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1.
Nicotinamidase is involved in the maintenance of NAD+ homeostasis and in the NAD+ salvage pathway of most prokaryotes, and it is considered as a possible drug target. The gene (ASAC_0847) encoding a hypothetical nicotinamidase has been found in the genome of the thermophilic archaeon Acidilobus saccharovorans. The product of this gene, NA_As0847, has been expressed in Escherichia coli, isolated, and characterized as a Fe2+-containing nicotinamidase (k cat/K m = 427 mM?1·sec?1)/pyrazinamidase (k cat/K m = 331 mM?1·sec?1). NA_As0847 is a homodimer with molecular mass 46.4 kDa. The enzyme has high thermostability (T1/2 (60°C) = 180 min, T1/2 (80°C) = 35 min) and thermophilicity (Topt = 90°C, Ea = 30.2 ± 1.0 kJ/mol) and broad pH interval of activity, with the optimum at pH 7.5. Special features of NA_As084 are the presence of Fe2+ instead of Zn2+ in the active site of the enzyme and inhibition of the enzyme activity by Zn2+ at micromolar concentrations. Analysis of the amino acid sequence revealed a new motif of the metal-binding site (DXHXXXDXXEXXXWXXH) for homological archaeal nicotinamidases.  相似文献   
2.
Biochemical analysis of enantioselective short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus sibiricus (TsAdh319) revealed unique polyextremophilic properties of the enzyme – half-life of 1 h at 100 °C, tolerance to high salt (up to 4 M) and organic solvents (50% v/v) concentrations. To elucidate the molecular basis of TsAdh319 polyextremophilicity, we determined the crystal structure of the enzyme in a binary complex with 5-hydroxy-NADP at 1.68 Å resolution. TsAdh319 has a tetrameric structure both in the crystals and in solution with an intersubunit disulfide bond. The substrate-binding pocket is hydrophobic, spacious and open that is consistent with the observed promiscuity in substrate specificity of TsAdh319. The present study revealed an extraordinary number of charged residues on the surface of TsAdh319, 70% of which were involved in ion pair interactions. Further we compared the structure of TsAdh319 with the structures of other homologous short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDRs) from thermophilic and mesophilic organisms. We found that TsAdh319 has the highest arginine and aspartate + glutamate contents compared to the counterparts. The frequency of occurrence of salt bridges on the surface of TsAdh319 is the highest among the SDRs under consideration. No differences in the proline, tryptophan, and phenylalanine contents are observed; the compactness of the protein core of TsAdh319, the monomer and tetramer organization do not differ from that of the counterparts. We suggest that the unique thermostability of TsAdh319 is associated with the rigidity and simultaneous “resilience” of the structure provided by a compact hydrophobic core and a large number of surface ion pairs. An extensive salt bridge network also might maintain the structural integrity of TsAdh319 in high salinity.  相似文献   
3.
A panel of eight monoclonal antibodies raised against horseradish root peroxidase was assembled and characterized. Affinity constants were determined for all antibodies, and their specificity for various structural forms of the enzyme (native peroxidase, apoperoxidase, and denatured peroxidase) were assessed by competitive enzyme immunoassay. The effects of the antibodies on the process of refolding of peroxidase after its denaturing with 6.5 M guanidine chloride were studied spectrophotometrically, by the restoration of the enzymatic activity in the reaction of 2,2-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonate) oxidation. The yield of the active enzyme in the course of the refolding was increased by 1.5–1.7 times in the presence of antibody H1. Effects of the antibodies constituting the panel on the activity of native peroxidase and the stability of its dilute solutions were analyzed.  相似文献   
4.
A gene encoding superoxide dismutase was revealed in the genome of the thermoacidophilic crenarchaeon Acidilobus saccharovorans. A recombinant expression vector was constructed and transformed into E. coli cells. The novel recombinant superoxide dismutase was purified and characterized. The enzyme was shown to be an iron-dependent super-oxide dismutase able to bind various bivalent metals in the active site. According to differential scanning calorimetric data, the denaturation temperature of the enzyme is 107.3°C. The maximal activity of the Fe(II) reconstituted enzyme defined by xanthine oxidase assay is 1700 U/mg protein. Study of the thermal stability of the superoxide dismutase samples with various metal contents by tryptophan fluorescence indicated that the thermal stability and activity of the enzyme directly depend on the nature of the reconstituted metal and the degree of saturation of binding sites.  相似文献   
5.
Extremophiles - (7R,8S)-diaminopelargonic acid transaminase from the cold-adapted Gram-negative bacterium Psychrobacter cryohalolentis (Pcryo361) is able to react with unnatural substrates...  相似文献   
6.
Branched-chain amino acid aminotransferases (BCATs) catalyze reversible stereoselective transamination of branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) L-leucine, L-isoleucine, and L-valine. BCATs are the key enzymes of BCAA metab- olism in all organisms. The catalysis proceeds through the ping-pong mechanism with the assistance of the cofactor pyri- doxal 5′-phosphate (PLP). BCATs differ from other (S)-selective transaminases (TAs) in 3D-structure and organization of the PLP-binding domain. Unlike other (S)-selective TAs, BCATs belong to the PLP fold type IV and are characterized by the proton transfer on the re-face of PLP, in contrast to the si-specificity of proton transfer in fold type I (S)-selective TAs. Moreover, BCATs are the only (S)-selective enzymes within fold type IV TAs. Dual substrate recognition in BCATs is imple- mented via the “lock and key” mechanism without side-chain rearrangements of the active site residues. Another feature of the active site organization in BCATs is the binding of the substrate α-COOH group on the P-side of the active site near the PLP phosphate group. Close localization of two charged groups seems to increase the effectiveness of external aldimine for- mation in BCAT catalysis. In this review, the structure-function features and the substrate specificity of bacterial and archaeal BCATs are analyzed. These BCATs differ from eukaryotic ones in the wide substrate specificity, optimal tempera- ture, and reactivity toward pyruvate as the second substrate. The prospects of biotechnological application of BCATs in stereoselective synthesis are discussed.  相似文献   
7.
8.
The gene TUZN1299 from the genome of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermoproteus uzoniensis encoding a new 32.8 kDa branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase (BCAT) was expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein TUZN1299 was purified to homogeneity in the PLP-bound form. TUZN1299 was active towards branched-chain amino acids (l-Val, l-Leu, l-Ile) and showed low but detectable activity toward (R)-alpha-methylbenzylamine. The enzyme exhibits high-temperature optimum, thermal stability, and tolerance to organic solvents. The structure of an archaeal BCAT called TUZN1299 was solved for the first time (at 2.0 Å resolution). TUZN1299 has a typical BCAT type IV fold, and the organization of its active site is similar to that of bacterial BCATs. However, there are some differences in the amino acid composition of the active site.  相似文献   
9.
Short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase, encoded by the gene Tsib_0319 from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus sibiricus, was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and characterized as an NADPH-dependent enantioselective oxidoreductase with broad substrate specificity. The enzyme exhibits extremely high thermophilicity, thermostability, and tolerance to organic solvents and salts.Alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs; EC 1.1.1.1.) catalyze the interconversion of alcohols to their corresponding aldehydes or ketones by using different redox-mediating cofactors. NAD(P)-dependent ADHs, due to their broad substrate specificity and enantioselectivity, have attracted particular attention as catalysts in industrial processes (5). However, mesophilic ADHs are unstable at high temperatures, sensitive to organic solvents, and often lose activity during immobilization. In this relation, there is a considerable interest in ADHs from extremophilic microorganisms; among them, Archaea are of great interest. The representatives of all groups of NAD(P)-dependent ADHs have been detected in genomes of Archaea (11, 12); however, only a few enzymes have been characterized, and the great majority of them belong to medium-chain (3, 4, 14, 16, 19) or long-chain iron-activated ADHs (1, 8, 9). Up to now, a single short-chain archaeal ADH from Pyrococcus furiosus (10, 18) and only one archaeal aldo-keto reductase also from P. furiosus (11) have been characterized.Thermococcus sibiricus is a hyperthermophilic anaerobic archaeon isolated from a high-temperature oil reservoir capable of growth on complex organic substrates (15). The complete genome sequence of T. sibiricus has been recently determined and annotated (13). Several ADHs are encoded by the T. sibiricus genome, including three short-chain ADHs (Tsib_0319, Tsib_0703, and Tsib_1998) (13). In this report, we describe the cloning and expression of the Tsib_0319 gene from T. sibiricus and the purification and the biochemical characterization of its product, the thermostable short-chain ADH (TsAdh319).The Tsib_0319 gene encodes a protein with a size of 234 amino acids and the calculated molecular mass of 26.2 kDa. TsAdh319 has an 85% degree of sequence identity with short-chain ADH from P. furiosus (AdhA; PF_0074) (18). Besides AdhA, close homologs of TsAdh319 were found among different bacterial ADHs, but not archaeal ADHs. The gene flanked by the XhoI and BamHI sites was PCR amplified using two primers (sense primer, 5′-GTTCTCGAGATGAAGGTTGCTGTGATAACAGGG-3′, and antisense primer, 5′-GCTGGATCCTCAGTATTCTGGTCTCTGGTAGACGG-3′) and cloned into the pET-15b vector. TsAdh319 was overexpressed, with an N-terminal His6 tag in Escherichia coli Rosetta-gami (DE3) and purified to homogeneity by metallochelating chromatography (Hi-Trap chelating HP column; GE Healthcare) followed by gel filtration on Superdex 200 10/300 GL column (GE Healthcare) equilibrated in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) with 200 mM NaCl. The homogeneity and the correspondence to the calculated molecular mass of 28.7 kDa were verified by SDS-PAGE (7). The molecular mass of native TsAdh319 was 56 to 60 kDa, which confirmed the dimeric structure in solution.The standard ADH activity measurement was made spectrophotometrically at the optimal pH by following either the reduction of NADP (in 50 mM Gly-NaOH buffer; pH 10.5) or the oxidation of NADPH (in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer; pH 7.5) at 340 nm at 60°C. The enzyme exhibited a strong preference for NADP(H) and broad substrate specificity (Table (Table1).1). The highest oxidation rates were found with pentoses d-arabinose (2.0 U mg−1) and d-xylose (2.46 U mg−1), and the highest reduction rates were found with dimethylglyoxal (5.9 U mg−1) and pyruvaldehyde (2.2 U mg−1). The enzyme did not reduce sugars which were good substrates for the oxidation reaction. The kinetic parameters of TsAdh319 determined for the preferred substrates are shown in Table Table2.2. The enantioselectivity of the enzyme was estimated by measuring the conversion rates of 2-butanol enantiomers. TsAdh319 showed an evident preference, >2-fold, for (S)-2-butanol over (RS)-2-butanol. The enzyme stereoselectivity is confirmed by the preferred oxidation of d-arabinose over l-arabinose (Table (Table1).1). The fact that TsAdh319 is metal independent was supported by the absence of a significant effect of TsAdh319 preincubation with 10 mM Me2+ for 30 min before measuring the activity in the presence of 1 mM Me2+ or EDTA (Table (Table3).3). TsAdh319 also exhibited a halophilic property, so the enzyme activity increased in the presence of NaCl and KCl and the activation was maintained even at concentration of 4 M and 3 M, respectively (Table (Table33).

TABLE 1.

Substrate specificity of TsAdh319
SubstrateaRelative activity (%)
Oxidation reactionb
    Methanol0
    2-Methoxyethanol0
    Ethanol36
    1-Butanol80
    2-Propanol100
    (RS)-(±)-2-Butanol86
    (S)-(+)-2-Butanol196
    2-Pentanol67
    1-Phenylmethanol180
    1.3-Butanediol91
    Ethyleneglycol0
    Glycerol16
    d-Arabinose*200
    l-Arabinose*17
    d-Xylose*246
    d-Ribose*35
    d-Glucose*146
    d-Mannose*48
    d-Galactose*0
    Cellobiose*71
Reduction reactionc
    Pyruvaldehyde100
    Dimethylglyoxal270
    Glyoxylic acid36
    Acetone0
    Cyclopentanone0
    Cyclohexanone4
    3-Methyl-2-pentanone*13
    d-Arabinose*0
    d-Xylose*0
    d-Glucose*0
    Cellobiose*0
Open in a separate windowaSubstrates were present in 250 mM or 50 mM (*) concentrations.bRelative rates, measured under standard conditions, were calculated by defining the activity for 2-propanol as 100%, which corresponds to 1.0 U mg−1. Data are averages from triplicate experiments.cRelative rates, measured under standard conditions, were calculated by defining the activity for pyruvaldehyde as 100%, which corresponds to 2.2 U mg−1. Data are averages from triplicate experiments.

TABLE 2.

Apparent Km and Vmax values for TsAdh319
Coenzyme or substrateApparent Km (mM)Vmax (U mg−1)kcat (s−1)
NADPa0.022 ± 0.0020.94 ± 0.020.45 ± 0.01
NADPHb0.020 ± 0.0033.16 ± 0.111.51 ± 0.05
2-Propanol168 ± 291.10 ± 0.090.53 ± 0.04
d-Xylose54.4 ± 7.41.47 ± 0.090.70 ± 0.04
Pyruvaldehyde17.75 ± 3.384.26 ± 0.402.04 ± 0.19
Open in a separate windowaActivity was measured under standard conditions with 2-propanol. Data are averages from triplicate experiments.bActivity was measured under standard conditions with pyruvaldehyde. Data are averages from triplicate experiments.

TABLE 3.

Effect of various ions and EDTA on TsAdh319a
CompoundConcn (mM)Relative activity (%)
None0100
NaCl400206
600227
4,000230
KCl600147
2,000200
3,000194
MgCl21078
CoCl210105
NiSO410100
ZnSO41079
FeSO41074
EDTA1100
580
Open in a separate windowaThe activity was measured under standard conditions with 2-propanol; relative rates were calculated by defining the activity without salts as 100%, which corresponds to 0.9 U mg−1. Data are averages from duplicate experiments.The most essential distinctions of TsAdh319 are the thermophilicity and high thermostability of the enzyme. The optimum temperature for the 2-propanol oxidation catalyzed by TsAdh319 was not achieved. The initial reaction rate of oxidation increased up to 100°C (Fig. (Fig.1).1). The Arrhenius plot is a straight line, typical of a single rate-limited thermally activated process, but there is no obvious transition point due to the temperature-dependent conformational changes of the protein molecule. The activation energy for the oxidation of 2-propanol was estimated at 84.0 ± 5.8 kJ·mol−1. The thermostability of TsAdh319 was calculated from residual TsAdh319 activity after preincubation of 0.4 mg/ml enzyme solution in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5) containing 200 mM NaCl at 70, 80, 90, or 100°C. The preincubation at 70°C or 80°C for 1.5 h did not cause a decrease in the TsAdh319 activity, but provoked slight activation. The residual TsAdh319 activities began to decrease after 2 h of preincubation at 70°C or 80°C and were 10% and 15% down from the control, respectively. The determined half-life values of TsAdh319 were 2 h at 90°C and 1 h at 100°C.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Temperature dependence of the initial rate of the 2-propanol reduction by TsAdh319. The reaction was initiated by enzyme addition to a prewarmed 2-propanol-NADP mixture. The inset shows the Arrhenius plot of the same data.Protein thermostability often correlates with such important biotechnological properties as increased solvent tolerance (2). We tested the influence of organic solvents at a high concentration (50% [vol/vol]) on TsAdh319 by using either preincubation of the enzyme at a concentration of 0.2 mg/ml with solvents for 4 h at 55°C or solvent addition into the reaction mixture to distinguish the effect of solvent on the protein stability and on the enzyme activity. TsAdh319 showed significant solvent tolerance in both cases (Table (Table4),4), and the effects of solvents could be modulated by salts, acting apparently as molecular lyoprotectants (17). Furthermore, TsAdh319 maintained 57% of its activity in 25% (vol/vol) 2-propanol, which could be used as the cosubstrate in cofactor regeneration (6).

TABLE 4.

Influence of various solvents on TsAdh319 activitya
SolventRelative activity (%)bRelative activity (%)c
Buffer without NaClBuffer with 600 mM NaCl
None100100100
DMSOd98040
DMFAe1011341
Methanol98259
Acetonitrile9500
Ethyl acetate470*33*
Chloroform10579*81*
n-Hexane10560*118*
n-Decane3691*107*
Open in a separate windowaThe activity measured at the standard condition with 2-propanol as a substrate. Data are averages from triplicate experiments.bPreincubation for 4 h at 55°C in the presence of 50% (vol/vol) of solvent prior the activity assay.cWithout preincubation, solvent addition to the reaction mixture up to 50% (vol/vol) or using the buffer saturated by a solvent (*).dDMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide.eDMFA, dimethylformamide.From all the aforesaid we may suppose TsAdh319 or its improved variant to be interesting both for the investigation of structural features of protein tolerance and for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   
10.
A panel of eight monoclonal antibodies raised against horseradish root peroxidase has been assembled and characterized. Affinity constants were determined for all antibodies, and their specificity for various structural forms of the enzyme (native peroxidase, apoperoxidase, and denatured peroxidase) were assessed by competitive enzyme immunoassay. The effects of the antibodies on the process of refolding of peroxidase after its denaturing with 6.5 M guanidine hydrochloride were studied spectrophotometrically, by the restoration of the enzymatic activity in the reaction of 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonate). The yield of the active enzyme in the course of the refolding was increased 1.5 to 1.7 times in the presence of antibody H1. Effects of the antibodies constituting the panel on the activity of native peroxidase and the stability of its dilute solutions were analyzed.  相似文献   
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