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1.
Hristozova T Michailova L Tuneva D Gotcheva V Angelov A Roshkova Z 《Zeitschrift für Naturforschung. C, Journal of biosciences》2002,57(9-10):858-862
A mutant of the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha with constitutive alcohol oxidase (AOX) and peroxisome biosynthesis was obtained after UV treatment followed by cell plating on a medium containing methanol and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (DOG). DOG-resistant colonies of mutants were insensitive to catabolic repression by glucose and methanol. A selection procedure is described that allows the isolation of a mutant exhibiting a constitutive phenotype of AOX involved in methanol utilization. Furthermore, additional features of the constitutive presence of peroxisomes are demonstrated. 562 DOG-resistant colonies were tested, 24 of them demonstrating constitutive AOX formation. Based on quantitative analysis, one of the strains--DOG-13 was selected and its growth, biochemical and ultrastructural characteristics were examined. Its specific enzyme activity when cultivated on a yeast nitrogen base + 1% glucose (YNB + 1% Glucose) was found to reach 145 nmol x min(-1) x mg(-1) protein (compared to zero of the parent strain) after he 20th hour of cultivation. This was confirmed by fine-structure analysis, showing typical peroxisomes, which number and size increased with the enzyme activity. This study demonstrates a constitutive AOX and peroxisome biosynthesis by the mutant strain H. polymorpha DOG-13 obtained. 相似文献
2.
Thermodynamic behaviour and conformational changes of alcohol oxidase of yeasts Hansenula polymorpha
We studied influence of heating, ethanol and sodium azide on the structural and conformational changes of the alcohol oxidase from yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The increase of fluorescence of alcohol oxidase -cofactor, flavin adenine dinucleotide, was revealed when heated to 60 degrees C while the enzymatic activity of alcohol oxidase remained unchanged. Differential scanning microcalorimetry revealed that ethanol stabilized the protein structure and increased the temperature of melting, Based on the data of circular dichroism, we concluded that the percentage of helicities in the secondary structure of alcohol oxidase was not influenced by both ethanol and sodium azide, however ethanol significantly modified the circular dichroism spectrum associated with the tertiary structure of alcohol oxidase. 相似文献
3.
M de Hoop S Asgeirsdottir M Blaauw M Veenhuis J Cregg M Gleeson A B Geert 《Protein engineering》1991,4(7):821-829
Alcohol oxidase of methylotrophic yeast is an FAD-containing enzyme. When in its active form, the enzyme is an octamer and located in the peroxisomes. To study the importance of FAD-binding on the activity, octamerization and intracellular localization of the enzyme, alcohol oxidase of Hansenula polymorpha was mutated in its presumed nucleotide-binding domain, which is formed by the N-terminal sequence. Whereas mutations of a glutamic acid residue (E42) reduced the stability of the octamer, it hardly affected enzyme activity and expression. However, replacements of three conserved glycines (G13, G15 and G18) and a conserved glutamic acid (E39) within the fold had severe effects. The mutations not only resulted in loss of enzyme activity but in reduced protein levels as well, probably due to decreased stability of the mutant alcohol oxidase. However, octamerization of the protein still occurred. The existence of inactive octameric proteins provides information about the formation pathway of this octameric flavoprotein. 相似文献
4.
We report on the rerouting of peroxisomal alcohol oxidase (AO) to the secretory pathway of Hansenula polymorpha. Using the leader sequence of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mating factor alpha (MFalpha) as sorting signal, AO was correctly sorted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which strongly proliferated in these cells. The MFalpha presequence, but not the prosequence, was cleaved from the protein. AO protein was present in the ER as monomers that lacked FAD, and hence was enzymatically inactive. Furthermore, the recombinant AO protein was subject to gradual degradation, possibly because the protein did not fold properly. However, when the S. cerevisiae invertase signal sequence (ISS) was used, secretion of AO protein was observed in conjunction with bulk of the protein being localized to the ER. The amount of secreted AO protein increased with increasing copy numbers of the AO expression cassette integrated into the genome. The secreted AO protein was correctly processed and displayed enzyme activity. 相似文献
5.
Routing of Hansenula polymorpha alcohol oxidase: an alternative peroxisomal protein-sorting machinery 下载免费PDF全文
Import of Hansenula polymorpha alcohol oxidase (AO) into peroxisomes is dependent on the PTS1 receptor, HpPex5p. The PTS1 of AO (-LARF) is sufficient to direct reporter proteins to peroxisomes. To study AO sorting in more detail, strains producing mutant AO proteins were constructed. AO containing a mutation in the FAD binding fold was mislocalized to the cytosol. This indicates that the PTS1 of AO is not sufficient for import of AO. AO protein in which the PTS1 was destroyed (-LARA) was normally sorted to peroxisomes. Moreover, C-terminal deletions of up to 16 amino acids did not significantly affect AO import, indicating that the PTS1 was not necessary for targeting. Consistent with these observations we found that AO import occurred independent from the C-terminal TPR-domain of HpPex5p, known to bind PTS1 peptides. Synthesis of the N-terminal domain (amino acids 1-272) of HpPex5p in pex5 cells restored AO import, whereas other PTS1 proteins were mislocalized to the cytosol. These data indicate that AO is imported via a novel HpPex5p-dependent protein translocation pathway, which does not require the PTS1 of AO and the C-terminal TPR domains of HpPex5p, but involves FAD binding and the N-terminus of HpPex5p. 相似文献
6.
7.
In vivo inactivation of peroxisomal alcohol oxidase in Hansenula polymorpha by KCN is an irreversible process 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The fate of alcohol oxidase (AO) in chemostat-grown cells of Hansenula polymorpha, after its inactivation by KCN, was studied during subsequent cultivation of the cyanide-treated cells in fresh methanol media. Biochemical experiments showed that the cyanide-induced inactivation of AO was due to the release of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) from the holo enzyme. However, dissociation of octameric AO into subunits was not observed. Subsequent growth of intact cyanide-treated cells in fresh methanol media was paralleled by proteolytic degradation of part of the peroxisomes present in the cells. The recovery of AO activity, concurrently observed in these cultures, was accounted for by synthesis of new enzyme protein. Reactivation of previously inactivated AO was not observed, even in the presence of FAD in such cultures. Newly synthesized AO protein was incorporated in only few of the peroxisomes present in the cells. 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies showed that cyanide-treatment of the cells led to a dissipation of the pH gradient across the peroxisomes membrane. However, restoration of this pH gradient was fast when cells were incubated in fresh methanol medium after removal of the cyanide. 相似文献
8.
Ida J. van der Klei Marten Veenhuis Klaas Nicolay Wim Harder 《Archives of microbiology》1988,151(1):26-33
The fate of alcohol oxidase (AO) in chemostatgrown cells of Hansenula polymorpha, after its inactivation by KCN, was studied during subsequent cultivation of the cyanide-treated cells in fresh methanol media. Biochemical experiments showed that the cyanide-induced inactivation of AO was due to the release of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) from the holo enzyme. However, dissociation of octameric AO into subunits was not observed. Subsequent growth of intact cyanide-treated cells in fresh methanol media was paralelled by proteolytic degradation of part of the peroxisomes present in the cells. The recovery of AO activity, concurrently observed in these cultures, was accounted for by synthesis of new enzyme protein. Reactivation of previously inactivated AO was not observed, even in the presence of FAD in such cultures. Newly synthesized AO protein was incorporated in only few of the peroxisomes present in the cells. 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies showed that cyanide-treatment of the cells led to a dissipation of the pH gradient across the peroxisomal membrane. However, restoration of this pH gradient was fast when cells were incubated in fresh methanol medium after removal of the cyanide.Abbreviations AO
alcohol oxidase
- FAD
flavin adenine dinucleotide
- CHI
cycloheximide
- NMR
nuclear magnetic resonance
- FPLC
fast protein liquid chromatography
- RIE
rocket immuno electrophoresis 相似文献
9.
Modification of flavin adenine dinucleotide in alcohol oxidase of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha. 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Alcohol oxidase, a major peroxisomal protein of methanol-utilizing yeasts, may possess two different forms of flavin adenine dinucleotide, classical FAD and so-called modified FAD (mFAD). Conversion of FAD into mFAD was observed both in purified preparations of the enzyme and in cells grown in batch and continuous culture. The relative amount of mFAD in the enzyme varied from 5 to 95%, depending on the growth or storage conditions. The presence of mFAD led to a slight decrease in Vmax and a significant (about one order) decrease in the Km of alcohol oxidase with respect to methanol. The kinetics of modification measured in purified preparations of the enzyme obeyed first-order kinetics (k = 0.78 h-1). The modification process was strongly inhibited by methanol, formaldehyde or hydroxylamine. Modification observed in continuous culture under steady state conditions depended on the dilution rate and could also be described as a spontaneous first-order reaction (kapp = 0.27 h-1). FAD modification could only be detected in alcohol oxidase and not in other yeast peroxisomal flavoenzymes, such as D-amino acid oxidase from Candida boidinii. 相似文献
10.
Isolation of mutants of Hansenula polymorpha defective in the assembly of octameric alcohol oxidase 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Alcohol oxidase (AO) is a peroxisomal enzyme that catalyses the first step in methanol metabolism in yeast. Monomeric, inactive AO protein is synthesised in the cytosol and subsequently imported into peroxisomes, where the enzymatically active, homo-octameric form is found. The mechanisms involved in AO octamer assembly are largely unclear. Here we describe the isolation of Hansenula polymorpha mutants specifically affected in AO assembly. These mutants are unable to grow on methanol and display reduced AO activities. Based on their phenotypes, three major classes of mutants were isolated. Three additional mutants were isolated that each displayed a unique phenotype. Complementation analysis revealed that the isolated AO assembly mutants belonged to 10 complementation groups. 相似文献
11.
Architecture of peroxisomal alcohol oxidase crystals from the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha as deduced by electron microscopy. 下载免费PDF全文
The architecture of alcohol oxidase crystalloids occurring in vivo in the peroxisomes of methylotrophic yeasts was deduced from electron micrographs of similar crystals of the Hansenula polymorpha enzyme grown in vitro. Three characteristic views of the crystal are observed, as well as single layers in the very early stages of crystal formation. The crystal is concluded to be cubical, with every octameric molecule making the same contacts with four neighbors in one plane, at right angles to its fourfold axis. The unit cell contains six octamers, in three mutually orthogonal orientations, and two large holes, which can accommodate other peroxisomal proteins involved in methanol metabolism. The crystal contains channels, connecting the holes, which allow the diffusion of relatively large molecules through the crystal. Crystal formation depends on just one contact per subunit, which may explain the fragility of the crystals. 相似文献
12.
The regulation of the synthesis of alcohol oxidase, catalase, formaldehyde dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase was investigated in the methanol-utilizing yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The organism was found to synthesize immunologically identical alcohol oxidases during growth on glycerol and methanol. Growth on glycerol, however, was not dependent on the alcohol oxidase, as was shown with a mutant without alcohol oxidase protein. Similarly it was shown with a catalase activity negative mutant that high catalase activity during growth on glycerol was not a prerequisite for the utilization of this substrate, though absolutely required for growth on methanol.Experiments were conducted with mixed substrates to study the influence of methanol on alcohol oxidase synthesis. In batch cultures, growth on ribose plus methanol resulted in an enhanced rate of alcohol oxidase synthesis as compared to ribose alone. In continuous cultures, (D=0.1 h-1) addition of methanol to glycerol-, glucose-, or sorbose-limited cultures gave rise to increased alcohol oxidase activity of up to 20 U/mg, which is about by 2 times higher than the specific activity used for growth on methanol alone. The increase in specific activity of the dissimilatory enzymes on the mixed substrates is partly due to methanol per se, as was shown by a mutant unable to dissimilate or assimilate methanol. 相似文献
13.
Electron microscopy and image analysis of two-dimensional crystals and single molecules of alcohol oxidase from Hansenula polymorpha 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
The octameric protein alcohol oxidase from the yeast Hansenula polymorpha was studied by electron microscopy and image analysis. Two-dimensional crystals were formed by applying the protein, in a phosphate buffer containing poly(ethylene glycol) and EDTA, to a carbon-coated formvar film which had been glow-discharged in pentylamine at least several hours earlier. The crystals show p4 symmetry and have a unit cell of 12.5 X 12.5 nm2, containing one molecule. Image analysis of the crystals and of single molecules yielded two different views. From these it can be deduced that the subunits have an elongated shape and form two layers of four, stacked face to face. A tentative model of the structure is presented. 相似文献
14.
Johnson BJ Cohen J Welford RW Pearson AR Schulten K Klinman JP Wilmot CM 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2007,282(24):17767-17776
The accessibility of large substrates to buried enzymatic active sites is dependent upon the utilization of proteinaceous channels. The necessity of these channels in the case of small substrates is questionable because diffusion through the protein matrix is often assumed. Copper amine oxidases contain a buried protein-derived quinone cofactor and a mononuclear copper center that catalyze the conversion of two substrates, primary amines and molecular oxygen, to aldehydes and hydrogen peroxide, respectively. The nature of molecular oxygen migration to the active site in the enzyme from Hansenula polymorpha is explored using a combination of kinetic, x-ray crystallographic, and computational approaches. A crystal structure of H. polymorpha amine oxidase in complex with xenon gas, which serves as an experimental probe for molecular oxygen binding sites, reveals buried regions of the enzyme suitable for transient molecular oxygen occupation. Calculated O(2) free energy maps using copper amine oxidase crystal structures in the absence of xenon correspond well with later experimentally observed xenon sites in these systems, and allow the visualization of O(2) migration routes of differing probabilities within the protein matrix. Site-directed mutagenesis designed to block individual routes has little effect on overall k(cat)/K(m) (O(2)), supporting multiple dynamic pathways for molecular oxygen to reach the active site. 相似文献
15.
Assembly of alcohol oxidase in peroxisomes of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha requires the cofactor flavin adenine dinucleotide. 下载免费PDF全文
M E Evers V I Titorenko I J van der Klei W Harder M Veenhuis 《Molecular biology of the cell》1994,5(8):829-837
The peroxisomal flavoprotein alcohol oxidase (AO) is an octamer (600 kDa) consisting of eight identical subunits, each of which contains one flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule as a cofactor. Studies on a riboflavin (Rf) auxotrophic mutant of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha revealed that limitation of the cofactor led to drastic effects on AO import and assembly as well as peroxisome proliferation. Compared to wild-type control cells Rf-limitation led to 1) reduced levels of AO protein, 2) reduced levels of correctly assembled and activated AO inside peroxisomes, 3) a partial inhibition of peroxisomal protein import, leading to the accumulation of precursors of matrix proteins in the cytosol, and 4) a significant increase in peroxisome number. We argue that the inhibition of import may result from the saturation of a peroxisomal molecular chaperone under conditions that normal assembly of a major matrix protein inside the target organelle is prevented. 相似文献
16.
Shleev SV Shumakovich GP Nikitina OV Morozova OV Pavlishko HM Gayda GZ Gonchar MV 《Biochemistry. Biokhimii?a》2006,71(3):245-250
Alcohol oxidase (AOX) has been purified 8-fold from a genetically constructed over-producing strain of the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha C-105 (gcr1 catX) with impaired glucose-induced catabolite repression and completely devoid of catalase. The final enzyme preparation was homogeneous as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and HPLC. Some physicochemical and biochemical properties of AOX were studied in detail: molecular weight (approximately 620 kD), isoelectric point (pI 6.1), and UV-VIS, circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescence spectra. The content of different secondary structure motifs of the enzyme has been calculated from the CD spectra using a computer program. It was found that the native protein contains about 50% alpha-helix, 25% beta-sheet, and about 20% random structures. The kinetic parameters for different substrates, such as methanol, ethanol, and formaldehyde, were measured using a Clark oxygen electrode. The rate of enzymatic oxidation of formaldehyde by alcohol oxidase from H. polymorpha is only twice lower compared to the best substrate of the enzyme, methanol. 相似文献
17.
Peroxisomal alcohol oxidase (AO) from Hansenula polymorpha is inactive and partially mislocalized to the cytosol upon synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Co-production with H. polymorpha pyruvate carboxylase (HpPyc1p) resulted in AO activation, but did not improve import into peroxisomes. We show that import of AO mediated by S. cerevisiae Pex5p is strictly dependent on the peroxisomal targeting signal 1 (PTS1) of AO and independent of HpPyc1p. In contrast, HpPex5p-mediated sorting of AO into S. cerevisiae peroxisomes is independent of the PTS1, but requires an alternative PTS that is only formed when HpPyc1p is co-produced and most likely involves folding and co-factor binding to AO. 相似文献
18.
Substructure of crystalline peroxisomes in methanol-grown Hansenula polymorpha: evidence for an in vivo crystal of alcohol oxidase. 总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6 下载免费PDF全文
The substructural organization of completely crystalline peroxisomes present in Hansenula polymorpha cells grown under methanol limitation in a chemostat was investigated by different cytochemical and ultrastructural techniques. Time-dependent cytochemical staining experiments indicated that activities of the two main constituents of these organelles, namely, alcohol oxidase and catalase, were present throughout the crystalline matrix. Catalase was completely removed from isolated peroxisomes by osmotic shock treatment. After such treatment, the ultrastructure of the crystalline matrix of the organelles remained virtually intact. Because alcohol oxidase activity was still present in this matrix, it was concluded that alcohol oxidase protein is the only structural element of the peroxisomal crystalloids. The molecular architecture of the crystalloids was investigated in ultrathin cryosections which permitted recognition of individual molecules in the crystalline matrix. Depending on the plane of sectioning, different crystalline patterns were observed. Tilting experiments indicated that these images were caused by superposition of octameric alcohol oxidase molecules arranged in a tetragonal lattice. A three-dimensional model of the crystalloid is presented. The repeating unit of this structure is composed of four alcohol oxidase molecules. The crystalloid represents an open structure, which may explain the observed free mobility of catalase molecules. 相似文献
19.
20.
Cloning and sequencing of the peroxisomal amine oxidase gene from Hansenula polymorpha 总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7
P G Bruinenberg M Evers H R Waterham J Kuipers A C Arnberg G AB 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》1989,1008(2):157-167
We have cloned the AMO gene, encoding the microbody matrix enzyme amine oxidase (EC 1.4.3.6) from the yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The gene was isolated by differential screening of a cDNA library, immunoselection, and subsequent screening of a H. polymorpha genomic library. The nucleotide sequence of a 3.6 kilobase stretch of DNA containing the amine oxidase (AMO) gene was determined. The AMO gene contains an open reading frame of 692 amino acids, with a relative molecular mass of 77,435. The 5' and 3' ends of the gene were mapped and show that the transcribed region measures 2134 nucleotides. The derived amino-acid sequence was confirmed by sequencing an internal proteolytic fragment of the purified protein. Amine oxidase contains the tripeptide sequence Ser-Arg-Leu, located 9 residues from the carboxy terminus, which may represent the topogenic signal for protein import into microbodies. 相似文献