61 research outputs found

    Purification and In Situ Immobilization of Papain with Aqueous Two-Phase System

    Get PDF
    Papain was purified from spray-dried Carica papaya latex using aqueous two-phase system (ATPS). Then it was recovered from PEG phase by in situ immobilization or preparing cross-linked enzyme aggregates (CLEAs). The Plackett-Burman design and the central composite design (CCD) together with the response surface methodology (RSM) were used to optimize the APTS processes. The highly purified papain (96–100%) was achieved under the optimized conditions: 40% (w/w) 15 mg/ml enzyme solution, 14.33–17.65% (w/w) PEG 6000, 14.27–14.42% (w/w) NaH2PO4/K2HPO4 and pH 5.77–6.30 at 20°C. An in situ enzyme immobilization approach, carried out by directly dispersing aminated supports and chitosan beads into the PEG phase, was investigated to recover papain, in which a high immobilization yield (>90%) and activity recovery (>40%) was obtained. Moreover, CLEAs were successfully used in recovering papain from PEG phase with a hydrolytic activity hundreds times higher than the carrier-bound immobilized papain

    PCNA ubiquitylation ensures timely completion of unperturbed DNA replication in fission yeast

    Get PDF
    PCNA ubiquitylation on lysine 164 is required for DNA damage tolerance. In many organisms PCNA is also ubiquitylated in unchallenged S phase but the significance of this has not been established. Using Schizosaccharomyces pombe, we demonstrate that lysine 164 ubiquitylation of PCNA contributes to efficient DNA replication in the absence of DNA damage. Loss of PCNA ubiquitylation manifests most strongly at late replicating regions and increases the frequency of replication gaps. We show that PCNA ubiquitylation increases the proportion of chromatin associated PCNA and the co-immunoprecipitation of Polymerase δ with PCNA during unperturbed replication and propose that ubiquitylation acts to prolong the chromatin association of these replication proteins to allow the efficient completion of Okazaki fragment synthesis by mediating gap filling

    Characterization of Leishmania donovani MCM4: Expression Patterns and Interaction with PCNA

    Get PDF
    Events leading to origin firing and fork elongation in eukaryotes involve several proteins which are mostly conserved across the various eukaryotic species. Nuclear DNA replication in trypanosomatids has thus far remained a largely uninvestigated area. While several eukaryotic replication protein orthologs have been annotated, many are missing, suggesting that novel replication mechanisms may apply in this group of organisms. Here, we characterize the expression of Leishmania donovani MCM4, and find that while it broadly resembles other eukaryotes, noteworthy differences exist. MCM4 is constitutively nuclear, signifying that, unlike what is seen in S.cerevisiae, varying subcellular localization of MCM4 is not a mode of replication regulation in Leishmania. Overexpression of MCM4 in Leishmania promastigotes causes progress through S phase faster than usual, implicating a role for MCM4 in the modulation of cell cycle progression. We find for the first time in eukaryotes, an interaction between any of the proteins of the MCM2-7 (MCM4) and PCNA. MCM4 colocalizes with PCNA in S phase cells, in keeping with the MCM2-7 complex being involved not only in replication initiation, but fork elongation as well. Analysis of a LdMCM4 mutant indicates that MCM4 interacts with PCNA via the PIP box motif of MCM4 - perhaps as an integral component of the MCM2-7 complex, although we have no direct evidence that MCM4 harboring a PIP box mutation can still functionally associate with the other members of the MCM2-7 complex- and the PIP box motif is important for cell survival and viability. In Leishmania, MCM4 may possibly help in recruiting PCNA to chromatin, a role assigned to MCM10 in other eukaryotes

    Partitioning and resolution of mixture of two lipases from Bacillus stearothermophilus SB-1 in aqueous two-phase system

    No full text
    The partitioning and resolution of two lipases (acidic and neutral) was achieved in an aqueous two-phase system from crude culture supernatant of Bacillus stearothermophilus SB-1. The effects of changes in PEG molecular weight, varying PEG/phosphate system, pH and sodium chloride concentration were examined on the partition coefficient, K in PEG/phosphate system. The best system was PEG 6000 (70% w/v)/phosphate (40% w/v) and NaCl (3% w/v) at pH 7.0 where the total lipase partitioned to the top PEG phase. The two lipases were then selectively eluted by addition of fresh salt phase in a pH dependent manner with acidic lipase moving to the bottom phase at pH 4.0 with 5.27-fold purification while neutral lipase shifted to the bottom phase at pH 6.0 with 15.25-fold purity. The two lipases were easily recovered from the salt phase by immobilisation on accurel. Thus the mixture of two lipases was resolved and purified into acidic and neutral within 2 h with complete recycling of both the phase components. It has also been found that addition of PEG 6000 leads to an increase in the enzyme activity of the lipase mixture

    Endoscopic excision of Angiofibroma

    No full text
    • …
    corecore