc and two calcium ions to the MMP-2 catalytic domain is energetically favored. In this MMP-2 model, which shows the most compact structure, all of the substrate binding sites are readily accessible. Globally, our results help to rationalize at the atomic level the calcium and zinc dependence of the hydrolytic activity catalyzed by the MMPs.  相似文献   

16.
BtuB is a β‐barrel membrane protein that facilitates transport of cobalamin (vitamin B12) from the extracellular medium across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. It is thought that binding of B12 to BtuB alters the conformation of its periplasm‐exposed N‐terminal residues (the TonB box), which enables subsequent binding of a TonB protein and leads to eventual uptake of B12 into the cytoplasm. Structural studies determined the location of the B12 binding site at the top of the BtuB's β‐barrel, surrounded by extracellular loops. However, the structure of the loops was found to depend on the method used to obtain the protein crystals, which—among other factors—differed in calcium concentration. Experimentally, calcium concentration was found to modulate the binding of the B12 substrate to BtuB. In this study, we investigate the effect of calcium ions on the conformation of the extracellular loops of BtuB and their possible role in B12 binding. Using all‐atom molecular dynamics, we simulate conformational fluctuations of several X‐ray structures of BtuB in the presence and absence of calcium ions. These simulations demonstrate that calcium ions can stabilize the conformation of loops 3–4, 5–6, and 15–16, and thereby prevent occlusion of the binding site. Furthermore, binding of calcium ions to extracellular loops of BtuB was found to enhance correlated motions in the BtuB structure, which is expected to promote signal transduction. Finally, we characterize conformation dynamics of the TonB box in different X‐ray structures and find an interesting correlation between the stability of the TonB box structure and calcium binding. Proteins 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Alginate-producing (mucoid) strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa possess a 54-kDa outer membrane (OM) protein (AlgE) which is missing in nonmucoid bacteria. The coding region of the algE gene from mucoid P. aeruginosa CF3/M1 was subcloned in the expression vector pT7-7 and expressed in Escherichia coli. The level of expression of recombinant AlgE was seven times higher than that of the native protein in P. aeruginosa. Recombinant AlgE was found mainly in the OM. A putative precursor protein (56 kDa) of AlgE could be immunologically detected in the cytoplasmic membrane (CM). Surface exposition of AlgE in the OM of E. coli was indicated by labeling lysine residues with N-hydroxysuccinimide-biotin. Secondary-structure analysis suggested that AlgE is anchored in the OM by 18 membrane-spanning beta-strands, probably forming a beta-barrel. Recombinant AlgE was purified, and isoelectric focusing revealed a pI of 4.4. Recombinant AlgE was spontaneously incorporated into planar lipid bilayers, forming ion channels with a single-channel conductance of 0.76 nS in 1 M KCl and a mean lifetime of 0.7 ms. Single-channel current measurements in the presence of other salts as well as reversal potential measurements in salt gradients revealed that the AlgE channel was strongly anion selective. For chloride ions, a weak binding constant (Km = 0.75 M) was calculated, suggesting that AlgE might constitute an ion channel specific for another particular anion, e.g., polymannuronic acid, which is a precursor of alginate. Consistent with this idea, the open-state probability of the channel decreased when GDP-mannuronic acid was added. The AlgE channel was inactivated when membrane voltages higher than +85 mV were applied. The electrophysiological characteristics of AlgE, including its rectifying properties, are quite different from those of typical porins.  相似文献   

18.
The outer membranes of Gram-negative bacteria possess transport proteins essential for uptake of scarce nutrients. In TonB-dependent transporters, a conserved sequence of seven residues, the Ton box, faces the periplasm and interacts with the inner membrane TonB protein to energize an active transport cycle. A critical mechanistic step is the structural change in the Ton box of the transporter upon substrate binding; this essential transmembrane signaling event increases the affinity of the transporter for TonB and enables active transport to proceed. We have solved crystal structures of BtuB, the outer membrane cobalamin transporter from Escherichia coli, in the absence and presence of cyanocobalamin (vitamin B(12)). In these structures, the Ton box is ordered and undergoes a conformational change in the presence of bound substrate. Calcium has been implicated as a necessary factor for the high-affinity binding (K(d) approximately 0.3 nM) of cyanocobalamin to BtuB. We observe two bound calcium ions that order three extracellular loops of BtuB, thus providing a direct (and unusual) structural role for calcium.  相似文献   

19.
The calcium-induced formation of a complex between two isoforms of cobra venom phospholipase A2 reveals a novel interplay between the monomer-dimer and activity-inactivity transitions. The monodispersed isoforms lack activity in the absence of calcium ions while both molecules gain activity in the presence of calcium ions. At concentrations higher than 10 mg/ml, in the presence of calcium ions, they dimerize and lose activity again. The present study reports the crystal structure of a calcium-induced dimer between two isoforms of cobra phospholipase A2. In the complex, one molecule contains a calcium ion in the calcium binding loop while the second molecule does not possess an intramolecular calcium ion. However, there are two calcium ions per dimer in the structure. The second calcium ion is present at an intermolecular site and that is presumably responsible for the dimerization. The calcium binding loops of the two molecules adopt strikingly different conformations. The so-called calcium binding loop in the calcium-containing molecule adopts a normal conformation as generally observed in other calcium containing phospholipase A(2) enzymes while the conformation of the corresponding loop in the calcium free monomer deviates considerably with the formation of a unique intraloop Gly33 (N)-Cys27 (O) = 2.74 A backbone hydrogen bond. The interactions of Arg31 (B) with Asp49 (A) and absence of calcium ion are responsible for the loss of catalytic activity in molecule A while interactions of Arg2 (B) with Tyr52 (B) inactivate molecule B.  相似文献   

20.
The main scope of this paper is the characterization, in terms of viscoelastic and mechanical properties, of acid gels formed from solutions of mannuronan ALG (0%G/0%GG) and its enzymatically epimerised products. The epimerised products were obtained using recombinantly produced mannuronan C5 epimerases named AlgE1 and AlgE4, which catalyse the conversion of mannuronic residues into guluronic (G) and guluronic–mannuronic (GM) blocks, respectively. The products used in this study resulted from either the action of AlgE1 on mannuronan for 5 and 24 h (named ALG(44%G/32%GG) and ALG (68%G/59%GG), respectively) or AlgE4 on mannuronan (named ALG (47%G/0%GG)). d-gluconic acid-δ-lactone (GDL) was used as H+-donor to produce acidic gels. ALG (0%G/0%GG) yields strong, stable solid-like structures. As predicted by circular dichroism measurements performed at different pH, gelation of ALG (47%G/0%GG) occurs at lower values of pH (1) than those obtainable using GDL. Hydrochloric acid was therefore added to ALG (47%G/0%GG) solutions yielding rapid sol–gel transitions and gels with a remarkable resistance to thermal treatment.

The introduction of guluronic residues along the chain (ALG (44%G/32%GG)) causes a reduction in the storage modulus at the equilibrium with respect to that of ALG (0%G/0%GG) and the occurrence of negligible syneresis at the highest polymer concentrations. The increase in the average length of the G blocks (ALG (68%G/59%GG)) is accompanied by a further increase in the storage modulus without the occurrence of any significant syneresis.  相似文献   


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