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1.
Glucan formation catalyzed by two GH-family 70 enzymes, Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dextransucrase and L. mesenteroides NRRL B-1355 alternansucrase, was investigated by combining biochemical and kinetic characterization of the recombinant enzymes and their respective products. Using HPAEC analysis, we showed that two molecules act as initiator of polymerization: sucrose itself and glucose produced by hydrolysis, the latter being preferred when produced in sufficient amounts. Then, elongation occurs by transfer of the glucosyl residue coming from sucrose to the non-reducing end of initially formed products. Dextransucrase preferentially produces an isomaltooligosaccharide series, whose concentration is always low because of the high ability of these products to be elongated and form high molecular weight dextran. Compared with dextransucrase, alternansucrase has a broader specificity. It produces a myriad of oligosaccharides with various alpha-1,3 and/or alpha-1,6 links in early reaction stages. Only some of them are further elongated. Overall alternan polymer is smaller in size than dextran. In dextransucrase, the A repeats often found in C-terminal domain of GH family 70 were found to play a major role in efficient dextran elongation. Their truncation result in an enzyme much less efficient to catalyze high molecular weight polymer formation. It is thus proposed that, in dextransucrase, the A repeats define anchoring zones for the growing chains, favoring their elongation. Based on these results, a semi-processive mechanism involving only one active site and an elongation by the non-reducing end is proposed for the GH-family 70 glucansucrases.  相似文献   

2.
l-DOPA α-glycosides were synthesized by reaction of l-DOPA with sucrose, catalyzed by four different glucansucrases from Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMC, B-742CB, B-1299A, and B-1355C. The glucansucrases catalyzed the transfer of d-glucose from sucrose to the phenolic hydroxyl position-3 and -4 of l-DOPA. The glycosides were fractionated and purified by Bio-Gel P-2 column chromatography, and the structures were determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The major glycoside was 4-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl l-DOPA, and the minor glycoside was 3-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl l-DOPA. The two glycosides were formed by all four of the glucansucrases. The ratio of the 4-O-α-glycoside to the 3-O-α-glycoside produced by the B-512FMC dextransucrase was higher than that for the other three glucansucrases. The glycosylation of l-DOPA significantly reduced the oxidation of the phenolic hydroxyl groups, which prevents their methylation, potentially increasing the use of l-DOPA in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. The use of one enzyme, glucansucrase, and sucrose as the d-glucosyl donor makes the synthesis considerably simpler and cheaper than the formerly published procedure using cyclomaltodextrin and cyclomaltodextrin glucanyltransferase, followed by glucoamylase, and β-amylase hydrolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Dextransucrase (FMCMDS) from Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMCM, a dextransucrase constitutive and hyper-producing strain, catalyzes the synthesis of dextran from sucrose. The coding region for fmcmds was isolated and sequenced. It consisted of an open reading frame (ORF) of 4699 bp, coding for a 1527 amino acid protein with a molecular mass of 170 kDa. However, it showed a dextransucrase activity band at 180 kDa in SDS-PAGE. Only one nucleotide changed in the promoter site and two amino acid residues were changed in the structural gene from that of the parent L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dsrS; an inducible dextransucrase gene of low productivity.  相似文献   

4.
In the present work, the stability of crude dextransucrase from Leuconostoc citreum B-742 was evaluated in synthetic and in cashew apple juice culture broth. Optimum stability conditions for dextransucrase from L. citreum B-742 were different from the reported for its parental industrial strain enzyme (L. mesenteroides B-512F). Crude dextransucrase, from L. citreum B-742, produced using cashew apple juice as substrate, presented higher stability than the crude enzyme produced using synthetic culture medium, showing the same behavior previously reported for dextransucrase from L. mesenteroides B-512F. The crude enzyme presented good stability in cashew apple juice for 48 h at 25°C and pH 6.5.  相似文献   

5.
Dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512 catalyzes the polymerization of dextran from sucrose. The resulting dextran has 95% α-1 → 6 linkages and 5% α-1 → 3 branch linkages. A purified dextransucrase was insolubilized on Bio-Gel P-2 beads (BGD, Bio-Gel-dextransucrase). The BGD was labeled by incubating it with a very low concentration of [14C]sucrose or it was first charged with nonlabeled sucrose and then labeled with a very low concentration of [14C]sucrose. After extensive washings with buffer, the 14C label remained attached to BGD. This labeled material was previously shown to be [14C]dextran and was postulated to be attached covalently at the reducing end to the active site of the enzyme. When the labeled BGD was incubated with a low molecular weight nonlabeled dextran (acceptor dextran) all of the BGD-bound label was released as [14C]dextran whereas essentially no [14C]dextran was released when the labeled BGD was incubated in buffer alone under comparable conditions. The released [14C]dextran was shown to be a slightly branched dextran by hydrolysis with an exodextranase. Acetolysis of the released dextran gave 7.3% of the radioactivity in nigerose. Reduction with sodium borohydride, followed by acid hydrolysis, gave all of the radioactivity in glucose, indicating that the nigerose was exclusively labeled in the nonreducing glucose unit. These results indicated that [14C]dextran was being released from BGD by virtue of the action of the low molecular weight dextran and that this action gave the formation of a new α-1 → 3 branch linkage. A mehanism for branching is proposed in which a C3-OH on an acceptor dextran acts as a nucleophile on C1 of the reducing end of a dextranosyl-dextransucrase complex, thereby displacing dextran from dextransucrase and forming an α-1 → 3 branch linkage. It is argued that the biosynthesis of branched linkages does not require a separate branching enzyme but can take place by reactions of an acceptor dextran with a dextranosyl-dextransucrase complex.  相似文献   

6.
A comparative study of nine assay methods for dextransucrase and related enzymes has been made. A relatively widespread method for the reaction of dextransucrase with sucrose is the measurement of the reducing value of d-fructose by alkaline 3,5-dinitrosalicylate (DNS) and thereby the amount of d-glucose incorporated into dextran. Another method is the reaction with 14C-sucrose with the addition of an aliquot to Whatman 3MM paper squares that are washed three times with methanol to remove 14C-d-fructose and unreacted 14C-sucrose, followed by counting of 14C-dextran on the paper by liquid scintillation counting (LSC). It is shown that both methods give erroneous results. The DNS reducing value method gives extremely high values due to over-oxidation of both d-fructose and dextran, and the 14C-paper square method gives significantly low values due to the removal of some of the 14C-dextran from the paper by methanol washes. In the present study, we have examined nine methods and find two that give values that are identical and are an accurate measurement of the dextransucrase reaction. They are (1) a 14C-sucrose/dextransucrase digest in which dextran is precipitated three times with three volumes of ethanol, dissolved in water, and added to paper and counted in a toluene cocktail by LSC; and (2) precipitation of dextran three times with three volumes of ethanol from a sucrose/dextransucrase digest, dried, and weighed. Four reducing value methods were examined to measure the amount of d-fructose. Three of the four (two DNS methods, one with both dextran and d-fructose and the other with only d-fructose, and the ferricyanide/arsenomolybdate method with d-fructose) gave extremely high values due to over-oxidation of d-fructose, d-glucose, leucrose, and dextran.  相似文献   

7.
Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMC, a constitutive mutant for dextransucrase, was grown on glucose, fructose, or sucrose. The amount of cell-associated dextransucrase was about the same for the three sugars at different concentrations (0.6% and 3%). Enzyme produced in glucose medium was adsorbed on Sephadex G-100 and G-200, but much less enzyme was adsorbed when it was produced in sucrose medium. Sephadex adsorption decreased when the glucose-produced enzyme was preincubated with dextrans of molecular size greater than 10 kDa. The release of dextransucrase activity from Sephadex by buffer (20 mM acetate, pH 5.2) was the highest at 28°–30°C. The addition of dextran to the enzyme stimulated dextran synthesis but had very little effect on the temperature or pH stability. Dextransucrase purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydroxyapatite chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 adsorption did not contain any carbohydrate, and it synthesized dextran, showing that primers are not necessary to initiate dextran synthesis. The purified enzyme had a molecular size of 184 kDa on SDS-PAGE. On standing at 4°C for 30 days, the native enzyme was dissociated into three inactive proteins of 65, 62, and 57 kDa. However, two protein bands of 63 and 59 kDa were obtained on SDS-PAGE after heat denaturation of the 184-kDa active enzyme at 100°C. The amount of 63-kDa protein was about twice that of 59-kDa protein. The native enzyme is believed to be a trimer of two 63-kDa and one 59-kDa monomers.  相似文献   

8.
Dextran is a long chain polymer of d-glucose produced by different bacterial strains including Leuconostoc, Streptococcus and Acetobacter. The bacterial cells from Leuconostoc mesenteroides KIBGE HA1 were immobilized on calcium alginate for dextran production. It was observed that dextran production increases as the temperature increases and after reaching maxima (30 °C) production started to decline. It was also observed that at 50 °C free cells stopped producing dextran, while immobilized cells continued to produce dextran even after 60 °C and still not exhausted. It was found that when 10 g% substrate (sucrose) was used, maximum dextran production was observed. Immobilized cells produced dextran upto 12 days while free cells stopped producing dextran only after 03 days. Molecular mass distribution of dextran produced by immobilized cells is low as compared to free cells.  相似文献   

9.
Reactions of dextransucrase and sucrose in the presence of sugars (acceptors) of low molecular weight have been observed to give a dextran of low molecular weight and a series of oligosaccharides. The acceptor reaction of dextransucrase was examined in the absence and presence of sucrose by using d-[14C]glucose, d-[14C]fructose, and 14C-reducing-end labeled maltose as acceptors. A purified dextransucrase was pre-incubated with sucrose, and the resulting d-fructose and unreacted sucrose were removed from the enzyme by chromatography on columns of Bio-Gel P-6. The enzyme, which migrated at the void volume, was collected and referred to as “charged enzyme”. The charged enzyme was incubated with 14C-acceptor in the absence of sucrose. Each of the three acceptors gave two fractions of labeled products, a high molecular weight product, identified as dextran, and a product of low molecular weight that was an oligosaccharide. It was found that all three of the acceptors were incorporated into the products at the reducing end. Similar results were obtained when the reactions were performed in the presence of sucrose, but higher yields of labeled products were obtained and a series of homologous oligosaccharides was produced when d-glucose or maltose was the acceptor. We propose that the acceptor reaction proceeds by nucleophilic displacement of glucosyl and dextranosyl groups from a covalent enzyme-complex by a specific, acceptor hydroxyl group, and that this reaction effects a glycosidic linkage between the d-glucosyl and dextranosyl groups and the acceptor. We conclude that the acceptor reactions serve to terminate polymerization of dextran by displacing the growing dextran chain from the active site of the enzyme; the acceptors, thus, do not initiate dextran polymerization by acting as primers.  相似文献   

10.
A gene, dsrT, encoding a dextransucrase-like protein was isolated from the genomic DNA libraries of Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dextransucrase-like gene. The gene was similar to the intact open reading frames of the dextransucrase gene dsrS of L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F, dextransucrase genes of strain NRRL B-1299 and streptococcal glucosyltransferase genes, but was truncated after the catalytic domain, apparently by the deletion of five nucleotides. dsrT mRNA was produced in this strain L. mesenteroides when cells were grown in a sucrose medum, but at a level of 20% of that of dsrS mRNA. The molecular weight of the dsrT gene product was 150,000 by SDS-PAGE. The product did not synthesize dextran, but had weak sucrose cleaving activity. The insertion of five nucleotides at the putative deletion point in dsrT resulted in an enzyme with a molecular weight of 210,000 and with dextransucrase activity.  相似文献   

11.
The enzyme dextransucrase (sucrose:1, 6-α-D-glucan 6-α-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.5) catalyses the synthesis of exopolysaccharide, dextran from sucrose. This class of polysaccharide has been extensively exploited in pharmaceutical industry as blood volume expander, as stabiliser in food industry and as a chromatographic medium in fine chemical industry because of their nonionic nature and stability. Majority of the dextrans are synthesized from sucrose by dextransucrase secreted mainly by bacteria belonging to genera Leuconostoc, Streptococcus and Lactobacillus. Bulk of the information on purification of extracellular dextransucrase has been generated from Leuconostoc species. Various methods such as precipitation by ammonium sulphate, ethanol or polyethylene glycol, phase partitioning, ultrafiltration and chromatography have been used to purify the enzyme. Purification of dextransucrase is rendered difficult by the presence of viscous dextran in the medium. However, processes like ultra-filtration, salt and PEG precipitation, chromatography and phase partitioning have been standardized and successfully used for higher scale purification of the enzyme. A recombinant dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512F with a histidine tag has been expressed in E. coli cells and purifi ed by immobilized metal ion chromatography. This review reports the available information on purifi cation methods of dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides strains.  相似文献   

12.
Astragalin (kaempferol-3-O-β-d-glucopyranoside, Ast) glucosides were synthesized by the acceptor reaction of a dextransucrase produced by Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMCM with astragalin and sucrose. Each glucoside was purified and their structures were assigned as kaempferol-3-O-β-d-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-O-α-d-glucopyranoside (or kaempferol-3-O-β-d-nigeroside, Ast-G1′) and kaempferol-3-O-β-d-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 6)-O-α-d-glucopyranoside (or kaempferol-3-O-β-d-isomaltoside, Ast-G1) for one glucose transferred, and kaempferol-3-O-β-d-isomaltooligosacharide (Ast-IMO or Ast-Gn; n = 2-8). The astragalin glucosides exhibited 8.3-60.6% higher inhibitory effects on matrix metalloproteinase-1 expression, 18.8-20.3% increased antioxidant effects, and 3.8-18.8% increased inhibition activity of melanin synthesis compared to control (without the addition of compound), depending on the number of glucosyl residues linked to astragalin. These novel compounds could be used to further expand the industrial applications of astragalin glucosides, in particular in the cosmetics industry.  相似文献   

13.
The open reading frame of dsrE563, a dextransucrase gene obtained from a constitutive mutant (CB4-BF563) of Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-1299, consists of 8,511 bp encoding 2,836 amino acid residues. DsrE563 contains two catalytic domains (CD1 and CD2). Two truncated derivative mutants DsrE563ΔCD2ΔGBD (DsrE563-1) and DsrE563ΔCD2ΔVR (DsrE563-2) of DsrE563 were constructed and expressed using the pRSETC vector in Escherichia coli. The derivatives DsrE563-1 (deletion of 1,620 amino acids from the C-terminus) and DsrE563-2 (deletion of 1,258 amino acids from the C-terminus and 349 amino acids from the N-terminus) were expressed as active enzymes. Both enzymes synthesized less-soluble dextran, mainly containing α-1,6 glucosidic linkage. The synthesized less-soluble dextran also had a branched α-1,3 linkage. DsrE563-2 showed 4.5-fold higher dextransucrase activity than that of DsrE563-1 and showed higher acceptor reaction efficiency than that of dextransucrase from L. mesenteroides 512 FMCM when various mono or disaccharides were used as acceptors. Thus, the glucan-binding domain was important for both enzyme expression and dextransucrase activity.  相似文献   

14.
John F. Robyt 《Biologia》2008,63(6):980-988
The mechanisms for the biosynthesis of three polysaccharides are presented: (i) starch synthesized by starch synthase and adenosine diphospho glucose; (ii) dextran synthesized by Leuconostoc mesenteroides B-512FMC dextransucrase and sucrose; and (iii) Acetobacter xylinum cellulose synthesized by cellulose synthase, uridine diphospho glucose, and bactoprenol phosphate. All three enzymes were pulsed with substrates, containing 14C-glucose and chased with the same nonlabeled substrates. When the polysaccharides were isolated, reduced, and hydrolyzed, the pulsed reactions gave 14C-glucitol, which was significantly decreased in the chase reaction. These experiments definitively show that all three polysaccharides are biosynthesized by the addition of glucose to the reducing-ends of the growing polysaccharides and not by the addition to the nonreducing-ends of primers. Additional evidence indicates that glucose and the polysaccharides are covalently attached to the active-sites of the enzymes. A two catalytic-site insertion mechanism at one active-site is proposed for the biosyntheses. Two of the polysaccharides are α-linked glucans, starch and dextran, and cellulose is a β-linked glucan, known for several years to require a bactoprenol lipid phosphate intermediate. It is shown how this intermediate is involved in determining that β-linkages are synthesized. Other β-linked polysaccharides: bacterial cell wall peptidomurein, Salmonella O-antigen polysaccharide, and Xanthanomonas camprestris xanthan, are heteropolysaccharides, with the later two also being hetero-linked polysaccharides, with the β-linkage at the reducing-end of the repeating unit. All three require bactoprenol lipid phosphate intermediates and are biosynthesized by the addition of the repeating units to the reducing-end of a growing polysaccharide chain, with the formation of a β-linkage.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetic behavior of soluble and insoluble forms of dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1299 was investigated with sucrose as substrate and maltose as acceptor. To study the parameters involved, a kinetic model was applied that was previously developed for L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dextransucrase. There are significant correlations between the parameters of the soluble form of B-1299 dextransucrase and those calculated for the B-512F enzyme; that is, their properties are comparable and differ from those of the insoluble form of B-1299 dextransucrase. Whereas the calculated parameters for high maltose concentrations describe the kinetic behavior very well, the time curves for low maltose concentrations were not described correctly. Therefore, the parameters were calculated separately for the two ranges. Copyright 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
A water-soluble dextran was produced by purified dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-640. The dextran was purified by alcohol precipitation. The structure of dextran was determined by FT-IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR and 2-dimensional NMR spectroscopic techniques. NMR techniques (1D 1H, 13C and 2D HMQC) were used to fully assign the 1H and 13C spectra. All the spectral data showed that the dextran contains d-glucose residues in a linear chain with consecutive α(1  6) linkages. No branching was observed in the dextran structure. The viscosity of dextran solution decreased with the increase in shear rate exhibiting a typical non-Newtonian pseudoplastic behavior. The surface morphology of dried and powdered dextran studied using Scanning electron microscopy revealed the cubical porous structure.  相似文献   

17.
Dextransucrase (DSRS) from Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-512F is a glucosyltransferase that catalyzes the synthesis of soluble dextran from sucrose or oligosaccharides when acceptor molecules, like maltose, are present. The L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dextransucrase-encoding gene (dsrS) was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and cloned in an overexpression plasmid. The characteristics of DSRS were found to be similar to the characteristics of the extracellular dextransucrase produced by L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F. The enzyme also exhibited a high homology with other glucosyltransferases. In order to identify critical amino acid residues, the DSRS sequence was aligned with glucosyltransferase sequences and four amino acid residues were selected for site- directed mutagenesis experiments: aspartic acid 511, aspartic acid 513, aspartic acid 551 and histidine 661. Asp-511, Asp-513 and Asp-551 were independently replaced with asparagine and His-661 with arginine. Mutation at Asp-511 and Asp-551 completely suppressed dextran and oligosaccharide synthesis activities, showing that at least two carboxyl groups (Asp-511 and Asp-551) are essential for the catalysis process. However, glucan-binding properties were retained, showing that DSRS has a two-domain structure like other glucosyltransferases. Mutations at Asp-513 and His-661 resulted in greatly reduced dextransucrase activity. According to amino acid sequence alignments of glucosyltransferases, α-amylases or cyclodextrin glucanotransferases, His-661 may have a hydrogen-bonding function. Received: 16 April 1997 / Received revision: 17 June 1997 / Accepted: 23 June 1997  相似文献   

18.
19.
Isomalto-oligosaccharides and dextrans of controlled molecular weight of about 10 and 40 kDa were produced using a simple one-step process using engineered L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F dextransucrase variants. Isomalto-oligosaccharides were produced in a 58% yield by the acceptor reaction with glucose, and reached a degree of polymerization of at least 27 glucosyl units. Reaction conditions for optimal synthesis of dextrans of controlled molecular weight were defined, in respect of initial sucrose concentration and reaction temperature. Thus, we achieved synthesis with impressive yields of 69 and 75% for the 40 and 10 kDa dextran species, respectively. These two dextran sizes are particularly suitable for clinical applications, and are of great industrial demand. Compared with the traditional processes based on chemical hydrolysis and fractionation, which achieve only low yields, the new enzymatic methods offer improvement in quantity, quality and efficiency.  相似文献   

20.
When grown in glucose or fructose medium in the absence of sucrose, Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1299 produces two distinct extracellular dextransucrases named glucose glucosyltransferase (GGT) and fructose glucosyltransferase (FGT). The production level of GGT and FGT is 10 to 20 times lower than that of the extracellular dextransucrase sucrose glucosyltransferase (SGT) produced on sucrose medium (traditional culture conditions). GGT and FGT were concentrated by ultrafiltration before sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. Their molecular masses were 183 and 186 kDa, respectively, differing from the 195 kDa of SGT. The structural analysis of the dextran produced from sucrose and of the oligosaccharides synthesized by acceptor reaction in the presence of maltose showed that GGT and FGT are two different enzymes not previously described for this strain. The polymer synthesized by GGT contains 30% α(1→2) linkages, while FGT catalyzes the synthesis of a linear dextran only composed of α(1→6) linkages.  相似文献   

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