Abstract: | A polyol dehydrogenase was detected in cell extracts of the facultative phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides strain Si 4 grown on D-glucitol (sorbitol) as the sole carbon source. The enzyme was purified 150-fold to apparent homogeneity by steps involving fractionated (NH4)2SO4 precipitation, chromatography on Q-Sepharose and phenyl-Sepharose, and FPLC on Superose 12. The relative molecular mass (Mr) of the native polyol dehydrogenase was 47,200 as calculated from its Stokes' radius (rs = 2.76 nm) and sedimentation coefficient (s20, w = 4.15 S). SDS/PAGE resulted in one single band representing a polypeptide with a Mr of 52,200, indicating that the native protein is a monomer. The isoelectric point of the polyol dehydrogenase was determined to be pH 4.3. The enzyme was specific for NAD+ and oxidized both D-glucitol and D-mannitol to D-fructose, as well as D-arabinitol to D-ribulose. The pH optimum of substrate oxidation was pH 9.0 in 0.1 M Tris/HCl and that of substrate reduction was pH 6.5 in 0.1 M potassium phosphate. The reactions exhibited normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics allowing the estimation of KM values for NAD+ (0.18 mM) in the presence of D-glucitol, and for D-glucitol (31.8 mM), D-mannitol (0.29 mM) and D-arabinitol (1.8 mM), respectively. The KM value for D-fructose was 16.3 mM and that for NADH 0.02 mM. The equilibrium constants determined for the conversion of D-mannitol, D-glucitol and D-arabinitol were 4.5 nM, 0.58 nM and 80 pM, respectively. Based on the catalytic preference of the polyol dehydrogenase for D-mannitol, an enzymatic assay for D-mannitol was elaborated. |