and are being studied for their potential to contribute to a more sustainable bio-based economy. Both species were shown previously to rely on GTP or pyrophosphate instead of ATP as cofactors in specific reactions of central energy metabolism for reasons that are not well understood yet. Since it is often impossible to predict cofactor specificity from the primary protein structure, thirteen enzymes from were cloned and heterologous expressed in to assess the cofactor usage and paint a more complete picture of the cofactor usage in the central metabolism of . The assays were conducted with heat-treated cell-free extract devoid of background activity to allow the quick assessment of a relatively large number of (thermophilic) enzymes. Selected enzymes were also purified to allow the determination of the enzyme kinetics for competing cofactors. Following the results of the glucokinase (GK), galactokinase, xylulokinase (XK), and ribokinase assays, it seems that phosphorylation of monosaccharides by and large is mainly GTP-dependent. Some possible implications of this relating to the adenylate/guanylate energy charge are discussed here. Besides the highly expressed pyrophosphate-dependent 6-phosphofructokinase, another 6-phosphofructokinase was found to be equally dependent on ATP and GTP, while no 6-phosphofructokinase activity could be demonstrated for a third. Both type I glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenases were found to be NAD-dependent, and further, acetate kinase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, and three enzymes predicted to be responsible for the interconversion of phosphoenolpyruvate and pyruvate (i.e., pyruvate kinase; pyruvate, phosphate dikinase; phosphoenolpyruvate synthase), were also assessed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01162 | DOI Listing |
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October 2024
Zhejiang Cancer Hospital, Hangzhou Institute of Medicine, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310022, China.
Coenzymes (cofactors) are essential for bio-redox reactions, group transfer reactions, and heterogeneous reactions of bio-enzymes, as well as the auxiliary transfer of electrons or atoms to promote bio-enzyme activity. However, when mimetic enzymes are scaled to the micro or nanoscale levels, both the absence of cofactor activity and the presence of migrating internal atoms cause self-depletion, eventually limiting sustained usage. Herein, cofactor regulation, a key issue long neglected in traditional mimetic enzyme construction is addressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Cent Sci
August 2024
Department of Chemistry, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, United States.
Heme oxygenase-like domain-containing oxidases (HDOs) are a rapidly expanding enzyme family that typically use dinuclear metal cofactors instead of heme. FlcD, an HDO from the opportunistic pathogen , catalyzes the excision of an oxime carbon in the biosynthesis of the copper-containing antibiotic fluopsin C. We show that FlcD is a dioxygenase that catalyzes a four-electron oxidation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUrologia
November 2024
Department of Urology, ASST Sette Laghi - Circolo e Fondazione Macchi Hospital, Varese, Italy.
The availability of a range of modified synthetic oligonucleotides from commercial vendors has allowed the development of sophisticated assays to characterize diverse properties of nucleic acid metabolizing enzymes that can be run in any standard molecular biology lab. The use of fluorescent labels has made these methods accessible to researchers with standard PAGE electrophoresis equipment and a fluorescent-enabled imager, without using radioactive materials or requiring a lab designed for the storage and preparation of radioactive materials, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioelectrochemistry
December 2024
Key Laboratory of Engineering Biology for Low-Carbon Manufacturing, Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tianjin 300308, China; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China. Electronic address:
To take advantage of the high specificity of enzymatic catalysis along with the high efficiency of electrochemical cofactor regeneration, a bacterial surface displayed enzyme-nanomaterial hybrid bioelectrocatalytic system is herein developed. A cofactor-dependent xylose reductase, capable of reducing xylose to xylitol, is displayed on the surface of Bacillus subtilis, followed by the attachment of copper nanomaterials via the binding of His-tagged enzyme with the nickel ion. This hybrid system can regenerate NADPH with a highest efficiency of 71.
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