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1.
Two enzymes that hydrolysed lactose were purified essentially to homogeneity from cell extracts of the oleaginous yeast Trichosporon cutaneum. One enzyme of Mr 120,000 had properties typical of a beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23). It hydrolysed lactose, lactulose and nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactosides. The enzyme required K+ or Rb+ for activity, and other monovalent cations tested were not effective. Enzyme activity was abolished by EDTA and stimulated by Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ca2+. The beta-galactosidase was induced by lactose, galactose, lactulose and lactobionic acid. The other enzyme, a beta-glycosidase (EC 3.2.1.21) of Mr 52,000 showed no ionic requirements and it hydrolysed lactose, nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactosides, 4-nitrophenyl-beta-D-glucoside, cellobiose, laminaribiose, laminaritriose and sophorose, but not gentiobiose, 4-nitrophenyl-beta-D-mannoside or sucrose. This enzyme was induced by lactose, galactose and lactulose, and also by cellobiose.  相似文献   

2.
AIMS: Characterization of a thermostable recombinant beta-galactosidase from Thermotoga maritima for the hydrolysis of lactose and the production of galacto-oligosaccharides. METHODS AND RESULTS: A putative beta-galactosidase gene of Thermotoga maritima was expressed in Escherichia coli as a carboxyl terminal His-tagged recombinant enzyme. The gene encoded a 1100-amino acid protein with a calculated molecular weight of 129,501. The expressed enzyme was purified by heat treatment, His-tag affinity chromatography, and gel filtration. The optimum temperatures for beta-galactosidase activity were 85 and 80 degrees C with oNPG and lactose, respectively. The optimum pH value was 6.5 for both oNPG and lactose. In thermostability experiments, the enzyme followed first-order kinetics of thermal inactivation and its half-life times at 80 and 90 degrees C were 16 h and 16 min, respectively. Mn2+ was the most effective divalent cation for beta-galactosidase activity on both oNPG and lactose. The Km and Vmax values of the thermostable enzyme for oNPG at 80 degrees C were 0.33 mm and 79.6 micromol oNP min(-1) mg(-1). For lactose, the Km and Vmax values were dependent on substrate concentrations; 1.6 and 63.3 at lower concentrations up to 10 mm of lactose and 27.8 mm and 139 micromol glucose min(-1) mg(-1) at higher concentrations, respectively. The enzyme displayed non-Michaelis-Menten reaction kinetics with substrate activation, which was explained by simultaneous reactions of hydrolysis and transgalactosylation. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that the thermostable enzyme may be suitable for both the hydrolysis of lactose and the production of galacto-oligosaccharides. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The findings of this work contribute to the knowledge of hydrolysis and transgalactosylation performed by beta-galactosidase of hyperthermophilic bacteria.  相似文献   

3.
Plasma membrane-bound aminopeptidases (EC 3.4.11.2) are found in the midgut cells from Rhynchosciara americana larvae, and are recovered in soluble form after papain treatment. The major papain-released aminopeptidase (Mr 207,000 and pI 7.8) was shown to be a true aminopeptidase with a broad specificity toward aminoacyl-beta-naphthylamides and to be more active on tetra and tripeptides than on dipeptides. The purified aminopeptidase is inactivated by EDTA according to a kinetics which is half order in relation to EDTA. Leucine hydroxamate (Ki 27 microM) and hydroxylamine (Ki 5.4 mM) completely protect the enzyme from inactivation by EDTA, whereas isoamyl alcohol (Ki 62 mM) increases the inactivation rate. There are 2.3 binding sites in the enzyme for phenanthroline, which makes the binding of the substrate in the enzyme difficult, changes the enzyme-substrate into a more productive complex, and increases the inactivation rate of the enzyme by EDTA by 87-fold. The data support the proposal that the enzyme has a metal ion which is catalytically active and that the enzyme displays two subsites in its active center: a hydrophobic subsite, to which isoamyl alcohol binds exposing the metal ion, and a polar subsite, to which hydroxylamine binds.  相似文献   

4.
Although the addition of various divalent metals to beta-galactosidase resulted in apparent activation, only Mg2+ and Mn2+ actually did activate. The apparent activation by the other divalent metals was shown to be due to Mg2+ impurities. Calcium did not activate, but experiments suggested that it did bind. Other divalent metals which were studied failed to bind. The dissociation constants for Mg2+ and Mn2+ were 2.8 X 10(-7) and 1.1 X 10(-8) M, respectively, and in each case one ion bound per monomer. These constants corresponded very closely to apparent values which were obtained from activation studies. The apparent binding constant for Ca2+, obtained from competition studies, was 1.5 X 10(-5) M. Data were obtained which showed that Mg2+, Mn2+, and Ca2+ all compete for binding at a single site. Of interest and of possible molecular biological importance was the observation that, while Mg2+ bound noncooperatively (n = 1.0), Mn2+ did so in a highly cooperative manner (n = 3.4). The binding of Mn2+ (as compared to Mg2+) resulted in a twofold drop in the Vmax for the hydrolysis and transgalactosylis reactions of lactose but had little effect on the Vmax of hydrolysis of allolactose, p-nitrophenyl beta-D-galactopyranoside (PNPG), or o-nitrophenyl beta-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG); Km values were not effected differently for any of the substrates by Mn2+ as compared to Mg2+. When very low levels of divalent metal ions were present (0.01 M EDTA added) or when Ca2+ was bound with lactose as the substrate, a greater decrease was observed in the rate of the transgalactosylic reaction than in the rate of the hydrolytic reaction, and the Km values for lactose and ONPG were increased. Of the three divalent metal ions which bound to beta-galactosidase, only Mn2+ had significant stabilizing effects toward denaturing urea and heat conditions.  相似文献   

5.
We examined the kinetics of beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23) induction in the yeast Kluyveromyces lactis. Enzyme activity began to increase 10 to 15 min, about 1/10 of a cell generation, after the addition of inducer and continued to increase linearly for from 7 to 9 cell generations before reaching a maximum, some 125- to 150-fold above the basal level of uninduced cells. Thereafter, as long as logarithmic growth was maintained, enzyme levels remained high, but enzyme levels dropped to a value only 5- to 10-fold above the basal level if cells entered stationary phase. Enzyme induction required the constant presence of inducer, since removal of inducer caused a reduction in enzyme level. Three nongratuitous inducers of beta-galactosidase activity, lactose, galactose, and lactobionic acid, were identified. Several inducers of the lac operon of Escherichia coli, including methyl-, isopropyl- and phenyl-1-thio-beta-d-galactoside, and thioallolactose did not induce beta-galactosidase in K. lactis even though they entered the cell. The maximum rate of enzyme induction was only achieved with lactose concentrations of greater than 1 to 2 mM. The initial differential rate of beta-galactosidase appearance after induction was reduced in medium containing glucose, indicating transient carbon catabolite repression. However, glucose did not exclude lactose from K. lactis, it did not cause permanent carbon catabolite repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis, and it did not prevent lactose utilization. These three results are in direct contrast to those observed for lactose utilization in E. coli. Furthermore, these results, along with our observation that K. lactis grew slightly faster on lactose than on glucose, indicate that this organism has evolved an efficient system for utilizing lactose.  相似文献   

6.
beta-D-Galactopyranosylmethyl-p-nitrophenyltriazene (beta-GalMNT), a specific inhibitor of beta-galactosidase, was isolated as crystals by HPLC and its chemical and physicochemical characteristics were examined. Aspergillus oryzae beta-galactosidase was inactivated by the compound. We studied the inhibition mechanism in detail. The inhibitor was hydrolyzed by the enzyme to p-nitroaniline and an active intermediate (beta-galactopyranosylmethyl carbonium or beta-galactopyranosylmethyldiazonium), which inactivated the enzyme. The efficiency of inactivation of the enzyme (the ratio of moles of inactivated enzyme to moles of beta-GalMNT hydrolyzed by the enzyme) was 3%; the efficiency of Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase was 49%. In spite of the low efficiency, the rate of inactivation of A. oryzae enzyme was not very different from that of the E. coli enzyme, because the former hydrolyzed beta-GalMNT faster than the latter did. A. oryzae beta-galactosidase was also inactivated by p-chlorophenyl, p-tolyl, and m-nitrophenyl derivatives of beta-galactopyranosylmethyltriazene. However, E. coli beta-galactosidase was not inactivated by these triazene derivatives. The results showed that the inactivation of A. oryzae and E. coli beta-galactosidases by beta-GalMNT was an enzyme-activated and active-site-directed irreversible inactivation. The possibility of inactivation by intermediates produced nonenzymatically was ruled out for E. coli, but not for the A. oryzae enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
The beta-galactosidase from the Antarctic gram-negative bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis TAE 79 was purified to homogeneity. The nucleotide sequence and the NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme indicate that the beta-galactosidase subunit is composed of 1,038 amino acids with a calculated M(r) of 118,068. This beta-galactosidase shares structural properties with Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase (comparable subunit mass, 51% amino sequence identity, conservation of amino acid residues involved in catalysis, similar optimal pH value, and requirement for divalent metal ions) but is characterized by a higher catalytic efficiency on synthetic and natural substrates and by a shift of apparent optimum activity toward low temperatures and lower thermal stability. The enzyme also differs by a higher pI (7.8) and by specific thermodynamic activation parameters. P. haloplanktis beta-galactosidase was expressed in E. coli, and the recombinant enzyme displays properties identical to those of the wild-type enzyme. Heat-induced unfolding monitored by intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy showed lower melting point values for both P. haloplanktis wild-type and recombinant beta-galactosidase compared to the mesophilic enzyme. Assays of lactose hydrolysis in milk demonstrate that P. haloplanktis beta-galactosidase can outperform the current commercial beta-galactosidase from Kluyveromyces marxianus var. lactis, suggesting that the cold-adapted beta-galactosidase could be used to hydrolyze lactose in dairy products processed in refrigerated plants.  相似文献   

8.
A beta-galactosidase isoenzyme, beta-Gall, from Bifidobacterium infantis HL96, was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The molecular mass of the beta-Gall subunit was estimated to be 115 kDa by SDS-PAGE. The enzyme appeared to be a tetramer, with a molecular weight of about 470 kDa by native PAGE. The optimum temperature and pH for o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG) and lactose were 60 degrees C, pH 7.5, and 50 degrees C, pH 7.5, respectively. The enzyme was stable over a pH range of 5.0-8.5, and remained active for more than 80 min at pH 7.0, 50 degrees C. The enzyme activity was significantly increased by reducing agents. Maximum activity required the presence of both Na+ and K+, at a concentration of 10 mM. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, divalent metal cations, and Cr3+, and to a lesser extent by EDTA and urea. The hydrolytic activity using lactose as a substrate was significantly inhibited by galactose. The Km, and Vmax values for ONPG and lactose were 2.6 mM, 262 U/mg, and 73.8 mM, 1.28 U/mg, respectively. beta-Gall possesses strong transgalactosylation activity. The production rate of galactooligosaccharides from 20% lactose at 30 and 60 degrees C was 120 mg/ml, and this rate increased to 190 mg/ml when 30% lactose was used.  相似文献   

9.
Klebsiella strain RE1755A is a Lac- Gal- mutant which has lost both of its lac operons, but possesses a gene specifying beta-galactosidase III, an enzyme which hydrolyzes o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside but does not hydrolyze lactose. Selective pressure was applied to isolate mutants able to utilize lactose. The lactose-utilizing mutants obtained were shown to possess an unaltered beta-galactosidase III. Lactose utilization was shown to result from a pleiotropic mutation which also (i) permits galactose utilization and (ii) prevents induction of beta-galactosidase III synthesis by lactose. Evidence is presented suggesting that a phospho-beta-galactosidase enzyme is involved in lactose metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
1. alpha-Mannosidase from the limpet, Patella vulgata, was purified nearly 150-fold, with 40% recovery. beta-N-Acetylglucosaminidase was removed from the preparation by treatment with ethanol. The final product was virtually free from beta-galactosidase. 2. Limpet alpha-mannosidase was assayed at pH3.5 and at this pH it was necessary to add Zn(2+) for full activity. At pH5, the enzyme had the same activity in the presence or absence of added Zn(2+). 3. On incubation at acid pH, the enzyme underwent reversible inactivation, which was prevented by adding Zn(2+). 4. EDTA accelerated inactivation and the addition of Zn(2+) at once restored activity. No other cation was found to reactivate the enzyme. 5. Cl(-) had an unspecific effect on hydrolysis by limpet alpha-mannosidase. It increased the rate of reaction with substrate. The anion did not prevent or reverse inactivation by EDTA. 6. It is concluded that alpha-mannosidase is a metalloenzyme or enzyme-metal ion complex, dissociable at the pH of activity, and that it requires Zn(2+) specifically.  相似文献   

11.
J X Lu 《BioTechniques》1992,12(2):177-181
Mammalian cell lysate containing beta-galactosidase (beta Gal) derived from the transient expression of the bacterial lacZ gene driven by the human beta-actin promoter loses activity progressively over time in storage at -20 degrees C in the presence of EDTA. The simultaneous presence of NaCl with EDTA exacerbates such an inactivation, although NaCl by itself does not. However, EGTA, a chelating agent that preferentially binds Ca2+ over Mg2+, does not inactivate beta Gal. Addition of equal or higher molar concentration of Mg2+ (as MgCl2) or Ca2+ (as CaCl2), both effectively chelated by EDTA, to an EDTA-containing lysate prevents this cold-related inactivation, but does not reactivate the enzyme. Therefore, the chelation of Mg2+ by EDTA at -20 degrees C inactivates beta Gal. Storage of cell lysate at -70 degrees C completely prevents the EDTA-induced inactivation of beta Gal. It is recommended that when beta Gal activity is used as the reporter for gene expression 1) EDTA should not be used to prepare cell lysate and 2) the cell lysate should be stored in a -70 degrees C freezer to preserve full activity.  相似文献   

12.
Alkaline phosphate, catalase and beta-galactosidase activities of Vibrio et tor were decreased after acquisition of resistance towards rifampicin. Zn2+, Mn2+ and EDTA inhibited alkaline phosphatase which is most active with p-nitrophenylphosphate as substrate while Mg2+ was found to suppress alkaline phosphatase activity. Removal of EDTA however, restores the original activity. Rifampicin could not induce mutation of lactose nonfermenting Vibrio el for cells allowing them to grow on lactose as sole carbon source, z-galactosidase which is a constitutive enzyme in this case is repressed by glucose. This repression is overcome by cAMP.  相似文献   

13.
1. alpha-d-Mannosidase from rat epididymis was purified 300-fold. beta-N-Acetyl-glucosaminidase and beta-galactosidase were removed from the preparation by treatment with pyridine. Zn(2+) was added during the purification to stabilize the alpha-mannosidase. 2. Mammalian alpha-mannosidase is most stable at pH6. At lower pH values it undergoes reversible spontaneous inactivation. The enzyme is also subject to irreversible inactivation, which is delayed by the addition of albumin. 3. Reversible inactivation of alpha-mannosidase is accelerated by EDTA and reversed or prevented by Zn(2+). Other cations, such as Co(2+), Cd(2+) and Cu(2+), accelerate inactivation and the action of a toxic cation can be prevented by Zn(2+) or by EDTA in suitable concentration. 4. The enzyme is stabilized by substrate and neither Zn(2+), EDTA nor a toxic cation has more than a small effect in the assay of an untreated preparation. The addition of Zn(2+) is necessary, however, for a constant rate of hydrolysis during prolonged incubation of the enzyme with substrate. In an EDTA-treated preparation, Zn(2+) reactivates the enzyme during the assay. 5. Evidence is presented that alpha-mannosidase is a dissociable Zn(2+)-protein complex, in which Zn(2+) is essential for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetics of the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (pNPG) by a thermophile, beta-galactosidase, was studied at different temperatures. This enzyme was isolated from the thermophilic microorganism archaebacterium Caldariella acidophila. The hydrolysis of pNPG by beta-galactosidase does not follow Michaelis-Menten law. This enzyme is inhibited by excess substrate at low temperatures and it is activated by excess substrate at high temperatures. A minimum mechanistic model is proposed to explain the behaviour. This model assumes the binding of an additional substrate molecule on the glycosidyl enzyme intermediate. This model is in good agreement with the postulated mechanism for beta-galactosidase from Escherichia coli. The kinetic parameters are calculated at six different temperatures.  相似文献   

15.
N Onishi  T Tanaka 《Applied microbiology》1995,61(11):4026-4030
A thermostable beta-galactosidase which catalyzed the production of galacto-oligosaccharide from lactose was solubilized from a cell wall preparation of Sterigmatomyces elviae CBS8119. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity by means of chromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl, Butyl-Toyopearl, Chromatofocusing, and p-aminobenzyl 1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranoside agarose columns. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated to be about 170,000 by gel filtration with a Highload-Superdex 200pg column and 86,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its isoelectric point, determined by polyacrylamide gel electrofocusing, was 4.1. The optimal temperature for enzyme activity was 85 degrees C. It was stable at temperatures up to 80 degrees C for 1 h. The optimal pH range for the enzyme was 4.5 to 5.0, it was stable at pH 2.5 to 7.0, and its activity was inhibited by Hg2+. The Km values for o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside and lactose were 9.5 and 2.4 mM, respectively, and the maximum velocities for these substrates were 96 and 240 mumol/min per mg of protein, respectively. In addition, this enzyme possessed a high level of transgalactosylation activity. Galacto-oligosaccharides, including tri- and tetrasaccharides, were produced with a yield, by weight, of 39% from 200-mg/ml lactose.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Acid production in milk by lactic streptococci was stimulated by added beta-galactosidase. Both glucose and galactose accumulated rapidly in the presence of this enzyme. Glucose accumulation ceased as the culture entered the most rapid period of acid production, whereas galactose accumulation continued. In cultures without added beta-galactosidase, a low concentration of galactose accumulated in the milk, whereas glucose was not detected after 2 hr of incubation. Cultures grew and produced acid faster in broth containing glucose rather than galactose or lactose. These observations suggest that the lactic streptococci do not metabolize the lactose in milk efficiently enough to permit optimum acid production and that a phenomenon such as catabolite repression functions to allow for a preferential use of glucose over either galactose or lactose. In addition to providing the culture with a more readily available energy source, it is possible that the culture produced more acidic metabolites as a result of preferentially utilizing the glucose released by the action of the beta-galactosidase.  相似文献   

18.
The thermostable Pyrococcus furiosus beta-glycosidase was used for oligosaccharide production from lactose in a kinetically controlled reaction. Our experiments showed that higher temperatures are beneficial for the absolute as well as relative oligosaccharide yield. However, at reaction temperatures of 80 degrees C and higher, the inactivation rate of the enzyme in the presence of sugars was increased by a factor of 2 compared to the inactivation rate in the absence of sugars. This increased enzyme inactivation was caused by the occurrence of Maillard reactions between the sugar and the enzyme. The browning of our reaction mixture due to Maillard reactions was modeled by a cascade of a zeroth- and first-order reaction and related to enzyme inactivation. From these results we conclude that modification of only a small number of amino groups already gives complete inactivation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of temperature on the hydrolysis of lactose by immobilized beta-galactosidase were studied in a continuous flow capillary bed reactor. Temperature affects the rates of enzymatic reactions in two ways. Higher temperatures increase the rate of the hydrolysis reaction, but also increase the rate of thermal deactivation of the enzyme. The effect of temperature on the kinetic parameters was studied by performing lactose hydrolysis experiments at 15, 20, 25, 30, and 40 degrees C. The kinetic parameters were observed to follow an Arrhenius-type temperature dependence. Galactose mutarotation has a significant impact on the overall rate of lactose hydrolysis. The temperature dependence of the mutarotation of galactose was effectively modelled by first-order reversible kinetics. The thermal deactivation characteristics of the immobilized enzyme reactor were investigated by performing lactose hydrolysis experiments at 52, 56, 60, and 64 degrees C. The thermal deactivation was modelled effectively as a first order decay process. Based on the estimated thermal deactivation rate constants, at an operating temperature of 40 degrees C, 10% of the enzyme activity would be lost in one year.  相似文献   

20.
1. The chromatography of rat small-intestinal beta-galactosidase activities on gel-filtration and ion-exchange columns has been studied. Five different substrates were used to measure beta-galactosidase activity (lactose, phenyl beta-galactoside, o-nitrophenyl beta-galactoside, p-nitrophenyl beta-galactoside and 6-bromo-2-naphthyl beta-galactoside) and the activity was measured at one acid and one more neutral pH value. 2. By gel filtration one acid beta-galactosidase, hydrolysing lactose and the hetero-beta-galactosides at about the same rate, and one more neutral beta-galactosidase, hydrolysing lactose much more rapidly than the hetero-beta-galactosides, were separated. 3. By ion-exchange chromatography the acid enzyme was fractionated into two components. These may be individual enzymes or different forms of the same enzyme.  相似文献   

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