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1.
Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are copper ion-containing enzymes that degrade crystalline polysaccharides, such as cellulose or chitin, through an oxidative mechanism. To the best of our knowledge, there are no assay methods for the direct characterization of LPMOs that degrade substrates without coupled enzymes. As such, in this study, a coupled enzyme-free assay method for LPMOs was developed, which is based on measuring the consumption of ascorbic acid used as an external electron donor for LPMOs. To establish this new assay method, a chitin-active LPMO from Bacillus atrophaeus (BatLPMO10) was cloned as a model enzyme. An expression system using B. subtilis as the host cell yielded a simple purification process without complicated periplasmic fractionation, as well as improved productivity by 3.7-fold higher than that of Escherichia coli BL21(DE3). At the optimum pH determined using a newly developed assay, BatLPMO10 showed the highest activity in terms of promoting chitin degradation by a chitinase. In addition, the assay method indicated that BatLPMO10 was inhibited by sodium ions, and BatLPMO10 and a chitinase mutually enhanced each other’s activities upon degrading chitin as the substrate. In conclusion, this hydrolase-free ascorbate assay allows quantitative analysis of BatLPMO10 without a coupled enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Chitinases have the ability of chitin digestion that constitutes a main compound of the cell wall in many of the phytopathogens such as fungi. Chitinase Chit42 from Trichoderma atroviride PTCC5220 is considered to play an important role in the biocontrol activity of this fungus against plant pathogens. Chit42 lacks a chitin binding domain (ChBD). We have produced a chimeric chitinase with stronger chitin-binding capacity by fusing to Chit42 a ChBD from Serratia marcescens Chitinase B. The fusion of ChBD improved the affinity to crystalline and colloidal chitin and also the enzyme activity of the chimeric chitinase when compared with the native Chit42. The chimeric chitinase showed higher antifungal activity toward phytopathogenic fungi.  相似文献   

3.
Results obtained with an in vitro system for the study of chitinase are described. The system involves soluble enzyme protein(s) and an insoluble substrate preparation. With insect molting fluid chitinase, it shows properties that parallel those observed during in vivo breakdown of cuticle during the molt. For example, molting fluid chitinase activity not previously exposed to chitin is stronly and specifically adsorbed to the substrate, in contrast to other enzymatic activities including hexosaminidase (chitobiase) present in molting fluid. This leads to partial purification of molting fluid chitinase activity reflected in increased specific activity of chitinase associated with the insoluble chitin substrate; we have previously reported increase of specific chitinase activity of (deproteinized) cuticle resulting from its incubation with molting fluid (M. L. Bade and A. Stinson, 1978, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.84, 381–388). Soluble end product is generated rapidly and linearly with time by the in vitro system; the end product is assumed to be N-acetylglucosamine since the specific radioactivity of this compound is unchanged during the 10 min required for assay. Molting fluid chitinase activity may involve a number of polypeptides ranging in molecular weight from 145,000 to less than 20,000 daltons. The system described gives results consistent with a processive mechanism for molting fluid chitinase, i.e., data are given demonstrating that molting fluid chitinase continues to act on the same chitin particle(s) with which it initially associates rather than diffusing freely from substrate particle to substrate particle, and the product of its action appears to be a monosaccharide rather than a mixture of oligosaccharides. Processive behavior for chitinase would be predicted from the known structure, and the in vivo measured rate of breakdown, of cuticle chitin during the molt; the preliminary nature of this conclusion, based on what is so far known about the structure of the substrate used in the in vitro system, is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Chitinase activity during Drosophila development   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Before both larval moults in Drosophila melanogaster, the chitin in the cuticle is digested to a significant degree by the moulting fluid. A spurt of chitinase activity appears just before each ecdysis, drops sharply after the first ecdysis, and begins to rise again just about the time that chitin degradation becomes evident. The level of enzyme activity/mg of soluble protein reached just before the second ecdysis is about twice that reached before the first, and this declines gradually after the ecdysis until puparium formation. Chitinase activity is measured with a viscometric assay on a chitosan substrate.The enzyme activity is stable, with no loosely bound cofactor. Data also exist supporting the presence of more than one enzyme fraction in Drosophila with chitinase activity.  相似文献   

5.
  • 1.1. Fundamental chitin digestion characteristics of Crassostrea virginica crystalline style were investigated.
  • 2.2. Optimum temperature and pH were 34°C and 4.8. respectively.
  • 3.3. The colloidal regenerated chitin (0.56mol/0.5 ml: GlcNAc equivalents) was saturating under all enzyme levels encountered.
  • 4.4. There was no evidence of end product inhibition, even after 100 hr incubation.
  • 5.5. Calculated Km for the chitinase complex was 1.19mM when determined using a 30 min assay, but was only 0.70 mM when determined using a 4.6 hr assay.
  • 6.6. Both Km values are lower than reported for similar assays in other molluscs and for most bacteria.
  • 7.7. Effect of substrate preparation on the kinetics are discussed.
  • 8.8. Eight peaks of chitinase activity were resolved by DEAE-Fractogel ion exchange chromatography.
  相似文献   

6.
We examined the mechanism of attachment of the marine bacterium Vibrio harveyi to chitin. Wheat germ agglutinin and chitinase bind to chitin and competitively inhibited the attachment of V. harveyi to chitin, but not to cellulose. Bovine serum albumin and cellulase do not bind to chitin and had no effect on bacterial attachment to chitin. These data suggest that this bacterium recognizes specific attachment sites on the chitin particle. The level of attachment of a chitinase-overproducing mutant of V. harveyi to chitin was about twice as much as that of the uninduced wild type. Detergent-extracted cell membranes inhibited attachment and contained a 53-kDa peptide that was overproduced by the chitinase-overproducing mutant. Three peptides (40, 53, and 150 kDa) were recovered from chitin which had been exposed to membrane extracts. Polyclonal antibodies raised against extracellular chitinase cross-reacted with the 53- and 150-kDa chitin-binding peptides and inhibited attachment, probably by sterically hindering interactions between the chitin-binding peptides and chitin. The 53- and 150-kDa chitin-binding peptides did not have chitinase activity. These results suggest that chitin-binding peptides, especially the 53-kDa chitin-binding peptide and chitinase and perhaps the 150-kDa peptide, mediate the specific attachment of V. harveyi to chitin.  相似文献   

7.
T. Boller  A. Gehri  F. Mauch  U. Vögeli 《Planta》1983,157(1):22-31
Ethylene induced an endochitinase in primary leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris L. The enzyme formed chitobiose and higher chitin oligosaccharides from insoluble, colloidal or regenerated chitin. Less than 5% of the total chitinolytic activity was detected in an exochitinase assay proposed by Abeles et al. (1970, Plant Physiol. 47, 129–134) for ethylene-induced chitinase. In ethylene-treated plants, chitinase activity started to increase after a lag of 6 h and was induced 30 fold within 24 h. Exogenously supplied ethylene at 1 nl ml?1 was sufficient for half-maximal induction, and enhancement of the endogenous ethylene formation also enhanced chitinase activity. Cycloheximide prevented the induction. Among various hydrolases tested, only chitinase and, to a lesser extent, β-1,3-glucanase were induced by ethylene. Induction of chitinase by ethylene occurred in many different plant species. Ethylene-induced chitinase was purified by affinity chromatography on a column of regenerated chitin. Its apparent molecular weight obtained by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis was 30,000; the molecular weight determined from filtration through Sephadex G-75 was 22,000. The purified enzyme attacked chitin in isolated cell walls of Fusarium solani. It also acted as a lysozyme when incubated with Micrococcus lysodeikticus. It is concluded that ethylene-induced chitinase functions as a defense enzyme against fungal and bacterial invaders.  相似文献   

8.
Ren YY  West CA 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1169-1178
Cell-free extracts of UV-irradiated rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaves have a much greater capacity for the synthesis from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate of diterpene hydrocarbons, including the putative precursors of rice phytoalexins, than extracts of unstressed leaves (KA Wickham, CA West [1992] Arch Biochem Biophys 293: 320-332). An elicitor bioassay was developed on the basis of these observations in which 6-day-old rice cell suspension cultures were incubated for 40 hours with the substance to be tested, and an enzyme extract of the treated cells was assayed for its diterpene hydrocarbon synthesis activity as a measure of the response to elicitor. Four types of cell wall polysaccharides and oligosaccharide fragments that have elicitor activity for other plants were tested. Of these, polymeric chitin was the most active; a suspension concentration of approximately 7 micrograms per milliliter gave 50% of the maximum response in the bioassay. Chitosan and a branched β-1,3-glucan fraction from Phytophthora megasperma f. sp. glycinea cell walls were only weakly active, and a mixture of oligogalacturonides was only slightly active. A crude mycelial cell wall preparation from the rice pathogen, Fusarium moniliforme, gave a response comparable to that of chitin, and this activity was sensitive to predigestion of the cell wall material with chitinase before the elicitor assay. N-Acetylglucosamine, chitobiose, chitotriose, and chitotetrose were inactive as elicitors, whereas a mixture of chitin fragments solubilized from insoluble chitin by partial acid hydrolysis was highly active. Constitutive chitinase activity was detected in the culture filtrate and enzyme extract of cells from a 6-day-old rice cell culture; the amount of chitinase activity increased markedly in both the culture filtrate and cell extracts after treatment of the culture with chitin. We propose on the basis of these results that soluble chitin fragments released from fungal cell walls through the action of constitutive rice chitinases serve as biotic elicitors of defense-related responses in rice.  相似文献   

9.
The extracellular chitinase produced by Serratia marcescens was obtained in highly purified form by adsorption-digestion on chitin. After gel electrophoresis in a nondenaturing system, the purified preparation exhibited two major protein bands that coincided with enzymatic activity. A study of the enzyme properties showed its suitability for the analysis of chitin. Thus, the chitinase exhibited excellent stability, a wide pH optimum, and linear kinetics over a much greater range than similar enzymes from other sources. The major product of chitin hydrolysis was chitobiose, which was slowly converted into free N-acetylglucosamine by traces of β-N-acetylglucosaminidase present in the purified preparation. The preparation was free from other polysaccharide hydrolases. Experiments with radiolabeled yeast cell walls showed that the chitinase was able to degrade wall chitin completely and specifically.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously reported a non-processive endo-type chitinase, ChiA, from a newly isolated marine psychrophilic bacterium, Pseudoalteromonas sp. DL-6. In this study, a processive exo-type chitinase, ChiC, was cloned from the same bacterium and characterized in detail. ChiC could hydrolyze crystalline chitin into (GlcNAc)2 as the only observed product. It exhibited high catalytic activity even at low temperatures, e.g. close to 0 °C, or in the presence of 5 M NaCl, suggesting that ChiC was a cold-adapted and highly salt-tolerant chitinase. ChiC could also hydrolyze other substrates, including chitosan and Avicel, indicating its broad substrate specificity. Sequence features indicated that ChiC was a multi-domain protein having a deep substrate-binding groove that was regarded as characteristic of processive exo-chitinases. Enzymatic hydrolysis of chitin by ChiC could be remarkably boosted in the presence of ChiA, suggesting the synergy of ChiC and ChiA. This work provided a new evidence to prove that marine psychrophilic bacteria utilized a synergistic enzyme system to degrade recalcitrant chitin.  相似文献   

11.
An autolysis chitinase was purified from the cultural medium of the anaerobic fungus Piromyces communis OTS1 by ammonium sulfate precipitation, affinity chromatography with regenerated chitin, chromato-focusing, gel filtration, and chromato-focusing again. The optimal pH and temperature were 6.0 and 50°C, respectively, for a 20-min assay. The chitinase was stable from pH 6.0 to 8.0, but was unstable at 70°C for 20 min. The molecular mass of chitinase was estimated by SDS-PAGE to be 44.9 kDa, and its pI was 4.4. The enzyme activity, which was of the ‘endo’ type, was inhibited by Hg2+ and allosamidin. The chitinase hydrolyzes chitin powder and fungal cell walls at a higher rate than an artificial chitin substrate. It can be concluded that extracellular chitinase is similar to cytosolic chitinase, but they are not the same protein. Received: 3 December 1996 / Accepted: 28 January 1997  相似文献   

12.
The antagonism of Trichoderma strains usually correlates with the secretion of fungal cell wall degrading enzymes such as chitinases. Chitinase Chit42 is believed to play an important role in the biocontrol activity of Trichoderma strains as a biocontrol agent against phytopathogenic fungi. Chit42 lacks a chitin-binding domain (ChBD) which is involved in its binding activity to insoluble chitin. In this study, a chimeric chitinase with improved enzyme activity was produced by fusing a ChBD from T. atroviride chitinase 18–10 to Chit42. The improved chitinase containing a ChBD displayed a 1.7-fold higher specific activity than chit42. This increase suggests that the ChBD provides a strong binding capacity to insoluble chitin. Moreover, Chit42-ChBD transformants showed higher antifungal activity towards seven phytopathogenic fungal species.  相似文献   

13.
The presence of chitin in hyphal cell walls and regenerating protoplast walls ofSaprolegnia monoi¨ca was demonstrated by biochemical and biophysical analyses. α-Chitin was characterized by X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction, and infrared spectroscopy. In hyphal cell walls, chitin appeared as small globular particles while cellulose, the other crystalline cell wall component, had a microfibrillar structure. Chitin synthesis was demonstrated in regenerating protoplasts by the incorporation of radioactiveN-acetylglucosamine into a KOH-insoluble product. Chitin synthase activity of cell-free extracts was particulate. This activity was stimulated by trypsin and inhibited by the competitive inhibitor polyoxin D (Ki 20 μM). The reaction product was insoluble in 1M KOH or 1M acetic acid and was hydrolyzed by chitinase into diacetylchitobiose. Fungal growth and cell wall chitin content were reduced when mycelia were grown in the presence of polyoxin D. However, hyphal morphology was not altered by the presence of the antibiotic indicating that chitin does not seem to play an important role in the morphogenesis ofSaprolegnia.  相似文献   

14.
Chitin is an abundant polysaccharide used by many organisms for structural rigidity and water repulsion. As such, the insoluble crystalline structure of chitin poses significant challenges for enzymatic degradation. Acidic mammalian chitinase, a processive glycosyl hydrolase, is the primary enzyme involved in the degradation of environmental chitin in mammalian lungs. Mutations to acidic mammalian chitinase have been associated with asthma, and genetic deletion in mice increases morbidity and mortality with age. We initially set out to reverse this phenotype by engineering hyperactive acidic mammalian chitinase variants. Using a screening approach with commercial fluorogenic substrates, we identified mutations with consistent increases in activity. To determine whether the activity increases observed were consistent with more biologically relevant chitin substrates, we developed new assays to quantify chitinase activity with insoluble chitin, and identified a one‐pot fluorogenic assay that is sufficiently sensitive to quantify changes to activity due to the addition or removal of a carbohydrate‐binding domain. We show that the activity increases from our directed evolution screen were lost when insoluble substrates were used. In contrast, naturally occurring gain‐of‐function mutations gave similar results with oligomeric and insoluble substrates. We also show that activity differences between acidic mammalian chitinase and chitotriosidase are reduced with insoluble substrate, suggesting that previously reported activity differences with oligomeric substrates may have been driven by differential substrate specificity. These results highlight the need for assays against physiological substrates when engineering metabolic enzymes, and provide a new one‐pot assay that may prove to be broadly applicable to engineering glycosyl hydrolases.  相似文献   

15.
Chitinase [EC 3.2.1.14] is an enzyme that can hydrolyze the β-1,4 linkage between N-acetyl-D-glucosamine in chitin. In the genome database of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus, we found two adjacent genes (PF1233 and PF1234) homologous to those of the chitinase of Thermococcus kodakaraensis. In the cultured medium of P. furiosus, however, no chitinase activity was detected. On analysis of the structural gene of P. furiosus, it appears that one nucleotide insertion in PF1234 caused a frame shift and separated a gene. By deletion of one nucleotide in PF1234, the best match was achieved between chitinases of T. kodakaraenesis and P. furiosus. We succeeded in constructing an artificial recombinant chitinase exhibiting hydrolytic activity toward not only colloidal but also crystalline chitins at high temperature. Furthermore, by analyzing the characteristics of the domains, a recombinant enzyme comprising two domains exhibiting high activity toward crystalline chitin was prepared.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Aspergillus niger LOCK 62 produces an antifungal chitinase. Different sources of chitin in the medium were used to test the production of the chitinase. Chitinase production was most effective when colloidal chitin and shrimp shell were used as substrates. The optimum incubation period for chitinase production by Aspergillus niger LOCK 62 was 6?days. The chitinase was purified from the culture medium by fractionation with ammonium sulfate and affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the purified enzyme was 43?kDa. The highest activity was obtained at 40?°C for both crude and purified enzymes. The crude chitinase activity was stable during 180?min incubation at 40?°C, but purified chitinase lost about 25?% of its activity under these conditions. Optimal pH for chitinase activity was pH 6–6.5. The activity of crude and purified enzyme was stabilized by Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions, but inhibited by Hg2+ and Pb2+ ions. Chitinase isolated from Aspergillus niger LOCK 62 inhibited the growth of the fungal phytopathogens: Fusarium culmorum, Fusarium solani and Rhizoctonia solani. The growth of Botrytis cinerea, Alternaria alternata, and Fusarium oxysporum was not affected.  相似文献   

18.
The paper reports on the isolation of an extracellular chitinase produced by the alkaliphilic Bacillus mannanilyticus IB-OR17 B1 strain grown in media containing crab shell and bee chitin at a pH of 8–11. The enzyme was 860-fold purified by ultrafiltration and chitin sorption. The molecular weight of the purified chitinase was shown by denaturing electrophoresis to be 56 kDa. The enzyme showed maximum activity at a pH of 7.5–8.0 and 65°C and was stable within a pH range of 3.5–10.5 and temperature range of 75–85°C. With colloidal chitin as substrate, the kinetic characteristics of the chitinase were determined as follows: KM ~ 1.32 mg/mL and Vmax ~ 5.05 μM min–1. N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and its dimer were the main products of enzymatic chitin cleavage, while the trisaccharide was detected just in minor quantities. The chitinase actively hydrolyzed p-nitrophenyl-GlcNAc2 according to the exo-mechanism of substrate hydrolysis characteristic of chitobiosidases.  相似文献   

19.
《Plant science》1986,44(2):79-83
Lysozyme (EC 3.2.1.17) and/or chitinase (EC 3.2.1.14) activities were found to be increased up to 2-fold in Rubus hispidus callus cultured in vitro by infection with Micrococcus luteus, Septoria nodorum and Trichoderma viride. The presence of chitin, chitosan and the bacterial peptidoglycan in the growth medium could also increase chitinase activity and, to a lesser extent, lysozyme activity in the tissue cultures.  相似文献   

20.
Endogenous proteins secreted from Kluyveromyces lactis were screened for their ability to bind to or to hydrolyze chitin. This analysis resulted in identification of a nucleus-encoded extracellular chitinase (KlCts1p) with a chitinolytic activity distinct from that of the plasmid-encoded killer toxin α-subunit. Sequence analysis of cloned KlCTS1 indicated that it encodes a 551-amino-acid chitinase having a secretion signal peptide, an amino-terminal family 18 chitinase catalytic domain, a serine-threonine-rich domain, and a carboxy-terminal type 2 chitin-binding domain. The association of purified KlCts1p with chitin is stable in the presence of high salt concentrations and pH 3 to 10 buffers; however, complete dissociation and release of fully active KlCts1p occur in 20 mM NaOH. Similarly, secreted human serum albumin harboring a carboxy-terminal fusion with the chitin-binding domain derived from KlCts1p also dissociates from chitin in 20 mM NaOH, demonstrating the domain's potential utility as an affinity tag for reversible chitin immobilization or purification of alkaliphilic or alkali-tolerant recombinant fusion proteins. Finally, haploid K. lactis cells harboring a cts1 null mutation are viable but exhibit a cell separation defect, suggesting that KlCts1p is required for normal cytokinesis, probably by facilitating the degradation of septum-localized chitin.  相似文献   

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