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1.
With improved enzymatic activity and easy accessibility, the recombinant purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNPase) could be a very promising alternative for nucleoside biosynthesis. In our work, the deoD gene encoding PNPase was successfully cloned from Escherichia coli MG1665 and overexpressed in E. coli BL 21(DE3). After optimization of expression conditions including temperature, induction timing and isopropyl-thio-β-D-galactoside (IPTG) concentration, over 70% of expressed total protein was His-tagged PNPase, in the soluble and functional form. Followed assays indicated that the recombinant enzyme exhibited similar substrate specificity and pH preference as the wild type PNPase. Furthermore, the immobilization technology was applied to develop the possible application of recombinant enzyme. Agar from four different polymer carriers was selected as a suitable matrix for whole recombinant cell entrapment. Subsequent enzyme assays, kinetic analysis and stability evaluation of free and immobilized recombinant cells were compared. The results indicated that although the immobilization process reduced the substrate affinity and catalytic efficiency of recombinant cells, it could significantly enhance the stability and reusability of these cells. Finally, the immobilized whole cell biocatalyst was applied to produce ribavirin, as a model nucleoside synthesis reaction. The obtained relative high productivity of ribavirin and quick reaction time suggested the great potential and feasibility of immobilized PNPase in efficient and valuable industrial utilizations.  相似文献   

2.
A continuous fluorimetric assay for ATPase activity.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A new continuous coupled fluorimetric assay is described for ATPases in general. Thus phosphate released from ATP hydrolysis is coupled to the nucleoside phosphorylase reaction using 7-methylguanosine as a fluorescent substrate for the nucleoside phosphorylase reaction. The hydrolysis of 7-methylguanosine leads to 7-methylguanine, which has lower quantum yield and hence can be used to monitor ATP hydrolysis continuously. The method has the potential to be extended to GTPase and nucleotidyltransferase assays.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular mechanism of mRNA degradation in the chloroplast consists of sequential events including endonucleolytic cleavage, the addition of poly(A)-rich sequences to the endonucleolytic cleavage products, and exonucleolytic degradation by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase). In Escherichia coli, polyadenylation is performed mainly by poly(A)-polymerase (PAP) I or by PNPase in its absence. While trying to purify the chloroplast PAP by following in vitro polyadenylation activity, it was found to copurify with PNPase and indeed could not be separated from it. Purified PNPase was able to polyadenylate RNA molecules with an activity similar to that of lysed chloroplasts. Both activities use ADP much more effectively than ATP and are inhibited by stem-loop structures. The activity of PNPase was directed to RNA degradation or polymerization by manipulating physiologically relevant concentrations of P(i) and ADP. As expected of a phosphorylase, P(i) enhanced degradation, whereas ADP inhibited degradation and enhanced polymerization. In addition, searching the complete Arabidopsis genome revealed several putative PAPs, none of which were preceded by a typical chloroplast transit peptide. These results suggest that there is no enzyme similar to E. coli PAP I in spinach chloroplasts and that polyadenylation and exonucleolytic degradation of RNA in spinach chloroplasts are performed by one enzyme, PNPase.  相似文献   

4.
In Escherichia coli, the exoribonuclease polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), the endoribonuclease RNase E, a DEAD-RNA helicase and the glycolytic enzyme enolase are associated with a high molecular weight complex, the degradosome. This complex has an important role in processing and degradation of RNA. Chloroplasts contain an exoribonuclease homologous to E. coli PNPase. Size exclusion chromatography revealed that chloroplast PNPase elutes as a 580-600 kDa complex, suggesting that it can form an enzyme complex similar to the E. coli degradosome. Biochemical and mass-spectrometric analysis showed, however, that PNPase is the only protein associated with the 580-600 kDa complex. Similarly, a purified recombinant chloroplast PNPase also eluted as a 580-600 kDa complex after gel filtration chromatography. These results suggest that chloroplast PNPase exists as a homo-multimer complex. No other chloroplast proteins were found to associate with chloroplast PNPase during affinity chromatography. Database analysis of proteins homologous to E. coli RNase E revealed that chloroplast and cyanobacterial proteins lack the C-terminal domain of the E. coli protein that is involved in assembly of the degradosome. Together, our results suggest that PNPase does not form a degradosome-like complex in the chloroplast. Thus, RNA processing and degradation in this organelle differ in several respects from those in E. coli.  相似文献   

5.
Formycin B (FB), a moderate inhibitor (Ki approximately 100 microM) of mammalian purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), and formycin A (FA), which is totally inactive vs. the mammalian enzyme, are both effective inhibitors of the bacterial (Escherichia coli) enzyme (Ki approximately 5 microM). Examination of a series of N-methyl analogues of FA and FB led to the finding that N(6)-methyl-FA, virtually inactive vs. the mammalian enzyme, is the most potent inhibitor of E. coli purine nucleoside phosphorylase (Ki approximately 0.3 uM) at neutral pH. Inhibition is competitive not only with respect to Ino, but also relative to 7-methyl-Guo and 7-methyl-Ado, as substrates. Both oxoformycins A and B are relatively poor inhibitors. For the most potent inhibitor, N(6)-methyl-FA, it was shown that the enzyme preferentially binds the neutral, and not the cationic, form. In accordance with this the neutral, but not the cationic form, of the structurally related N(1)-methyl-Ado was found to be an excellent substrate. Reported data on tautomerism of formycins were profited from, and extended, to infer which tautomeric species and ionic forms are the active inhibitors. A commercially available (Sigma) bacterial PNP, of unknown origin, was shown to differ from the E. coli enzyme by its inability to phosphorylase Ado; this enzyme was also resistant to FA and FB. These findings have been extended to provide a detailed comparison of the substrate/inhibitor properties of PNP from various microorganisms.  相似文献   

6.
The previous finding that 7-methylinosine (m7Ino) and 7-methylguanosine (m7Guo) are excellent, as well as fluorescent, substrates for calf spleen purine nucleoside phosphorylase has been extended to include a series of 7-alkylguanosines with higher alkyl groups (ethyl, propyl, butyl, isopropyl, isobutyl, benzyl). All of these are good substrates, with increases in Km compensated for by corresponding increases in Vmax, and excluding the ring N-7 as a binding site. Both m1Ino and m1Guo are neither substrates nor inhibitors of this enzyme, implicating the ring N-1 as a binding site. Included also are guanosine analogues with C-8 substituents (alpha-hydroxyisopropyl, methyl, bromo, chloro, amino) with known populations of syn and anti conformers about the glycosidic bond; while these did not unequivocally point to involvement of only one form, efficiency of phosphorolysis appeared to be correlated with a conformation in the anti region. The influence of various substituents is also considered in relation to steric and electronic effects. Kinetic parameters for all the foregoing have been determined fluorimetrically and/or spectrophotometrically from initial velocities and/or continuous monitoring of phosphorolysis including Ki values for inhibition by the base moieties. Furthermore, kinetic data demonstrated that, in striking contrast to the mammalian enzyme, both m1Ino and m1Guo are almost as good substrates as the parent nucleosides for a bacterial (Escherichia coli) enzyme, suggesting that the ring N-1 is not a binding site for the latter.  相似文献   

7.
In the present work we have used a double-hybrid assay in bacteria to identify a putative domain in E. coli PNPase required for in vivo interaction with RNase E. We used a 202 aa fragment of RNase E previously reported as the PNPase binding domain in this enzyme and a collection of 13 different fragments of 105 aa, spanning the entire sequence of 734 aa PNPase (GenBank Accession number NP_417633). Our results indicate that two clones of PNPase including residues 158-262 and residues 473-577 contain interaction sites for RNase E within a betabetaalphabetabetaalpha domain configuration. Three-dimensional modeling of the E. coli PNPase based on the S. antibioticus protein structure indicates that the putative binding domain is located on the monomer surface, facing outward from the trimeric tertiary structure. Since a copy of the betabetaalphabetabetaalpha domain is also found in RNase PH, we investigated and found an interaction with RNase E in a pull-down assay. We suggest this interaction takes place through the similar betabetaalphabetabetaalpha domain present in the tertiary structure of this enzyme. Based on these results, we propose that RNase PH and RNase E could form functional assemblies in E. coli.  相似文献   

8.
9.
NupG from Escherichia coli is the archetype of a family of nucleoside transporters found in several eubacterial groups and has distant homologues in eukaryotes, including man. To facilitate investigation of its molecular mechanism, we developed methods for expressing an oligohistidine-tagged form of NupG both at high levels (>20% of the inner membrane protein) in E. coli and in Xenopus laevis oocytes. In E. coli recombinant NupG transported purine (adenosine) and pyrimidine (uridine) nucleosides with apparent K(m) values of approximately 20-30 microM and transport was energized primarily by the membrane potential component of the proton motive force. Competition experiments in E. coli and measurements of uptake in oocytes confirmed that NupG was a broad-specificity transporter of purine and pyrimidine nucleosides. Importantly, using high-level expression in E. coli and magic-angle spinning cross-polarization solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance, we have for the first time been able directly to measure the binding of the permeant ([1'-(13)C]uridine) to the protein and to assess its relative mobility within the binding site, under non-energized conditions. Purification of over-expressed NupG to near homogeneity by metal chelate affinity chromatography, with retention of transport function in reconstitution assays, was also achieved. Fourier transform infrared and circular dichroism spectroscopy provided further evidence that the purified protein retained its 3D conformation and was predominantly alpha-helical in nature, consistent with a proposed structure containing 12 transmembrane helices. These findings open the way to elucidating the molecular mechanism of transport in this key family of membrane transporters.  相似文献   

10.
Eukaryotic cells encode AMP-lysine (AMP-N-epsilon-(N-alpha-acetyl lysine methyl ester) 5'-phosphoramidate) hydrolases related to the rabbit histidine triad nucleotide-binding protein 1 (Hint1) sequence. Bacterial and archaeal cells have Hint homologs annotated in a variety of ways, but the enzymes have not been characterized, nor have phenotypes been described due to loss of enzymatic activity. We developed a quantitative (31)P NMR assay to determine whether Escherichia coli possesses an adenosine phosphoramidase activity. Indeed, soluble lysates prepared from wild-type laboratory E. coli exhibited activity on the model substrate adenosine 5'-monophosphoramidate (AMP-NH(2)). The E. coli Hint homolog, which had been comprehensively designated ycfF and is here named hinT, was cloned, overexpressed, purified, and characterized with respect to purine nucleoside phosphoramidate substrates. Bacterial hinT was several times more active than human or rabbit Hint1 on five model substrates. In addition, bacterial and mammalian enzymes preferred guanosine versus adenosine phosphoramidates as substrates. Analysis of the lysates from a constructed hinT knock-out strain of E. coli demonstrated that all of the cellular purine nucleoside phosphoramidase activity is due to hinT. Physiological analysis of this mutant revealed that the loss of hinT results in failure to grow in media containing 0.75 m KCl, 0.9 m NaCl, 0.5 m NaOAc, or 10 mm MnCl(2). Thus, cation-resistant bacterial cell growth may be dependent on the hydrolysis of adenylylated and/or guanylylated phosphoramidate substrates by hinT.  相似文献   

11.
RNase E is an essential Escherichia coli endonuclease, which controls both 5S rRNA maturation and bulk mRNA decay. While the C-terminal half of this 1061-residue protein associates with polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) and several other enzymes into a 'degradosome', only the N-terminal half, which carries the catalytic activity, is required for growth. We characterize here a mutation (rne131 ) that yields a metabolically stable polypeptide lacking the last 477 residues of RNAse E. This mutation resembles the N-terminal conditional mutation rne1 in stabilizing mRNAs, both in bulk and individually, but differs from it in leaving rRNA processing and cell growth unaffected. Another mutation (rne105 ) removing the last 469 residues behaves similarly. Thus, the C-terminal half of RNase E is instrumental in degrading mRNAs, but dispensable for processing rRNA. A plausible interpretation is that the former activity requires that RNase E associates with other degradosome proteins; however, PNPase is not essential, as RNase E remains fully active towards mRNAs in rne+pnp mutants. All mRNAs are not stabilized equally by the rne131 mutation: the greater their susceptibility to RNase E, the larger the stabilization. Artificial mRNAs generated by E. coli expression systems based on T7 RNA polymerase can be genuinely unstable, and we show that the mutation can improve the yield of such systems without compromising cell growth.  相似文献   

12.
The trehalose-phosphate synthase (TPS) of Mycobacterium smegmatis was previously purified to apparent homogeneity and several peptides from the 58 kDa protein were sequenced. Based on that sequence information, the gene for TPS was identified in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome, and the gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli with a (His)6 tag at the amino terminus. The TPS was expressed in good yield and as active enzyme, and was purified on a metal ion column to give a single band of approximately 58 kDa on SDS/PAGE. Approximately 1.3 mg of purified TPS were obtained from a 1-L culture of E. coli ( approximately 2.3 g cell paste). The purified recombinant enzyme showed a single band of approximately 58 kDa on SDS/PAGE, but a molecular mass of approximately 220 kDa by gel filtration, indicating that the active TPS is probably a tetrameric protein. Like the enzyme originally purified from M. smegmatis, the recombinant enzyme is an unusual glycosyltransferase as it can utilize any of the nucleoside diphosphate glucose derivatives as glucosyl donors, i.e. ADP-glucose, CDP-glucose, GDP-glucose, TDP-glucose and UDP-glucose, with ADP-glucose, GDP-glucose and UDP-glucose being the preferred substrates. These studies prove conclusively that the mycobacterial TPS is indeed responsible for catalyzing the synthesis of trehalose-P from any of the nucleoside diphosphate glucose derivatives. Although the original enzyme from M. smegmatis was greatly stimulated in its utilization of UDP-glucose by polyanions such as heparin, the recombinant enzyme was stimulated only modestly by heparin. The Km for UDP-glucose as the glucosyl donor was approximately 18 mm, and that for GDP-glucose was approximately 16 mm. The enzyme was specific for glucose-6-P as the glucosyl acceptor, and the Km for this substrate was approximately 7 mm when UDP-glucose was the glucosyl donor and approximately 4 mm with GDP-glucose. TPS did not show an absolute requirement for divalent cations, but activity was increased about twofold by 10 mm Mn2+. This recombinant system will be useful for obtaining sufficient amounts of protein for structural studies. TPS should be a valuable target site for chemotherapeutic intervention in tuberculosis.  相似文献   

13.
Genotypic and phenotypic assays for glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) and beta-D-glucuronidase (GUD) were compared for their abilities to detect various strains of Escherichia coli and to discriminate among other bacterial species. Test strains included nonpathogenic E. coli, three major groups of diarrheagenic E. coli, three other non-coli Escherichia species, and various other gram-negative and -positive bacteria found in water. The genotypic assays were performed with hybridization probes generated by PCR amplification of 670- and 623-bp segments of the gadA/B (GAD) and uidA (GUD) genes, respectively. The GAD enzymes catalyze the alpha-decarboxylation of L-glutamic acid to yield gamma-aminobutyric acid and carbon dioxide, which are detected in the phenotypic assay by a pH-sensitive indicator dye. The phenotypic assay for GUD involves the transformation of 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide to the fluorogenic compound 4-methylumbelliferone. The GAD phenotypic assay detected the majority of the E. coli strains tested, whereas a number of these strains, including all representatives of the O157:H7 serotype and several nonpathogenic E. coli strains, gave negative results in the GUD assay. Both phenotypic assays detected some but not all strains from each of the four Shigella species. A strain of Citrobacter freundii was also detected by the GUD assay but not by the GAD assay. All E. coli and Shigella strains were detected with both the gadA/B and uidA probes. A few Escherichia fergusonii strains gave weak hybridization signals in response to both probes at 65 degrees C but not at 68 degrees C. None of the other bacterial species tested were detected by either probe. These results were consistent with previous reports which have indicated that the GAD phenotypic assay detects a wider range of E. coli strains than does the GUD assay and is also somewhat more specific for this species. The genotypic assays for the two enzymes were found to be equivalent in both of these respects and superior to both of the phenotypic assays in terms of the range of E. coli strains and isolates detected.  相似文献   

14.
Molecular beacons (MBs) are oligonucleotide probes that fluoresce upon hybridization. In this paper, we described the development of a real-time PCR assay to detect the presence of Escherichia coli O157:H7 using these fluorogenic reporter molecules. MBs were designed to recognize a 26-bp region of the rfbE gene, coding for an enzyme necessary for O-antigen biosynthesis. The specificity of the MB-based PCR assay was evaluated using various enterohemorrhagic (EHEC) and Shiga-like toxin-producing (STEC) E. coli strains as well as bacteria species that cross-react with the O157 antisera. All E. coli serotype O157 tested was positively identified while all other species, including the closely related O55 were not detected by the assay. Positive detection of E. coli O157:H7 was demonstrated when >10(2) CFU/ml was present in the samples. The capability of the assay to detect E. coli O157:H7 in raw milk and apple juice was demonstrated. As few as 1 CFU/ml was detected after 6 h of enrichment. These assays could be carried out entirely in sealed PCR tubes, enabling rapid and semiautomated detection of E. coli O157:H7 in food and environmental samples.  相似文献   

15.
A xanthosine-inducible enzyme, inosine-guanosine phosphorylase, has been partially purified from a strain of Escherichia coli K-12 lacking the deo-encoded purine nucleoside phosphorylase. Inosine-guanosine phosphorylase had a particle weight of 180 kilodaltons and was rapidly inactivated by p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (p-CMB). The enzyme was not protected from inactivation by inosine (Ino), 2'-deoxyinosine (dIno), hypoxanthine (Hyp), Pi, or alpha-D-ribose-1-phosphate (Rib-1-P). Incubating the inactive enzyme with dithiothreitol restored the catalytic activity. Reaction with p-CMB did not affect the particle weight. Inosine-guanosine phosphorylase was more sensitive to thermal inactivation than purine nucleoside phosphorylase. The half-life determined at 45 degrees C between pH 5 and 8 was 5 to 9 min. Phosphate (20 mM) stabilized the enzyme to thermal inactivation, while Ino (1 mM), dIno (1 mM), xanthosine (Xao) (1 mM), Rib-1-P (2 mM), or Hyp (0.05 mM) had no effect. However, Hyp at 1 mM did stabilize the enzyme. In addition, the combination of Pi (20 mM) and Hyp (0.05 mM) stabilized this enzyme to a greater extent than did Pi alone. Apparent activation energies of 11.5 kcal/mol and 7.9 kcal/mol were determined in the phosphorolytic and synthetic direction, respectively. The pH dependence of Ino cleavage or synthesis did not vary between 6 and 8. The substrate specificity, listed in decreasing order of efficiency (V/Km), was: 2'-deoxyguanosine, dIno, guanosine, Xao, Ino, 5'-dIno, and 2',3'-dideoxyinosine. Inosine-guanosine phosphorylase differed from the deo operon-encoded purine nucleoside phosphorylase in that neither adenosine, 2'-deoxyadenosine, nor hypoxanthine arabinoside were substrates or potent inhibitors. Moreover, the E. coli inosine-guanosine phosphorylase was antigenically distinct from the purine nucleoside phosphorylase since it did not react with any of 14 monoclonal antisera or a polyvalent antiserum raised against deo-encoded purine nucleoside phosphorylase.  相似文献   

16.
We examined the activity of polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) from Streptomyces coelicolor, Streptomyces antibioticus, and Escherichia coli in phosphorolysis using substrates derived from the rpsO-pnp operon of S. coelicolor. The Streptomyces and E. coli enzymes were both able to digest a substrate with a 3′ single-stranded tail although E. coli PNPase was more effective in digesting this substrate than were the Streptomyces enzymes. The kcat for the E. coli enzyme was ca. twofold higher than that observed with the S. coelicolor enzyme. S. coelicolor PNPase was more effective than its E. coli counterpart in digesting a substrate possessing a 3′ stem-loop structure, and the Km for the E. coli enzyme was ca. twice that of the S. coelicolor enzyme. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays revealed an increased affinity of S. coelicolor PNPase for the substrate possessing a 3′ stem-loop structure compared with the E. coli enzyme. We observed an effect of nucleoside diphosphates on the activity of the S. coelicolor PNPase but not the E. coli enzyme. In the presence of a mixture of 20 μM ADP, CDP, GDP, and UDP, the Km for the phosphorolysis of the substrate with the 3′ stem-loop was some fivefold lower than the value observed in the absence of nucleoside diphosphates. No effect of nucleoside diphosphates on the phosphorolytic activity of E. coli PNPase was observed. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of an effect of nucleoside diphosphates, the normal substrates for polymerization by PNPase, on the phosphorolytic activity of that enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies of nucleoside transport in mammalian cells have identified two types of activities: the equilibrative nucleoside transporters and concentrative, Na+-nucleoside cotransporters. Characterization of the concentrative nucleoside transporters has been hampered by the presence in most cells and tissues of multiple transporters with overlapping permeant specificities. With the recent cloning of cDNAs encoding rat and human members of the concentrative nucleoside transporter (CNT) family, it is now possible to study the concentrative transporters in isolation by use of functional expression systems. We report here the isolation of a nucleoside transport-deficient subline of L1210 mouse leukemia (L1210/DNC3) that is a suitable recipient for stable expression of cloned nucleoside transporter cDNAs. We have used L1210/DNC3 as the recipient in gene transfer studies to develop a stable cell line (L1210/DU5) that produces the recombinant concentrative nucleoside transporter with selectivity for pyrimidine nucleosides (CNT1) that was initially identified in rat intestine (Q.Q. Huang, S.Y. Yao, M.W. Ritzel, A.R.P. Paterson, C.E. Cass, and J.D. Young. 1994. J. Biol. Chem. 269: 17,757-17,760). L1210/DU5 was used to examine the permeant selectivity of recombinant rat CNT1 by comparing a series of nucleoside analogs with respect to (i) inhibition of inward fluxes of [3H]thymidine, (ii) initial rates of transport of 3H-analog, and (iii) cytotoxicity to L1210/DU5 versus the parental transport-deficient cell line. By all three criteria, recombinant CNT1 transported 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine and 5-fluorouridine well and cytosine arabinoside poorly. Although some purine nucleosides (2'-deoxyadenosinedeoxyadeno-2'-deoxyadenosine, 7-deazaadenosine) were potent inhibitors of CNT1, they were poor permeants when uptake was measured directly by analysis of isotopic fluxes or indirectly by comparison of cytotoxicity ratios. We conclude that comparison of analog cytotoxicity to L1210/DU5 versus L1210/DNC3 is a reliable indirect predictor of transportability, suggesting that cytotoxicity assays with a panel of such cell lines, each with a different recombinant nucleoside transporter, would be a valuable tool in the development of antiviral and antitumor nucleoside analogs.  相似文献   

18.
Kakikawa M  Ohkubo S  Syama M  Taketo A  Kodaira KI 《Gene》2000,242(1-2):155-166
The structural and functional features of the approximately 530 bp P(L)/Gb5-Gb6-cpg-Gb7 region (P(L) overlaps Gb5) for the lysogenic pathway of L. plantarum phage (phi)gle were investigated using the cat gene of E. coli plasmid pKK232-8 as a reporter. In E. coli XL1-Blue, a recombinant plasmid pKPL2 (cat under P(L)/Gb5-Gb6) exhibited distinct CAT activity, whereas the activity of pKPLCP1 (cat under P(L)/Gb5-Gb6-cpg) was only marginal. When pKPL2 was coexistent with a compatible derivative of plasmid pACYC177 carrying P(L)/Gb5-Gb6-cpg, the CAT activity was declined to the level of pKPLCP1. On the other hand, the cpg-encoded protein Cpg was overproduced in E. coli under P(T7). The molecular mass of the purified Cpg (14.5 kDa on a SDS gel) corresponded well with that (15.1 kDa) predicted from the DNA sequence. Gel-shift and footprinting assays demonstrated that Cpg selectively binds to about 25 bp bases centered around the GATAC-box (from 1 to 7). Moreover, protein crosslinking experiments using glutaraldehyde showed that Cpg most likely functions as a dimeric form. Thus, the present results indicate that Cpg probably represses P(L) through binding to the operator GATAC-box(es), and the P(L)/cpg region might participate in the lysogenic pathway.  相似文献   

19.
目的:在枯草芽孢杆菌中表达嘌呤核苷磷酸化酶(PNPase)并分析其活性。方法:将PNPase的编码基因deoD克隆入pDG148表达载体,构建原核穿梭型表达载体pDG148-deoD,采用电转化方法将表达载体转入枯草芽孢杆菌WB600后诱导表达重组PNPase;研究重组PNPase的活性。结果与结论:获得的重组PNPase活性较对照提高了193.9%,其最适催化条件为65℃、pH7.5、500μmol/L底物浓度和1%1,2,4-三氮唑-3-羧甲酰胺;对重组菌的发酵条件进行了初步优化,IPTG诱导6h后在发酵液中添加0.5%的Tween-80能大幅度提高重组PNPase的酶活力。  相似文献   

20.
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