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Query: EC:1.1.1.3 (
HSD
)
3,464
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Classical whole-cell mutagenesis has achieved great success in development of many industrial fermentation strains, but has the serious disadvantage of accumulation of uncharacterized secondary mutations that are detrimental to their performance. In the post-genomic era, a novel methodology which avoids this drawback presents itself. This "genome-based strain reconstruction" involves identifying mutations by comparative genomic analysis, defining mutations beneficial for production, and assembling them in a single wild-type background. Described herein is an initial challenge involving reconstruction of classically derived L-lysine-producing Corynebacterium glutamicum. Comparative genomic analysis for the relevant terminal pathways, the efflux step, and the anaplerotic reactions between the wild-type and production strains identified a Val-59-->Ala mutation in the
homoserine dehydrogenase
gene (hom), a Thr-311-->
Ile
mutation in the aspartokinase gene (lysC), and a Pro-458-->Ser mutation in the pyruvate carboxylase gene (pyc). Introduction of the hom and lysC mutations into the wild-type strain by allelic replacement resulted in accumulation of 8 g and 55 g of L-lysine/l, respectively, indicating that both these specific mutations are relevant to production. The two mutations were then reconstituted in the wild-type genome, which led to a synergistic effect on production (75 g/l). Further introduction of the pyc mutation resulted in an additional contribution and accumulation of 80 g/l after only 27 h. This high-speed fermentation achieved the highest productivity (3.0 g l(-1) h(-1)) so far reported for microbes producing L-lysine in fed-batch fermentation.
...
PMID:A novel methodology employing Corynebacterium glutamicum genome information to generate a new L-lysine-producing mutant. 1187 15
Candidate attenuators were identified that regulate operons responsible for biosynthesis of branched amino acids, histidine, threonine, tryptophan, and phenylalanine in gamma- and alpha-proteobacteria, and in some cases in low-GC Gram-positive bacteria, Thermotogales and Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi. This allowed us not only to describe the evolutionary dynamics of regulation by attenuation of transcription, but also to annotate a number of hypothetical genes. In particular, orthologs of ygeA of Escherichia coli were assigned the branched chain amino acid racemase function. Three new families of histidine transporters were predicted, orthologs of yuiF and yvsH of Bacillus subtilis, and lysQ of Lactococcus lactis. In Pasteurellales, the single bifunctional aspartate kinase/
homoserine dehydrogenase
gene thrA was predicted to be regulated not only by threonine and
isoleucine
, as in E. coli, but also by methionine. In alpha-proteobacteria, the single acetolactate synthase operon ilvIH was predicted to be regulated by branched amino acids-dependent attenuators. Histidine biosynthetic operons his were predicted to be regulated by histidine-dependent attenuators in Bacillus cereus and Clostridium difficile, and by histidine T-boxes in L. lactis and Streptococcus mutans.
...
PMID:Attenuation regulation of amino acid biosynthetic operons in proteobacteria: comparative genomics analysis. 1513 44
A relatively unexploited potential target for antimicrobial agents is the biosynthesis of essential amino acids. Homoserine dehydrogenase, which reduces aspartate semi-aldehyde to homoserine in a NAD(P)H-dependent reaction, is one such target that is required for the biosynthesis of Met, Thr, and
Ile
from Asp. We report a small molecule screen of yeast
homoserine dehydrogenase
that has identified a new class of phenolic inhibitors of this class of enzyme. X-ray crystal structural analysis of one of the inhibitors in complex with
homoserine dehydrogenase
reveals that these molecules bind in the amino acid binding region of the active site and that the phenolic hydroxyl group interacts specifically with the backbone amide of Gly175. These results provide the first nonamino acid inhibitors of this class of enzyme and have the potential to be exploited as leads in antifungal compound design.
...
PMID:New phenolic inhibitors of yeast homoserine dehydrogenase. 1521 Jan 49
The Arabidopsis genome contains two genes predicted to code for bifunctional aspartate kinase-
homoserine dehydrogenase
enzymes (isoforms I and II). These two activities catalyze the first and the third steps toward the synthesis of the essential amino acids threonine,
isoleucine
, and methionine. We first characterized the kinetic and regulatory properties of the recombinant enzymes, showing that they mainly differ with respect to the inhibition of the
homoserine dehydrogenase
activity by threonine. A systematic search for other allosteric effectors allowed us to identify an additional inhibitor (leucine) and 5 activators (alanine, cysteine,
isoleucine
, serine, and valine) equally efficient on aspartate kinase I activity (4-fold activation). The six effectors of aspartate kinase I were all activators of aspartate kinase II activity (13-fold activation) and displayed a similar specificity for the enzyme. No synergy between different effectors could be observed. The activation, which resulted from a decrease in the Km values for the substrates, was detected using low substrates concentrations. Amino acid quantification revealed that alanine and threonine were much more abundant than the other effectors in Arabidopsis leaf chloroplasts. In vitro kinetics in the presence of physiological concentrations of the seven allosteric effectors confirmed that aspartate kinase I and II activities were highly sensitive to changes in alanine and threonine concentrations. Thus, physiological context rather than enzyme structure sets the specificity of the allosteric control. Stimulation by alanine may play the role of a feed forward activation of the aspartate-derived amino acid pathway in plant.
...
PMID:Identification of six novel allosteric effectors of Arabidopsis thaliana aspartate kinase-homoserine dehydrogenase isoforms. Physiological context sets the specificity. 1621 75
To increase carbon flux to lysine, minimized production of amino acids that are biosynthetically related to lysine, for example,
isoleucine
and valine, is required. By limiting the supply of pantothenate, the precursor of coenzyme A, the carbon flux was redirected from
isoleucine
and valine to lysine in the recombinant of Corynebacterium lactofermentum ATCC 21799 containing the plasmid pGC77. The pGC77 contains hom(dr), thrB, and ilvA encoding feedback-deregulated
homoserine dehydrogenase
, homoserine kinase, and threonine dehydratase, respectively. At 250 microM of isopropyl-beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside, the recombinant (pGC77) produced lysine, valine, and
isoleucine
. Limiting the supply of pantothenate from 300 microg/l to 30 microg/l resulted in an increase in lysine (from 4.5 to 6.4 g/l) and decreases in valine (from 3.1 to 1.6 g/l) and
isoleucine
(from 0.9 to 0.3 g/l) production. The concentration of pyruvate was higher and that of acetate lower in the pantothenate-limited culture than in the control, suggesting that the limited supply of pantothenate delayed the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA. Increased availability of pyruvate by limiting the supply of pantothenate might favor the integration of pyruvate into the lysine branch. The results of this study are useful for the production of lysine with decreased concentrations of byproducts.
...
PMID:Redirection of carbon flux to lysine in a recombinant of Corynebacterium lactofermentum ATCC 21799 by limited supply of pantothenate. 1623 92
The hom-1-thrB operon encodes
homoserine dehydrogenase
resistant to feedback inhibition by L-threonine and homoserine kinase. Stable expression of this operon has not yet been attained in different Corynebacterium glutamicum strains. We studied the use of chromosomal integration and of a low-copy-number vector for moderate expression of the hom-1-thrB operon to enable an analysis of the physiological consequences of its expression in C. glutamicum. Strains carrying one, two, or three copies of hom-1-thrB were obtained. They showed proportionally increased enzyme activity of feedback-resistant
homoserine dehydrogenase
and of homoserine kinase. This phenotype was stably maintained in all recombinants for more than 70 generations. In a lysine-producing C. glutamicum strain which does not produce any threonine, expression of one copy of hom-1-thrB resulted in the secretion of 39 mM threonine. Additional copies resulted in a higher, although not proportional, accumulation of threonine (up to 69 mM). This indicates further limitations of threonine production. As the copy number of hom-1-thrB increased, increasing amounts of homoserine (up to 23 mM) and
isoleucine
(up to 34 mM) were secreted. Determination of the cytosolic concentration of the respective amino acids revealed an increase of intracellular threonine from 9 to 100 mM and of intracellular homoserine from 4 to 74 mM as the copy number of hom-1-thrB increased. These results suggest that threonine production with C. glutamicum is limited by the efflux system for this amino acid. Furthermore, the results show the successful use of moderate and stable hom-1-thrB expression for directing the carbon flux from aspartate to threonine.
...
PMID:Stable Expression of hom-1-thrB in Corynebacterium glutamicum and Its Effect on the Carbon Flux to Threonine and Related Amino Acids. 1634 46
The biosynthesis of l-
isoleucine
proceeds via a highly regulated reaction sequence connected with l-lysine and l-threonine synthesis. Using defined genetic Corynebacterium glutamicum strains characterized by different fluxes through the
homoserine dehydrogenase
reaction, we analyzed the influence of four different ilvA alleles (encoding threonine dehydratase) in vectors with two different copy numbers on the total flux towards l-
isoleucine
. For this purpose, 18 different strains were constructed and analyzed. The result was that unlike ilvA in vectors with low copy numbers, ilvA in high-copy-number vectors increased the final l-
isoleucine
yield by about 20%. An additional 40% increase in l-
isoleucine
yield was obtained by the use of ilvA alleles encoding feedback-resistant threonine dehydratases. The strain with the highest yield was characterized by three hom(Fbr) copies encoding feedback-resistant
homoserine dehydrogenase
and ilvA(Fbr) encoding feedback-resistant threonine dehydratase on a multicopy plasmid. It accumulated 96 mM l-
isoleucine
, without any l-threonine as a by-product. The highest specific productivity was 0.052 g of l-
isoleucine
per g of biomass per h. This comparative flux analysis of isogenic strains showed that high levels of l-
isoleucine
formation from glucose can be achieved by the appropriate balance of
homoserine dehydrogenase
and threonine dehydratase activities in a strain background with feedback-resistant aspartate kinase. However, still-unknown limitations are present within the entire reaction sequence.
...
PMID:Use of Feedback-Resistant Threonine Dehydratases of Corynebacterium glutamicum To Increase Carbon Flux towards l-Isoleucine. 1653 85
Comprehensive studies were made with Lemna paucicostata Hegelm. 6746 of the effects of combinations of lysine, methionine, and threonine on growth rates, soluble amino acid contents, aspartokinase activities, and fluxes of 4-carbon moieties from aspartate through the aspartokinase step into the amino acids of the aspartate family. These studies show that flux in vitro through the aspartokinase step is insensitive to inhibition by lysine or threonine, and confirm previous in vitro data in establishing that aspartokinase in vivo is present in two orders of magnitude excess of its requirements. No evidence of channeling of the products of the lysine- and threonine-sensitive aspartokinases was obtained, either form of the enzyme alone being more than adequate for the combined in vivo flux through the aspartokinase step. The marked insensitivity of flux through the aspartokinase step to inhibition by lysine or threonine strongly suggests that inhibition of aspartokinase by these amino acids is not normally a major factor in regulation of entry of 4-carbon units into the aspartate family of amino acids. Direct measurement of fluxes of 4-carbon units demonstrated that: (a) Lysine strongly feedback regulates its own synthesis, probably at the step catalyzed by dihydrodipicolinate synthase. (b) Threonine alone does not regulate its own synthesis in vivo, thereby confirming previous studies of the metabolism of [(14)C]threonine and [(14)C]homoserine in Lemna. This finding excludes not only aspartokinases as an important regulatory determinant of threonine synthesis, but also two other enzymes (
homoserine dehydrogenase
and threonine synthase) suggested to fulfill this role. Complete inhibition of threonine synthesis was observed only in the combined presence of accumulated threonine and lysine. The physiological significance of this single example of apparent regulation of flux at the aspartokinase step, albeit under unusually stringent conditions of aspartokinase inhibition, remains to be determined. (c)
Isoleucine
strongly inhibits its own synthesis, probably at threonine dehydratase, without causing compensatory reduction in threonine synthesis. A fundamentally changed scheme for regulation of synthesis of the aspartate family of amino acids is presented that has important implications for improvement of the nutritional contents of these amino acids in plants.
...
PMID:Regulatory Structure of the Biosynthetic Pathway for the Aspartate Family of Amino Acids in Lemna paucicostata Hegelm. 6746, with Special Reference to the Role of Aspartokinase. 1666 69
It is well known that some amino acids inhibit bacterial growth. L-Serine is known to inhibit the growth of Escherichia coli by inhibition of
homoserine dehydrogenase
(
EC 1.1.1.3
). It has been reported that this L-serine inhibition may be prevented by the addition of L-
isoleucine
or L-threonine to the medium. In our study, however, recovery of the growth inhibition of Escherichia coli by L-serine occurred in the presence of several amino acids, especially L-phenylalanine. In an attempt to further elucidate this inhibition mechanism, different intermediates of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis were added to the growth medium. Recovery from the inhibition did not occur in the presence of prephenate but did occur when phenylpyruvate was added to the medium. The specific activity of prephenate dehydratase decreased in cells grown in the presence of L-serine. However. L-serine did not inhibit in vitro prephenate dehydratase activity, and the expression of pheA, which encodes the prephenate dehydratase, was not depressed by L-serine. We suggest that L-serine acts via another inhibition mechanism. Although this inhibition mechanism has not been fully elucidated, our results suggest that the addition of L-serine to the growth medium inhibits prephenate dehydratase synthesis and thus affects L-phenylalanine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Effect of L-serine on the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids in Escherichia coli. 1708 51
Initial steps of aspartate-derived biosynthesis pathway (Asp pathway) producing Lys, Thr, Met and
Ile
are catalyzed by bifunctional (AK/
HSD
) and monofunctional (AK-lys) aspartate kinase (AK) enzymes. Here, we show that transcription of all AK genes is negatively regulated under darkness and low sugar conditions. By using yeast one-hybrid assays and complementary chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses in Arabidopsis cells, the bZIP transcription factors ABI5 and DPBF4 were identified, capable of interacting with the G-box-containing enhancer of AK/HSD1 promoter. Elevated transcript levels of DPBF4 and ABI5 under darkness and low sugar conditions coincide with the repression of AK gene expression. Overexpression of ABI5, but not DPBF4, further increases this AK transcription suppression. Concomitantly, it also increases the expression of asparagines synthetase 1 (ASN1) that shifts aspartate utilization towards asparagine formation. However, in abi5 or dpbf4 mutant and abi5, dpbf4 double mutant the repression of AK expression is maintained, indicating a functional redundancy with other bZIP-TFs. A dominant-negative version of DPBF4 fused to the SRDX repressor domain of SUPERMAN could counteract the repression and stimulate AK expression under low sugar and darkness in planta. This effect was verified by showing that DPBF4-SRDX fails to recognize the AK/HSD1 enhancer sequence in yeast one-hybrid assays, but increases heterodimmer formation with DPBF4 and ABI5, as estimated by yeast two-hybrid assays. Hence it is likely that heterodimerization with DPBF4-SRDX inhibits the binding of redundantly functioning bZIP-TFs to the promoters of AK genes and thereby releases the repressing effect. These data highlight a novel transcription control of the chloroplast aspartate pathway that operates under energy limiting conditions.
...
PMID:Transcriptional control of aspartate kinase expression during darkness and sugar depletion in Arabidopsis: involvement of bZIP transcription factors. 2127 47
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