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1.
Four alginate lyase genes were cloned and sequenced from the genomic DNAs of deep-sea bacteria, namely members of Vibrio and Agarivorans. Three of them were from Vibrio sp. JAM-A9m, which encoded alginate lyases, A9mT, A9mC, and A9mL. A9mT was composed of 286 amino acids and 57% homologous to AlxM of Photobacterium sp. A9mC (221 amino acids) and A9mL (522 amino acids) had the highest degree of similarity to two individual alginate lyases of Vibrio splendidus with 74% and 84% identity, respectively. The other gene for alginate lyase, A1mU, was shotgun cloned from Agarivorans sp. JAM-A1m. A1mU (286 amino acids) showed the highest homology to AlyVOA of Vibrio sp. with 76% identity. All alginate lyases belong to polysaccharide lyase family 7, although, they do not show significant similarity to one another with 14% to 58% identity. Among the above lyases, the recombinant A9mT was purified to homogeneity and characterized. The molecular mass of A9mT was around 28 kDa. The enzyme was remarkably salt activated and showed the highest thermal stability in the presence of NaCl. A9mT favorably degraded mannuronate polymer in alginate. We discussed substrate specificities of family 7 alginate lyases based on their conserved amino acid sequences.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract In previous studies (Malissard et al., FEMS Microbiol. Lett. (1993) 110, 101–106), the alginate lyase AlxM of the marine bacterium ATCC 433367 was produced in Escherichia coli TC4/pAL-A3 with a yield of 50 μg per litre of culture. The polypeptide chain was cleaved between two cysteine residues, C169 and C183, themselves linked by a disulphide bridge. AlxM has now been overproduced in E. coli BL21(DE3)/pAL-Sur/pLysS. Under conditions in which formation of inclusion bodies can be avoided, the enzyme is synthesized as a catalytically active, water-soluble, unnicked polypeptide with a yield of 32 mg per litre of culture. It has been purified to protein homogeneity using a one-step procedure. The nicked AlxMA and unnicked AlxMB alginate lyases have identical alginate-degrading activities at high salt concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
We isolated a new marine bacteria, which displayed alginate-depolymerizing activity in plate assays, from seawater in Mihonoseki Harbor, Japan. Analysis of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequence of one of the isolates proved that this alginate-depolymerizing bacterium belonged to the genus Vibrio and it was named Vibrio sp. O2. The alginate lyase genes of Vibrio sp. O2 were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Two alginate lyase-producing clones, pVOA-A4 and pVOA-B5, were obtained. The alginate lyase gene alyVOA from pVOA-A4 was composed of an 858-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding 285 amino acid residues, while alyVOB from pVOA-B5 was composed of an 828-bp ORF encoding 275 amino acid residues. The degree of identity between the deduced amino acid sequences of AlyVOA or AlyVOB and Photobacterium sp. ATCC43367 alginate poly(ManA)lyase AlxM was 92.3% or 32.6%, respectively. Alginate lyase consensus regions corresponding to the sequences YFKAGXYXQ and RXELR were observed in all three of these sequences. AlyVOA and AlyVOB both degraded polymannuronate in plate assays and were therefore confirmed to be poly(β-D-mannuronate)lyases.  相似文献   

4.
An alginate lyase named ALYII was purified to homogeneity from Escherichia coli JM109 carrying a recombinant plasmid, pJK26 harbouring the alyII gene from Pseudomonas sp. OS-ALG-9 by column chromatography with DEAE-cellulose, CM-Sephadex C-50, butyl-Toyopearl 650 M and isoelectric focusing. The molecular size of the purified ALYII was estimated to be 79 kDa by SDS-PAGE and its pI was 8.3. The enzyme was most active at pH 7.0 and 30 °C. Its activity was completely inhibited by Hg2+. The enzyme was poly -D-1, 4-mannuronate-specific rather than -D-1, 4-guluronate-specific and it showed a promotion effect in alginate degradation by combination with ALY, an another poly -D-1, 4-mannuronate-specific alginate lyase from the same strain.  相似文献   

5.
Alginate, the most abundant carbohydrate presents in brown macroalgae, has recently gained increasing attention as an alternative biomass for the production of biofuel. Oligoalginate lyases catalyze the degradation of alginate oligomers into monomers, a prerequisite for bioethanol production. In this study, two new oligoalginate lyase genes, oalC6 and oalC17, were cloned from Cellulophaga sp. SY116, and expressed them in Escherichia coli. The deduced oligoalginate lyases, OalC6 and OalC17, belonged to the polysaccharide lyase (PL) family 6 and 17, respectively. Both showed less than 50% amino acid identity with all of the characterized oligoalginate lyases. Moreover, OalC6 and OalC17 could degrade both alginate polymers and oligomers into monomers in an exolytic mode. Substrate specificity studies demonstrated that OalC6 preferred α-L-guluronate (polyG) blocks, while OalC17 preferred poly β-D-mannuronate (polyM) blocks. The combination of OalC6 and OalC17 showed synergistic degradation ability toward both alginate polymers and oligomers. Finally, an efficient process for the production of alginate monomers was established by combining the new-isolated exotype alginate lyases (i.e., OalC6 and OalC17) and the endotype alginate lyase AlySY08. Overall, our work provides new insights for the development of novel biotechnologies for biofuel production from seaweed.  相似文献   

6.
ALY is a ubiquitously expressed nuclear protein which interacts with proteins such as TAP that are involved in export of mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, as well as with proteins that bind the T cell receptor alpha gene enhancer. ALY has also been shown to bind mRNA and to co-localize in the nucleus with components of a multiprotein postsplicing complex that is deposited 20-24 nucleotides upstream of exon-exon junctions. ALY has a conserved RNA binding domain (RBD) flanked by Gly-Arg rich N-terminal and C-terminal sequences. We determined the solution structure of the RBD homology region in ALY by nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The RBD motif in ALY has a characteristic beta(1)alpha(1)beta(2)-beta(3)alpha(2)beta(4) fold, consisting of a beta sheet composed of four antiparallel beta strands and two alpha helices that pack on one face of the beta sheet. As in other RBD structures, the beta sheet has an exposed face with hydrophobic and charged residues that could modulate interactions with other molecules. The loop that connects beta strands 2 and 3 is in intermediate motion in the NMR time scale, which is also characteristic of other RBDs. This loop presents side chains close to the exposed surface of the beta sheet and is a primary candidate site for intermolecular interactions. The structure of the conserved RBD of ALY provides insight into the nature of interactions involving this multifunctional protein.  相似文献   

7.
The entire amino acid sequence of bifunctional alginate lyase from Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain No. 272 were determined by two approaches, Edman degradation of the peptides obtained from protease digestion of the enzyme protein and analysis of PCR products of the structural gene. The former resulted in incomplete amino acid sequence in the entire sequence, due to lacking of the proper peptides from the protease digestion. To compensate for this lack of sequences we applied the method of PCR of the structural gene that was initially elucidated from the primers designed from N- and C-terminal amino acid sequences of the enzyme. The results of the amino acid sequences from these two approaches showed good agreement. The enzyme consisted of 233 amino acid residues with a molecular mass of 25,549.5, including the sole W and cystine residue. The sequence homology search among the other alginate lyases from different origins indicated that they were very weakly homologous, with the exception of the sequence homology (80.3%) of Pseudoalteromonas elyakovii alginate lyase. The consensus sequence, YFKhG + Y-Q (Wong, T. Y., Preston, L. A., and Schiller, N. L. 2000. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 54: 289–340) in the C-terminal regions was conserved. The kinetic analyses of chemical modification of some amino acid residues of the enzyme showed that W, K, and Y appeared to be important in the enzyme function.  相似文献   

8.
Alginates are polysaccharides composed of 1-4-linked β-d-mannuronic acid and α-l-guluronic acid. The polymer can be degraded by alginate lyases, which cleave the polysaccharide using a β-elimination reaction. Two such lyases have previously been identified in the soil bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii, as follows: the periplasmic AlgL and the secreted bifunctional mannuronan C-5 epimerase and alginate lyase AlgE7. In this work, we describe the properties of three new lyases from this bacterium, AlyA1, AlyA2, and AlyA3, all of which belong to the PL7 family of polysaccharide lyases. One of the enzymes, AlyA3, also contains a C-terminal module similar to those of proteins secreted by a type I secretion system, and its activity is stimulated by Ca2+. All three enzymes preferably cleave the bond between guluronic acid and mannuronic acid, resulting in a guluronic acid residue at the new reducing end, but AlyA3 also degrades the other three possible bonds in alginate. Strains containing interrupted versions of alyA1, alyA3, and algE7 were constructed, and their phenotypes were analyzed. Genetically pure alyA2 mutants were not obtained, suggesting that this gene product may be important for the bacterium during vegetative growth. After centrifugation, cultures from the algE7 mutants form a large pellet containing alginate, indicating that AlgE7 is involved in the release of alginate from the cells. Upon encountering adverse growth conditions, A. vinelandii will form a resting stage called cyst. Alginate is a necessary part of the protective cyst coat, and we show here that strains lacking alyA3 germinate poorly compared to wild-type cells.Azotobacter vinelandii is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium found in soil. A. vinelandii and several species belonging to the related genus Pseudomonas have been found to produce the polymer alginate. This linear, extracellular polysaccharide is composed of 1-4-linked β-d-mannuronic acid (M) and its C-5 epimer α-l-guluronic acid (G) (35), and the relative amount and distribution of these two residues vary according to the species and growth conditions. Some of the M residues in bacterial alginates may be O acetylated at C-2, C-3, or both C-2 and C-3 (34).Alginate is first synthesized as mannuronan, and the G residues are introduced by mannuronan C-5 epimerases. All genome-sequenced alginate-producing bacteria have been found to encode a periplasmic epimerase, AlgG, that epimerizes some of the M residues in the polymer into G residues (40). AlgG seems to be unable to epimerize an M residue next to a preexisting G residue in vivo. A. vinelandii also encodes a family of secreted mannuronan C-5 epimerases (AlgE1-7) (40), some of which are able to form stretches of consecutive G residues (G blocks). Alginates containing G blocks can be cross-linked by divalent cations and thereby form gels (35).Polysaccharide lyases (EC 4.2.2.-) are a group of enzymes which cleave the polymer chains via a β-elimination mechanism, resulting in the formation of a double bond at the newly formed nonreducing end. For alginate lyases, 4-deoxy-l-erythro-hex-4-enepyranosyluronate (denoted as Δ) is formed at the nonreducing end. Several such lyases have been purified from both alginate-producing and alginate-degrading organisms, as reviewed by Wong et al. (42). When they are classified according to primary structure, the alginate lyases belong to the polysaccharide-degrading enzyme families PL5, PL6, PL7, PL14, PL17, and PL18 (http://www.cazy.org). Alginate molecules may contain four different bonds (M-M, M-G, G-M, and G-G), and alginate lyases may therefore be classified according to their preferred substrate specificities. It is now possible to obtain pure mannuronan and nearly pure (MG)n and G blocks (17, 19, 20), and this allows for an improved assessment of the substrate specificities of the alginate lyases.The following two alginate lyases have been characterized in A. vinelandii: the periplasmic AlgL that belongs to the PL5 family (15) and the extracellular bifunctional mannuronan C-5 epimerase and alginate lyase AlgE7 (36, 37). AlgL is encoded by the alginate biosynthesis operon, similar to what has been found in all characterized alginate-producing bacteria. This enzyme cleaves M-M and M-G bonds (15), while AlgE7 preferably degrades G-MM and G-GM bonds (37). The latter enzyme is also able to introduce G residues in the alginate, thus creating the preferred substrate for the lyase.When A. vinelandii experiences a lack of nutrients, it will develop into a dormant cell designated cyst (30). The cell is then protected against desiccation by a multilayered coat, of which gel-forming alginate is a necessary part. Resuspension of cysts in a medium containing glucose leads to a germination process in which vegetative cells eventually escape from the cyst coat. It has been proposed that an alginate lyase may be involved in the rupture of the coat (43). AlgL is dispensable for germination (38), while the biological function of AlgE7 is unknown. In this report, we use the available draft genome sequence of A. vinelandii to identify three additional putative lyases and evaluate their and AlgE7''s role in growth, encystment, and germination of the bacterium.  相似文献   

9.
《Journal of molecular biology》2019,431(24):4897-4909
Alginate lyases, which are important in both basic and applied sciences, fall into ten polysaccharide lyase (PL) families. PL36 is a newly established family that includes 39 bacterial sequences and one eukaryotic sequence. Till now, the structures or catalytic mechanisms of PL36 alginate lyases have yet to be revealed. Here, we characterized a novel PL36 alginate lyase, Aly36B, from Chitinophaga sp. MD30. Aly36B is a polymannuronate specific endolytic alginate lyase. To probe the catalytic mechanism of Aly36B, the structures of wild-type Aly36B and its mutants (K143A/Y185A in complex with alginate tetrasaccharide and K143A/M171A with trisaccharide) were solved. The overall structure of Aly36B belongs to the β-jelly roll scaffold, adopting a typical β-sandwich fold. Aly36B contains a Ca2+, which is far away from the active center and plays an important role in stabilizing the structure of Aly36B. Based on structural and mutational analyses, the catalytic mechanism of Aly36B for alginate degradation was explained. During catalysis, Arg169, Tyr185, and Tyr187 are responsible for neutralizing the negative charge of the substrate, and Lys143 acts as both the catalytic base and the catalytic acid, which represents a new kind of catalytic mechanism of alginate lyases. Sequence alignment shows that these four residues involved in catalysis are highly conserved in all PL36 sequences, suggesting that PL36 alginate lyases may adopt a similar catalytic mechanism. Taken together, this study reveals the molecular structure and catalytic mechanism of a PL36 alginate lyase, broadening our knowledge on alginate lyases and facilitating future biotechnological applications of PL36 alginate lyases.  相似文献   

10.
Algae are considered as third-generation biomass, and alginate is the main component of brown macroalgae. Alginate can be enzymatically depolymerized by alginate lyases into uronate monomers, such as mannuronic acid and guluronic acid, which are further nonenzymatically converted to 4-deoxy-l-erythro-5-hexoseulose uronic acid (DEH). We have optimized an enzymatic saccharification process using two recombinant alginate lyases, endo-type Alg7D and exo-type Alg17C, for the efficient production of DEH from alginate. When comparing the sequential and simultaneous additions of Alg7D and Alg17C, it was found that the final yield of DEH was significantly higher when the enzymes were added sequentially. The progress of saccharification reactions and production of DEH were verified by thin layer chromatography and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, respectively. Our results showed that the two recombinant enzymes could be exploited for the efficient production of DEH that is the key substrate for producing biofuels from brown macro algal biomass.  相似文献   

11.
Alginate lyases have a wide range of industrial applications, such as oligosaccharide preparation, medical treatment, and bioconversion. Therefore, the discovery and characterization of novel alginate lyases are extremely important. PL-6 alginate lyases are classified into two groups: those with a single domain or two domains. However, only one structure of a two-domain alginate lyase has been determined to date. In this study, we characterized a novel single-domain PL-6 alginate lyase (named AlyF). According to the biochemical analysis, AlyF possesses unique features compared with other PL-6 enzymes, including (1) a Ca2+-independent catalytic mechanism and (2) a PolyG-specific cleavage specificity that predominantly produces trisaccharides. The structures of AlyF and its complexes described here reveal the structural basis for these unique features and substrate binding mechanisms, which were further confirmed using mutagenesis. More importantly, we determined the possible subsites specifying the predominantly trisaccharide products of AlyF, which may facilitate the rational design of AlyF for potential applications in preparing a single alginate oligomer.  相似文献   

12.
Alginate lyases are enzymes that degrade alginate through β-elimination of the glycosidic bond into smaller oligomers. We investigated the alginate lyases from Vibrio splendidus 12B01, a marine bacterioplankton species that can grow on alginate as its sole carbon source. We identified, purified, and characterized four polysaccharide lyase family 7 alginates lyases, AlyA, AlyB, AlyD, and AlyE, from V. splendidus 12B01. The four lyases were found to have optimal activity between pH 7.5 and 8.5 and at 20 to 25°C, consistent with their use in a marine environment. AlyA, AlyB, AlyD, and AlyE were found to exhibit a turnover number (kcat) for alginate of 0.60 ± 0.02 s−1, 3.7 ± 0.3 s−1, 4.5 ± 0.5 s−1, and 7.1 ± 0.2 s−1, respectively. The Km values of AlyA, AlyB, AlyD, and AlyE toward alginate were 36 ± 7 μM, 22 ± 5 μM, 60 ± 2 μM, and 123 ± 6 μM, respectively. AlyA and AlyB were found principally to cleave the β-1,4 bonds between β-d-mannuronate and α-l-guluronate and subunits; AlyD and AlyE were found to principally cleave the α-1,4 bonds involving α-l-guluronate subunits. The four alginate lyases degrade alginate into longer chains of oligomers.  相似文献   

13.
Rahman MM  Inoue A  Tanaka H  Ojima T 《Biochimie》2011,93(10):1720-1730
Herbivorous marine gastropods such as abalone and sea hare ingest brown algae as a major diet and degrade the dietary alginate with alginate lyase (EC 4.2.2.3) in their digestive fluid. To date alginate lyases from Haliotidae species such as abalone have been well characterized and the primary structure analyses have classified abalone enzymes into polysaccharide-lyase-family 14 (PL-14). However, other gastropod enzymes have not been so well investigated and only partial amino-acid sequences are currently available. To improve the knowledge for primary structure and catalytic residues of gastropod alginate lyases, we cloned the cDNA encoding an alginate lyase, AkAly30, from an Aplysiidae species Aplysia kurodai and assessed its catalytically important residues by site-directed mutagenesis. Alginate lyase cDNA fragments were amplified by PCR followed by 5′- and 3′-RACE from A. kurodai hepatopancreas cDNA. The finally cloned cDNA comprised 1313 bp which encoded an amino-acid sequence of 295 residues of AkAly30. The deduced sequence comprised an initiation methionine, a putative signal peptide for secretion (18 residues), a propeptide-like region (9 residues), and a mature AkAly30 domain (267 residues) which showed ∼40% amino-acid identity with abalone alginate lyases. An Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)-pCold I expression system for recombinant AkAly30 (recAkAly30) was constructed and site-directed mutagenesis was performed to assess catalytically important amino-acid residues which had been suggested in abalone and Chlorella virus PL-14 enzymes. Replacements of K99, S126, R128, Y140 and Y142 of recAkAly30 by Ala and/or Phe greatly decreased its activity as in the case of abalone and/or Chlorella virus enzymes. Whereas, H213 that was essential for Chlorella virus enzyme to exhibit the activity at pH 10.0 was originally replaced by N120 in AkAly30. The reverse replacement of N120 by His in recAkAly30 increased the activity at pH 10.0 from 8 U/mg to 93 U/mg; however, the activity level at pH 7.0, i.e., 774.8 U/mg, was still much higher than that at pH 10.0. This indicates that N120 is not directly related to the pH dependence of AkAly30 unlike H213 of vAL-1.  相似文献   

14.
Structural and functional analyses of alginate lyases are important in the clarification of the biofilm-dependent ecosystem in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and in the development of therapeutic agents for bacterial disease. Most alginate lyases are classified into polysaccharide lyase (PL) family-5 and -7 based on their primary structures. Family PL-7 enzymes are still poorly characterized especially in structural properties. Among family PL-7, a gene coding for a hypothetical protein (PA1167) homologous to Sphingomonas alginate lyase A1-II was found to be present in the P. aeruginosa genome. PA1167 overexpressed in Escherichia coli cleaved glycosidic bonds in alginate and released unsaturated saccharides, indicating that PA1167 is an alginate lyase catalyzing a beta-elimination reaction. The enzyme acted preferably on heteropolymeric regions endolytically and worked most efficiently at pH 8.5 and 40 degrees C. The specific activity of PA1167, however, was much weaker than that of the known alginate lyase AlgL, suggesting that AlgL plays a main role in alginate depolymerization in P. aeruginosa. In addition to this specific activity, differences were found between PA1167 and AlgL in enzyme properties such as molecular mass, optimum pH, salt effect, and substrate specificity. The first crystal structure of the family PL-7 alginate lyase was determined at 2.0 A resolution. PA1167 was found to form a glove-like beta-sandwich composed of 15 beta-strands and 3 alpha-helices. The structural difference between the beta-sandwich PA1167 of family PL-7 and alpha/alpha-barrel AlgL of family PL-5 may be responsible for the enzyme characteristics. Crystal structures of polysaccharide lyases determined so far indicate that they can be assigned to three folding groups having parallel beta-helix, alpha/alpha-barrel, and alpha/alpha-barrel + antiparallel beta-sheet structures as basic frames. PA1167 is the fourth novel folding structure found among polysaccharide lyases.  相似文献   

15.
A kinetic analysis of splitting oligomeric substrates by poly(β-D-mannuronate)lyases (alginate lyases I, SP1 and SP2) from a marine mollusk was done. Monomer and oligomers of mannuronate and guluronate were prepared by hydrolyzing poly β-1,4-D-mannuronate and poly α-1,4-L-guluronate from alginate with H2SO4, respectively, and thereafter by gel filtration on a Bio-Gel P-2 column. Alginate lyases I apparently did not act on the trimer of mannuronate but did on the tetramer or those longer than that, indicating the increased kcad/Km with increasing polymerization degree. The kinetic analyses suggest that the size of the subsite structure of the enzymes is most likely to be able to bind the linear pentamer of mannuronate units.  相似文献   

16.
A number of peroxidase amino acid sequences show limited homology to short regions comprising the known active site cleft of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase. Otherwise no clear homology is visible in linear alignments between this enzyme and other peroxidases. We have subjected eight peroxidase sequences to hydrophobic cluster analysis. Our results suggest that these peroxidases are evolutionary related and that they share many folding characteristics.  相似文献   

17.
Alginates are commercially valuable and complex polysaccharides composed of varying amounts and distribution patterns of 1–4-linked β-d-mannuronic acid (M) and α-l-guluronic acid (G). This structural variability strongly affects polymer physicochemical properties and thereby both commercial applications and biological functions. One promising approach to alginate fine structure elucidation involves the use of alginate lyases, which degrade the polysaccharide by cleaving the glycosidic linkages through a β-elimination reaction. For such studies one would ideally like to have different lyases, each of which cleaves only one of the four possible linkages in alginates: G-G, G-M, M-G, and M-M. So far no lyase specific for only G-G linkages has been described, and here we report the construction of such an enzyme by mutating the gene encoding Klebsiella pneumoniae lyase AlyA (a polysaccharide lyase family 7 lyase), which cleaves both G-G and G-M linkages. After error-prone PCR mutagenesis and high throughput screening of ∼7000 lyase mutants, enzyme variants with a strongly improved G-G specificity were identified. Furthermore, in the absence of Ca2+, one of these lyases (AlyA5) was found to display no detectable activity against G-M linkages. G-G linkages were cleaved with ∼10% of the optimal activity under the same conditions. The substitutions conferring altered specificity to the mutant enzymes are located in conserved regions in the polysaccharide lyase family 7 alginate lyases. Structure-function analyses by comparison with the known three-dimensional structure of Sphingomonas sp. A1 lyase A1-II′ suggests that the improved G-G specificity might be caused by increased affinity for nonproductive binding of the alternating G-M structure.  相似文献   

18.
Brown algae are one of the largest groups of oceanic primary producers for CO2 removal and carbon sinks for coastal regions. However, the mechanism for brown alga assimilation remains largely unknown in thermophilic microorganisms. In this work, a thermophilic alginolytic community was enriched from coastal sediment, from which an obligate anaerobic and thermophilic bacterial strain, designated Alg1, was isolated. Alg1 shared a 16S rRNA gene identity of 94.6% with Defluviitalea saccharophila LIND6LT2T. Phenotypic, chemotaxonomic, and phylogenetic studies suggested strain Alg1 represented a novel species of the genus Defluviitalea, for which the name Defluviitalea phaphyphila sp. nov. is proposed. Alg1 exhibited an intriguing ability to convert carbohydrates of brown algae, including alginate, laminarin, and mannitol, to ethanol and acetic acid. Three gene clusters participating in this process were predicted to be in the genome, and candidate enzymes were successfully expressed, purified, and characterized. Six alginate lyases were demonstrated to synergistically deconstruct alginate into unsaturated monosaccharide, followed by one uronic acid reductase and two 2-keto-3-deoxy-d-gluconate (KDG) kinases to produce pyruvate. A nonclassical mannitol 1-phosphate dehydrogenase, catalyzing d-mannitol 1-phosphate to fructose 1-phosphate in the presence of NAD+, and one laminarase also were disclosed. This work revealed that a thermophilic brown alga-decomposing system containing numerous novel thermophilic alginate lyases and a unique mannitol 1-phosphate dehydrogenase was adopted by the natural ethanologenic strain Alg1 during the process of evolution in hostile habitats.  相似文献   

19.
Alginate, a major component of the cell wall matrix in brown seaweeds, is degraded by alginate lyases through a β-elimination reaction. Almost all alginate lyases act endolytically on substrate, thereby yielding unsaturated oligouronic acids having 4-deoxy-l-erythro-hex-4-enepyranosyluronic acid at the nonreducing end. In contrast, Agrobacterium tumefaciens alginate lyase Atu3025, a member of polysaccharide lyase family 15, acts on alginate polysaccharides and oligosaccharides exolytically and releases unsaturated monosaccharides from the substrate terminal. The crystal structures of Atu3025 and its inactive mutant in complex with alginate trisaccharide (H531A/ΔGGG) were determined at 2.10- and 2.99-Å resolutions with final R-factors of 18.3 and 19.9%, respectively, by x-ray crystallography. The enzyme is comprised of an α/α-barrel + anti-parallel β-sheet as a basic scaffold, and its structural fold has not been seen in alginate lyases analyzed thus far. The structural analysis of H531A/ΔGGG and subsequent site-directed mutagenesis studies proposed the enzyme reaction mechanism, with His311 and Tyr365 as the catalytic base and acid, respectively. Two structural determinants, i.e. a short α-helix in the central α/α-barrel domain and a conformational change at the interface between the central and C-terminal domains, are essential for the exolytic mode of action. This is, to our knowledge, the first report on the structure of the family 15 enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
A novel acetylalginate esterase (AcAlgE) gene was cloned and characterized from the genomic DNA library of Sphingomonas sp. MJ-3. A putative gene encoding AcAlgE protein of 292-residue precursor protein with 20-amino acid signal peptide was identified in the alg operon. The deduced AcAlgE protein has GDSL-like consensus motif and shares a highest sequence identity (51 %) with GDSL family lipolytic protein from Pseudoxanthomonas suwonensis. Enzymatic assays with bacterial acetylalginate as the substrate showed that the recombinant AcAlgE protein possesses deacetylation activity. The optimal temperature and pH for the AcAlgE were 22 °C and pH 6.5 (citrate buffer), respectively. The recombinant AcAlgE protein catalyzed deacetylation of acetylalginate with release of acetate. The resulting de-acetylated alginate was readily degraded by alginate lyases, indicating that the recombinant AcAlgE enhanced the subsequent degradation of acetylalginate by alginate lyases. The recombinant AcAlgE can play an important role in the degradation of acetylated alginate such as mucoidal acetylalginate in cystic fibrosis patient.  相似文献   

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