The effect of low temperatures on enzyme activity

Abstract

The stability of two enzymes from extreme thermophiles (glutamate dehydrogenase from Thermococcales strain AN1 and beta-glucosidase from Caldocellum saccharolyticum expressed in Escherichia coli) has been exploited to allow measurement of activity over a 175 degrees C temperature range, from +90 degrees C to -85 degrees C for the glutamate dehydrogenase and from +90 degrees C to -70 degrees C for the beta-glucosidase. The Arrhenius plots of these enzymes, and those for two mesophilic enzymes (glutamate dehydrogenase from bovine liver and beta-galactosidase from Escherichia coli), exhibit no downward deflection corresponding to the glass transition, found by biophysical measurements of several non-enzymic mesophilic proteins at about -65 degrees C and reflecting a sharp decrease in protein flexibility as the overall motion of groups of atoms ceases

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Last time updated on 05/06/2015

This paper was published in Research Commons@Waikato.

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