• Title/Summary/Keyword: Substrate specificity

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Genome-wide survey and expression analysis of F-box genes in wheat

  • Kim, Dae Yeon;Hong, Min Jeong;Seo, Yong Weon
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Crop Science Conference
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    • 2017.06a
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    • pp.141-141
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    • 2017
  • The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is the major regulatory mechanism in a number of cellular processes for selective degradation of proteins and involves three steps: (1) ATP dependent activation of ubiquitin by E1 enzyme, (2) transfer of activated ubiquitin to E2 and (3) transfer of ubiquitin to the protein to be degraded by E3 complex. F-box proteins are subunit of SCF complex and involved in specificity for a target substrate to be degraded. F-box proteins regulate many important biological processes such as embryogenesis, floral development, plant growth and development, biotic and abiotic stress, hormonal responses and senescence. However, little is known about the F-box genes in wheat. The draft genome sequence of wheat (IWGSC Reference Sequence v1.0 assembly) used to analysis a genome-wide survey of the F-box gene family in wheat. The Hidden Markov Model (HMM) profiles of F-box (PF00646), F-box-like (PF12937), F-box-like 2 (PF13013), FBA (PF04300), FBA_1 (PF07734), FBA_2 (PF07735), FBA_3 (PF08268) and FBD (PF08387) domains were downloaded from Pfam database were searched against IWGSC Reference Sequence v1.0 assembly. RNA-seq paired-end libraries from different stages of wheat, such as stages of seedling, tillering, booting, day after flowering (DAF) 1, DAF 10, DAF 20, and DAF 30 were conducted and sequenced by Illumina HiSeq2000 for expression analysis of F-box protein genes. Basic analysis including Hisat, HTseq, DEseq, gene ontology analysis and KEGG mapping were conducted for differentially expressed gene analysis and their annotation mappings of DEGs from various stages. About 950 F-box domain proteins identified by Pfam were mapped to wheat reference genome sequence by blastX (e-value < 0.05). Among them, more than 140 putative F-box protein genes were selected by fold changes cut-offs of > 2, significance p-value < 0.01, and FDR<0.01. Expression profiling of selected F-box protein genes were shown by heatmap analysis, and average linkage and squared Euclidean distance of putative 144 F-box protein genes by expression patterns were calculated for clustering analysis. This work may provide valuable and basic information for further investigation of protein degradation mechanism by ubiquitin proteasome system using F-box proteins during wheat development stages.

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Molecular Cloning and Expression of a Novel Protease-resistant GH-36 $\alpha$-Galactosidase from Rhizopus sp. F78 ACCC 30795

  • Yanan, Cao;Wang, Yaru;Luo, Huiying;Shi, Pengjun;Meng, Kun;Zhou, Zhigang;Zhang, Zhifang;Yao, Bin
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.19 no.11
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    • pp.1295-1300
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    • 2009
  • A 2,172-bp full-length gene (aga-F78), encoding a protease-resistant $\alpha$-galactosidase, was cloned from Rhizopus sp. F78 and expressed in Escherichia coli. The deduced amino acid sequence shared highest identity (45.0%) with an $\alpha$-galactosidase of glycoside hydrolase family 36 from Absidia corymbifera. After one-step purification with a Ni-NTA chelating column, the recombinant Aga-F78 migrated as a single band of ~82 and ~210 kDa on SDS-PAGE and nondenaturing gradient PAGE, respectively, indicating that the native structure of the recombinant Aga-F78 was a trimer. Exhibiting the similar properties as the authentic protein, purified recombinant Aga-F78 was optimally active at $50^{\circ}C$ and pH 4.8, highly pH stable over the pH range 5.0-10.0, more resistant to some cations and proteases, and had wide substrate specificity (pNPG, melidiose, raffinose, and stachyose). The recombinant enzyme also showed good hydrolytic ability to soybean meal, releasing galactose of $415.58\;{\mu}g/g$ soybean meal. When combined with trypsin, the enzyme retained over 90% degradability to soybean meal. These favorable properties make Aga-F78 a potential candidate for applications in the food and feed industries.

Characterization of Ribose-5-Phosphate Isomerase B from Newly Isolated Strain Ochrobactrum sp. CSL1 Producing ʟ-Rhamnulose from ʟ-Rhamnose

  • Shen, Min;Ju, Xin;Xu, Xinqi;Yao, Xuemei;Li, Liangzhi;Chen, Jiajia;Hu, Cuiying;Fu, Jiaolong;Yan, Lishi
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.28 no.7
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    • pp.1122-1132
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    • 2018
  • In this study, we attempted to find new and efficient microbial enzymes for producing rare sugars. A ribose-5-phosphate isomerase B (OsRpiB) was cloned, overexpressed, and preliminarily purified successfully from a newly screened Ochrobactrum sp. CSL1, which could catalyze the isomerization reaction of rare sugars. A study of its substrate specificity showed that the cloned isomerase (OsRpiB) could effectively catalyze the conversion of $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnose to $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnulose, which was unconventional for RpiB. The optimal reaction conditions ($50^{\circ}C$, pH 8.0, and 1 mM $Ca^{2+}$) were obtained to maximize the potential of OsRpiB in preparing $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnulose. The catalytic properties of OsRpiB, including $K_m$, $k_{cat}$, and catalytic efficiency ($k_{cat}/K_m$), were determined as 43.47 mM, $129.4sec^{-1}$, and 2.98 mM/sec. The highest conversion rate of $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnose under the optimized conditions by OsRpiB could reach 26% after 4.5 h. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first successful attempt of the novel biotransformation of $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnose to $\text\tiny{L}$-rhamnulose by OsRpiB biocatalysis.

Aerobic Degradation of Tetrachloroethylene(PCE) by Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1

  • Ryoo, Doohyun;Shim, Hojae;Barbieri, Paola;Wood, Thomas K.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Soil and Groundwater Environment Conference
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    • 2000.11a
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    • pp.207-208
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    • 2000
  • Since trichloroethylene (TCE), dichloroethylene (DCE), and vinyl chloride (VC) arise from anaerobic degradation of tetrachloroethylene (PCE) and TCE, there is interest in creating aerobic remediation systems that avoid the highly toxic VC and cis-DCE which predonominate in anaerobic degradation. However, it seemed TCE could not be degraded aerobically without an inducing compound (which also competitively inhibits TCE degradation). It has been shown that TCE induces expression of both the toluene dioxygenase of p. putida F1 as well as toluene-p-monooxygenase of P.mendocina KRI. We investigated here the ability of PCE, TCE, and chlorinated phenols to induce toluene-o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO) from P.stutzeri OX1. ToMO has a relaxed regio-specificity since it hydroxylates toluene in the ortho, meta, and para positions; it also has a broad substrate range as it oxidizes o-xylene, m-xylene, p-xylene, toluene, benzene, ethylbenzene, styrene, and naphthalene; chlorinated compounds including TCE, 1, 1-DCE, cis-DCE, trans-DCE, VC, and chloroform : as well as mixtures of chlorinated aliphatics (Pseudomonas 1999 Maui Meeting). ToMO is a multicomponent enzyme with greatest similarity to the aromatic monooxygenases of Burkholderia pickettii PKO1 and P.mendocina KR1. Using P.sturzeri OX1, it was found that PCE induces P.mendocina KR1 Using P.situtzeri OX1, it was found that PCE induces ToMO activity measured as naphthalene oxygenase activity 2.5-fold, TCE induces 2.3-fold, and toluene induces 3.0 fold. With the mutant P.stutzeri M1 which does not express ToMO, it was also found there was no naphthalene oxygenate activity induced by PCE and TCE; hence, PCE and TCE induce the tow path. Using P.putida PaW340(pPP4062, pFP3028) which has the tow promoter fused to the reporter catechol-2, 3-dioxygenase and the regulator gene touR, it was determined that the tow promoter was induced 5.7-, 7.1-, and 5.2-fold for 2-, 3-, 4-chlorophenol, respectively (cf. 8.9-fold induction with o-cresol) : however, TCE and PCE did not directly induce the tou path. Gas chromatography and chloride ion analysis also showed that TCE induced ToMO expression in P.stutzeri OX1 and was degraded and mineralized. This is the first report of significant PCE induction of any enzyme as well as the first report of chlorinated compound induction of the tou operon. The results indicate TCE and chlorinated phenols can be degraded by P.stutzeri OX1 without a separate inducer of the tou pathway and without competitive inhibition.

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Measurement of Biogenic Amines with a Chitopearl Enzyme Reactor (Chitopearl 효소 Reactor를 이용한 Biogenic Amines 측정)

  • Park, In-Seon;Kim, Dong-Kyung;Shon, Dong-Hwa;Cho, Yong-Jin;Kim, Nam-Soo
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.593-599
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    • 1999
  • Substrate specificity of a flow-injection-analysis (FIA)-type biogenic amine sensor with enzyme reactor was determined. The enzyme reactor was prepared with a diamine oxidase immobilized on preactivated chitosan porous beads (Chitopearl) by intramolecular cross-linking via glutaraldehyde. The sensor showed a rapid response to putrescine and a quasi-linear calibration curve was obtained up to 15.0 mM. The optimal pH and temperature of the enzyme reactor system were 7.5 and $35^{\circ}C$. Interferences due to ATP-related compounds and trimethylamine, and the effects of NaCl and amino acids were measured. Inhibitory effects owing to these components could be mitigated by sample extraction with perchloric acid. Polyamines except putrescine were determined by a putrescine calibration range within 26.7%. This system was confirmed as rapid and convenient for biogenic amine determination.

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Novel substrate specificity of a thermostable β-glucosidase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon, Thermococcus pacificus P-4 (초고온 고세균 Thermococcus pacificus P-4로부터 내열성 β-glucosidase의 새로운 기질 특이성)

  • Kim, Yun Jae;Lee, Jae Eun;Lee, Hyun Sook;Kwon, Kae Kyoung;Kang, Sung Gyun;Lee, Jung-Hyun
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.51 no.1
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    • pp.68-74
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    • 2015
  • Based on the genomic analysis of Thermococcus pacificus P-4, we identified a putative GH1 ${\beta}$-glucosidase-encoding gene (Tpa-glu). The gene revealed a 1,464 bp encoding 487 amino acid residues, and the deduced amino acid residues exhibited 77% identity with Pyrococcus furiosus ${\beta}$-glucosidase (accession no. NP_577802). The gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli system. The recombinant protein was purified by metal affinity chromatography and characterized. Tpa-Glu showed optimum activity at pH 7.5 and $75^{\circ}C$, and thermostability with a half life of 6 h at $90^{\circ}C$. Tpa-Glu exhibited hydrolyzing activity against various pNP-glycopyranosides, with kcat/Km values in the order of pNP-${\beta}$-glucopyranoside, pNP-${\beta}$-galactopyranoside, pNP-${\beta}$-mannopyranoside, and pNP-${\beta}$-xylopyranoside. In addition, the enzyme exhibited exo-hydrolyzing activity toward ${\beta}$-1,3-linked polysaccharide (laminarin) and ${\beta}$-1,3- and ${\beta}$-1,4-linked oligosaccharides. This is the first description of an enzyme from hyperthermophilic archaea that displays exo-hydrolyzing activity toward ${\beta}$-1,3-linked polysaccharides and could be applied in combination with ${\beta}$-1,3-endoglucanase for saccharification of laminarin.

General Properties of Phytase Produced by Fluorescent Pseudomonas sp. BUN1 (토양세균 Fluorescent Pseudomonas sp. BUN 1 균주 유래의 파이테이즈(Phytase)의 일반적 특성규명)

  • Cho, Jaie-Soon
    • Journal of Animal Science and Technology
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    • v.51 no.2
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    • pp.171-176
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    • 2009
  • A bacterial strain producing intracellular phytase was isolated from cultivable soil near cowsheds and identified as a fluorescent Pseudomonas sp. BUN1. The BUN1 phytase, partially purified by cation and anion exchange chromatography, exhibited its optimal activity at $40^{\circ}C$ and pH 5.5. As for substrate specificity, it was very specific for phytate and showed little activity on other phosphorylated conjugates. Its activity was greatly inhibited by metal ions such as $Cu^{2+}$, $Cd^{2+}$, and $Zn^{2+}$. Addition of corn starch to PSM (phytasesynthetic medium) [0.5% sodium phytate, 0.5% $(NH_4)_2SO_4$, 0.5% KCl, 0.01% $MgSO_4\cdot7H_2O$, 0.01% $CaCl_2\cdot2H_2O$, 0.01% NaCl, 0.001% $FeSO_4\cdot7H_2O$, 0.001% $MnSO_4\cdot4H_2O$; pH 6.5] for the phytase production significantly induced its enzyme activity in comparison with other carbon sources tested.

Preparation of $Gal^3Man_4(6^3-mono-{\alpha}-D-galacto-pyranosyl-{\beta}-mannotetraose)$ by Bacillus sp. ${\beta}-mannanase$ and Growth Activity to Intestinal Bacteria (Bacillus sp.유래 ${\beta}-mannanase$에 의한 $Gal^3Man_4(6^3-mono-{\alpha}-D-galacto-pyranosyl-{\beta}-mannotetraose)$ 조제 및 장내세균에 대한 생육활성)

  • Kim, Sang-Woo;Park, Gwi-Gun
    • Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.379-383
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    • 2004
  • For the elucidation of substrate specificity to the brown copra meal by Bacillus sp. ${\beta}-mannanase.$, the enzymatic hydrolysate after 24 hr of reaction was heated in a boiling water bath for 10 min, and then centrifuged to remove the insoluble materials from hydrolysates. The major hydrolysates composed of D.P 5 and 7 galactosyl mannooligosaccharides. For the separate of galactosyl mannooligosaccharides, the supernatant solution of 150 ml was put on a first activated carbon column. The column was then washed with 5 l of water to remove mannose and salts. The oligosaccharides in the column were eluted by a liner gradient of $0{\sim}30%$ ethanol, at the flow rate of 250 ml per hour. The sugar composition in each fraction tubes was examined by TLC and FACE analysis. The combined fraction from F3 was concentrated to 30 ml by vacuum evaporator. Then put on a second activated carbon column. The oligosaccharides in the column were eluted by a liner gradient of $0{\sim}30%$ ethanol (total volume: 5 l), at the flow rate of 250 ml per hour. The eluent was collected in 8 ml fraction tubes, and the total sugar concentration was measured by method of phenol-sulfuric acid. The major component of F2 separated by 2nd activated carbon column chromatography were identified $Gal^3Man_4(6^3-mono-{\alpha}-D-galactopyranosyl-{\beta}-mannotetraose)$. To investigate the effects of brown copra meal galactomannooligosaccharides on growth of Bifidobacterium longum, B. bifidum were cultivated individually on the modified-MRS medium containing carbon source such as $Gal^3Man_4$, compared to those of standard MRS medium.

Purification and Properties of D-Xylose Isomerase from Lactococcus sp. JK-8 (Lactococcus sp. JK-8에서 생산된 D-Xylose isomerase의 정제와 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Jun, Hong-Ki;Kim, Suk-Young;Baik, Hyung-Suk
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.636-643
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    • 2004
  • D-Xylose isomerase produced by Lactococcus sp. JK-8, isolated from kimchi, was purified 17-fold of homogeneity, and its physicochemical properties were determined. Although the N-terminal amino acid sequence of D-xylose isomerase was analysed to Ala-Tyr-Phe-Asn-Asp-Ile-Ala-Pro-Ile-Lys, it was not similar to that of Lactobacillus enzyme. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 180 kDa by gel filtration, 45 kDa by SDS-PAGE and the enzyme was homotetramer. The optimum pH of the enzyme was around 7 and stable between pH 6 and 8. The optimum reaction temperature was 7$0^{\circ}C$ and stable up to 7$0^{\circ}C$ in the presence of 1 mM $Mn^{2+}$. Like other D-xylose isomerases, this enzyme required divalent cation, such as $Mg^{2+}$, $Co^{2+}$, or $Mn^{2+}$ for the activity and thermostability. $Mn^{2+}$was the best activator. Substrate specificity studies showed that this enzyme was highly active on D-xylose. The enzyme had an isoelectric point of 4.8, and fm values for D-xylose was 5.9 mM.

Purification and Characterization of Polyphenol Oxidase from Lotus Root (Nelumbo nucifera G.) (연근의 polyphenol oxidase 정제 및 특성조사)

  • Moon, Sang-Mi;Kim, Hyun-Jin;Ham, Kyung-Sik
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.35 no.5
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    • pp.791-796
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    • 2003
  • Polyphenol oxidase isoforms were purified from the lotus roots using 50% acetone precipitation, conventional chromatographies of Q-Sepharose and hydrophobic interaction, and high performance liquid chromatographies of Mono-Q and Superdex 75 gel-filtration. Molecular mass of a purified PPO isoform (LPIII-2) was determined to be 56 kDa using gel-filtration chromatography. The active form of LPIII-2 appeared to bea heterodimer, as purified LPIII-2 on SDS-PAGE gel showed two bands that were determined to be 28 kDa and 26 kDa. To further characterize PPO, partially purified PPO isoforms (LP-II, LP-III) were obtained from Q-Sepharose anion-exchange chromatography. In substrate specificity, the partially purified PPO isoform LP-II showed a high affinity to catechol, while LP-III showed a high affinity to pyrogallol. The optimum pH of LP-II and LP-III was pH 7.0. Interestingly, the partially purified PPO isoforms showed high activities at low temperatures $(0{\sim}5^{\circ}C)$, and as temperatures rose, the activities decreased. Both PPO isoforms were stable at $40^{\circ}C$ and were inactivated by incubation at $60^{\circ}C$ for 40 min.