25 research outputs found

    Direct expression of active spinach glycolate oxidase in Escherichia coli

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    Spinach glycolate oxidase (GAO) was expressed in Escherichia coli using the T7 RNA polymerase promotor. The enzyme accounts for approx. 1% of the soluble protein fraction and is expressed as a soluble and active enzyme. Comparison with GAO expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Macheroux, P., Massey, V., Thiele, D.J. and Volokita, M. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4612-4619) showed that the GAO expressed in E. coli has identical physico-chemical features to the wild-type enzyme, but is expressed at a level approx. 15-fold higher than in the yeast system.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29898/1/0000255.pd

    Metal Ion Dependence of Recombinant Escherichia coli Allantoinase

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    Allantoinase is a suspected dinuclear metalloenzyme that catalyzes the hydrolytic cleavage of the five-member ring of allantoin (5-ureidohydantoin) to form allantoic acid. Recombinant Escherichia coli allantoinase purified from overproducing cultures amended with 2.5 mM zinc, 1 mM cobalt, or 1 mM nickel ions was found to possess āˆ¼1.4 Zn, 0.0 Co, 0.0 Ni, and 0.4 Fe; 0.1 Zn, 1.0 Co, 0.0 Ni, and 0.2 Fe; and 0.0 Zn, 0.0 Co, 0.6 Ni, and 0.1 Fe per subunit, respectively, whereas protein obtained from nonamended cultures contains near stoichiometric levels of iron. We conclude that allantoinase is incompletely activated in the recombinant cells, perhaps due to an insufficiency of a needed accessory protein. Enzyme isolated from nonsupplemented cultures possesses very low activity (k(cat) = 34.7 min(āˆ’1)) compared to the zinc-, cobalt-, and nickel-containing forms of allantoinase (k(cat) values of 5,000 and 28,200 min(āˆ’1) and 200 min(āˆ’1), respectively). These rates and corresponding K(m) values (17.0, 19.5, and 80 mM, respectively) are significantly greater than those that have been reported previously. Absorbance spectroscopy of the cobalt species reveals a band centered at 570 nm consistent with five-coordinate geometry. Dithiothreitol is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme, with significant K(i) differences for the zinc and cobalt species (237 and 795 Ī¼M, respectively). Circular dichroism spectroscopy revealed that the zinc enzyme utilizes only the S isomer of allantoin, whereas the cobalt allantoinase prefers the S isomer, but also hydrolyzes the R isomer at about 1/10 the rate. This is the first report for metal content of allantoinase from any source

    Biosynthesis of Active Bacillus subtilis Urease in the Absence of Known Urease Accessory Proteins

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    Bacillus subtilis contains urease structural genes but lacks the accessory genes typically required for GTP-dependent incorporation of nickel. Nevertheless, B. subtilis was shown to possess a functional urease, and the recombinant enzyme conferred low levels of nickel-dependent activity to Escherichia coli. Additional investigations of the system lead to the suggestion that B. subtilis may use unidentified accessory proteins for in vivo urease activation

    Purification and Properties of the Klebsiella aerogenes UreE Metal-Binding Domain, a Functional Metallochaperone of Urease

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    Klebsiella aerogenes UreE, a metallochaperone that delivers nickel ions during urease activation, consists of distinct ā€œpeptide-bindingā€ and ā€œmetal-bindingā€ domains and a His-rich C terminus. Deletion analyses revealed that the metal-binding domain alone is sufficient to facilitate urease activation. This domain was purified and shown to exhibit metal-binding properties similar to those of UreE lacking only the His-rich tail

    The AidB Component of the Escherichia coli Adaptive Response to Alkylating Agents Is a Flavin-Containing, DNA-Binding Protein

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    Upon exposure to alkylating agents, Escherichia coli increases expression of aidB along with three genes (ada, alkA, and alkB) that encode DNA repair proteins. In order to begin to identify the role of AidB in the cell, the protein was purified to homogeneity, shown to possess stoichiometric amounts of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), and confirmed to have low levels of isovaleryl-coenzyme A (CoA) dehydrogenase activity. A homology model of an AidB homodimer was constructed based on the structure of a four-domain acyl-CoA oxidase. The predicted structure revealed a positively charged groove connecting the two active sites and a second canyon of positive charges in the C-terminal domain, both of which could potentially bind DNA. Three approaches were used to confirm that AidB binds to double-stranded DNA. On the basis of its ability to bind DNA and its possession of a redox-active flavin, AidB is predicted to catalyze the direct repair of alkylated DNA

    Inhibition of urease by bismuth(III): Implications for the mechanism of action of bismuth drugs

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    Bismuth compounds are widely used for the treatment of peptic ulcers and Helicobacter pylori infections. It has been suggested that enzyme inhibition plays an important role in the antibacterial activity of bismuth towards this bacterium. Urease, an enzyme that converts urea into ammonia and carbonic acid, is crucial for colonization of the acidic environment of the stomach by H. pylori. Here, we show that three bismuth complexes exhibit distinct mechanisms of urease inhibition, with some differences dependent on the source of the enzyme. Bi(EDTA) and Bi(Cys)3 are competitive inhibitors of jack bean urease with K i values of 1.74 Ā± 0.14 and 1.84 Ā± 0.15 mM, while the anti-ulcer drug, ranitidine bismuth citrate (RBC) is a non-competitive inhibitor with a K i value of 1.17 Ā± 0.09 mM. A 13C NMR study showed that Bi(Cys)3 reacts with jack bean urease during a 30 min incubation, releasing free cysteines from the metal complex. Upon incubation with Bi(EDTA) and RBC, the number of accessible cysteine residues in the homohexameric plant enzyme decreased by 5.80 Ā± 0.17 and 11.94 Ā± 0.13, respectively, after 3 h of reaction with dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid). Kinetic analysis showed that Bi(EDTA) is both a competitive inhibitor and a time-dependent inactivator of the recombinant Klebsiella aerogenes urease. The active C319A mutant of the bacterial enzyme displays a significantly reduced sensitivity toward inactivation by Bi(EDTA) compared with the wild-type enzyme, consistent with binding of Bi3+ to the active site cysteine (Cys319) as the mechanism of enzyme inactivation

    Exploring the conformational equilibrium of E. coli thioredoxin reductase: Characterization of two catalytically important states by ultrafast flavin fluorescence spectroscopy

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    The conformational dynamics of wild-type Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) and the mutant enzyme C138S were studied by ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence of the flavin cofactor in combination with circular dichroism (both in the flavin fingerprint and far-UV regions) and steady-state fluorescence and absorption spectroscopy. The spectroscopic data show two conformational states of the enzyme (named FO and FR), of which the physical characteristics differ considerably. Ultrafast fluorescence lifetime measurements make it possible to distinguish between the two different populations: Dominant picosecond lifetimes of āˆ¼1 ps (contribution 75%) and 7 ps (8%) are associated with the FO species in TrxR C138S. Long-lived fluorescence with two time constants in the range of 0.2ā€“1 ns (total contribution 17%) originates from enzyme molecules in the FR conformation. The near absence of fast lifetime components in oxidized wild-type TrxR supports the idea of this enzyme being predominantly in the FR conformation. The emission spectrum of the FO conformation is blue-shifted with respect to that of the FR conformation. Because of the large difference in fluorescence characteristics, fluorescence measurements on time scales longer than 100 ps are fully determined by the fraction of enzyme molecules in the FR conformation. Binding of the thiol reagent phenyl mercuric acetate to wild-type enzyme and TrxR C138S stabilizes the enzymes in the FR conformation. Specific binding of the NADPH-analog, AADP+, to the FR conformation resulted in dynamic fluorescence quenching in support of the multiple quenching sites model. Raising the temperature from 277Kā€“323K resulted in a moderate shift to the FR conformation for TrxR C138S. High concentrations of the cosolvent glycerol triggered the domain rotation from the FO to the FR conformation
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