Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.10.3.2 (
laccase
)
4,656
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Production of ligninolytic enzymes and degradation of 14C-ring labeled synthetic lignin by the white-rot fungus Cyathus stercoreus ATCC 36910 were determined under a variety of conditions. The highest mineralization rate for 14C dehydrogenative polymerizates (DHP; 38% 14CO2 after 30 days) occurred with 1 mM ammonium tartrate as nitrogen source and 1%
glucose
as additional carbon source, but levels of extracellular
laccase
and manganese peroxidase (MnP) were low. In contrast, 10 mM ammonium tartrate with 1%
glucose
gave low mineralization rates (10% 14CO2 after 30 days) but higher levels of
laccase
and manganese peroxidase. Lignin peroxidase was not produced by C. stercoreus under any of the studied conditions. Mn(II) at 11 ppm gave a higher rate of 14C DHP mineralization than 0.3 or 40 ppm, but the highest manganese peroxidase level was obtained with Mn(II) at 40 ppm. Cultivation in aerated static flasks gave rise to higher levels of both
laccase
and manganese peroxidase compared to the levels in shake cultures. 3,4-Dimethoxycinnamic acid at 500 microM concentration was the most effective inducer of
laccase
of those tested. The purified
laccase
was a monomeric glycoprotein having an apparent molecular mass of 70 kDa, as determined by calibrated gel filtration chromatography. The pH optimum and isoelectric point of the purified
laccase
were 4.8 and 3.5, respectively. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of C. stercoreus
laccase
showed close homology to the N-terminal sequences determined from other basidiomycete laccases. Information on C. stercoreus, whose habitat and physiological requirements for lignin degradation differ from many other white-rot fungi, expands the possibilities for industrial application of biological systems for lignin degradation and removal in biopulping and biobleaching processes.
...
PMID:Production of ligninolytic enzymes and synthetic lignin mineralization by the bird's nest fungus Cyathus stercoreus. 1057 Aug 16
The presence of oxidases and peroxidases was tested qualitatively in 12 strains of white rot Basidiomycetes. Plate tests with gallic acid, tannic acid, guayacol, Poly R-478 and Azure B were used. Fomes sclerodermeus, Phlebia sp. and Pycnoporus sanguineus were selected for further studies because they produced the largest areas of degradation in all media tested. Poly R-478 degradation and manganese peroxidase, lignin peroxidase and
laccase
activities were measured in
glucose
-asparagine (N-sufficient) and Kirk (N-limited) media. The highest activities were produced by F. sclerodermeus cultured in
glucose
asparagine medium.
...
PMID:[Enzymes of white rot fungi involved in lignin degradation]. 1088 8
Cells of the white rot fungus Pycnoporus cinnabarinus grown in
glucose
were able to hydroxylate biphenyl and diphenyl ether, although growth was inhibited by these substrates at concentrations above 250 microM. 2- and 4-Hydroxybiphenyl were detected as products of biphenyl metabolism and 2- and 4-hydroxydiphenyl ether as products of diphenyl ether metabolism in the culture media. After addition of 2-hydroxydiphenyl ether and 2-hydroxybiphenyl to cell-free supernatants containing
laccase
as the only ligninolytic enzyme, different coloured precipitates were formed. HPLC analysis revealed the formation of additional hydrophobic metabolites with one major product per transformation. Mass spectrometric analysis of the methyl derivatives of the polymer mixture indicated dimers and trimers with different binding types. The main products were identified as dimers with carbon-carbon bonds in para-position to the hydroxyl group of the monomers by mass spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
...
PMID:Characterisation of coupling products formed by biotransformation of biphenyl and diphenyl ether by the white rot fungus Pycnoporus cinnabarinus. 1119 94
Flavodon flavus (Klotzsch) Ryvarden, a basidiomycete (NIOCC strain 312) isolated from decomposing leaves of a sea grass, decolorized pigments in molasses spent wash (MSW) by 80% after 8 days of incubation, when used at concentrations of 10% and 50%. Decolorizing activity was also present in media prepared with half-strength seawater (equivalent to 15 ppt salinity). Decolorizing activity was seen in low-nitrogen medium, nutrient-rich medium and in sugarcane bagasse medium. The percentage decolorization of MSW was highest when
glucose
or sucrose was used as the carbon source in the low-nitrogen medium. The production of lignin-modifying enzymes, manganese-dependent peroxidase (MNP) and
laccase
decreased in a medium containing MSW. MNP production and MSW decolorization were inversely correlated, suggesting no role for MNP in MSW decolorization. The decolorization of MSW was not effective when F. flavus was immobilized in calcium alginate beads. Decolorization was achieved best in oxygenated cultures. Besides color, total phenolics and chemical oxygen demand were reduced by 50% in MSW treated with F. flavus, suggesting its potential in the bioremediation of effluents.
...
PMID:Decolorization of molasses spent wash by the white-rot fungus Flavodon flavus, isolated from a marine habitat. 1139 35
The white-rot fungus Trametes pubescens MB 89 has been identified as an outstanding, although not-yet-described, producer of the industrially important enzyme
laccase
. Extracellular
laccase
formation could be greatly stimulated by the addition of Cu(II) to a simple,
glucose
-based culture medium. Using optimum Cu concentrations (1.5-2.0 mM), maximum values for
laccase
activity of approximately 65 U/ml were obtained. The synthesis of the
laccase
protein depended on the presence of Cu in the medium as shown by Western blot analysis. Copper had to be supplemented during the exponential phase of growth for its maximal effect; addition during the stationary phase, during which
laccase
activity is predominantly formed, resulted in markedly reduced
laccase
productivity. As was shown by X-ray microanalysis of T pubescens mycelia obtained from a laboratory fermentation, Cu was rapidly taken up by the fungal biomass. A possible explanation for this stimulatory effect of Cu on
laccase
biosynthesis could be a role for this enzyme activity in melanin synthesis. The stimulatory effect of Cu on
laccase
synthesis was also effective for several other basidiomycetes and hence could be used as a simple method to boost the production of this enzyme.
...
PMID:Enhanced formation of laccase activity by the white-rot fungus Trametes pubescens in the presence of copper. 1149 35
Pleurotus ostreatus No. 42 produced the ligninolytic enzymes, manganese peroxidase (MnP) and
laccase
, in agitation culture in
glucose
/peptone/wheat-bran medium. Formation of mycelial pellets 1-2 mm in diameter was essential for the production of MnP; and the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the culture medium greatly influenced the production of MnP, a concentration over 5 ppm being necessary for MnP production. The maximal activity of MnP was obtained on days 7-9 of culture, after the consumption of nutrient
glucose
. Introduction of oxygen from the start of the cultivation caused large pellet formation, which resulted in a low MnP activity level. P. ostreatus No. 42 produced two MnP isozymes in agitation culture. The major isozyme, F-2, was 36.4 kDa and had a pI of 3.95. The MnP characteristics, Km values, dependence on Mn2+ and optimum pH showed the similarity between this isozyme and MnP 3, which was produced under different culture conditions. Analysis of the N-terminal amino acid sequence indicated the close similarity of F-2 to MnP 3.
...
PMID:Production of manganese peroxidase by pellet culture of the lignin-degrading basidiomycete, Pleurotus ostreatus. 1152 18
The ability of the white rot fungus Trametes trogii BAFC 463 (high producer of ligninolytic enzymes, especially
laccase
and manganese peroxidase) to degrade the dye anthraquinone blue, refractory to bacterial attack, was evaluated. Both tropho- and idiophasic T. trogii cultures in synthetic medium (
glucose
/asparagine) and complex medium (malt extract/
glucose
) were able to transform up to 88% dye in 4 hours. The activity of
laccase
, an oxygen-dependent phenoloxidase which was present at high levels in all the conditions assayed, might be related to the ability of the fungus to degrade the colorant. This is supported by the fact that in bioreactor experiences carried out at pH 4.5 the addition of anthraquinone blue caused a decrease in the levels of soluble oxygen. However, although high levels of
laccase
were produced at pH 7.5, the enzyme was not active, and neither dye transformation nor loss in the levels of soluble oxygen were quantified.
...
PMID:[Degradation of anthraquinone blue by Trametes trogii]. 1183 54
Exogenous addition of copper stimulates cellular differentiation in Streptomyces spp. Several lines of evidence suggested a parallel correlation between the stimulatory effect of copper and phenol-oxidizing enzyme activities in Streptomyces griseus. Here a novel extracytoplasmic phenol oxidase (EpoA) associated with cellular development of this organism was identified and characterized. EpoA activity, examined by an in-gel stain procedure with N,N'-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine sulfate as a substrate, was repressed by
glucose
and induced by copper supplied in the medium. The enzyme activity was abolished and markedly reduced in the mutants forA-factor biosynthesis and amfR, respectively, which suggested that the activity of the enzyme depends on those essential regulators for morphogenesis in S. griseus. EpoA protein was purified to homogeneity and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined. A homologous sequence identified in the genomic database of Streptomyces coelicolorA3(2) was used as a probe to clone the complete epoA gene of S. griseus. The deduced amino acid sequence of EpoA revealed that the mature protein with a molecular mass of 34 kDa was preceded by a signal peptide consisting of 34 aa, consistent with EpoA being a secreted enzyme. EpoA was predicted to be a
laccase
-type oxidase by not only the sequence similarity, but its substrate selectivity, oxidizing not tyrosine but dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) to generate melanin pigment. Introduction of epoA on a plasmid partially restored both the EpoA activity and aerial mycelium productivity in an A-factor-deficient mutant. Exogenous supplementation of a substance synthesized by purified EpoA from DOPA stimulated cellular differentiation in S. griseus and several other species. Ultrafiltration indicated that the molecular mass of the putative stimulant synthesized by EpoA is between 500 and 1000 Da.
...
PMID:A novel extracytoplasmic phenol oxidase of Streptomyces: its possible involvement in the onset of morphogenesis. 1205 96
The activities of carboxymethylcellulase and xylanase in the higher basidial fungus Cerrena unicolor grown in avicel-containing medium reached 1.95 and 1.50 units per mg protein, respectively, whereas in mannitol-containing medium they ranged from 0.02 to 0.05 units per mg protein. The activity of fungal beta-glucosidase depended on the carbon source in the culture medium and ranged from 2.1 units per mg protein in the presence of mannitol to 17.3 units per mg protein in the presence of avicel. In contrast to polysaccharides, easily metabolizable substrates (cellobiose, mannitol, and
glucose
) provided the highest rates of secretion of
laccase
(52.7-123.5 ncat per mg protein) and ligninase (22-106 units per mg protein). The addition of tangerine pomace, a substrate enriched with aromatic compounds, to the culture medium caused an increase in the rate of bio-synthesis of
laccase
and ligninase to 862 ncat per ml and 557 units per ml, respectively. Aromatic compounds such as p-xylidine and veratric aldehyde increased the
laccase
activity of C. unicolor IBB 62 from 7.9 to 23.6 and 18.3 ncat per mg protein, respectively. Veratryl alcohol caused a sevenfold increase in the activity of Mn-dependent peroxidase in the culture medium.
...
PMID:[Dependence of activities of polysaccharide hydrolases and oxidases from Cerrena unicolor on the source of carbon and aromatic acids in culture media]. 1206 74
The ability of a Brazilian strain of Pleurotus pulmonarius to decolorize structurally different synthetic dyes (including azo, triphenylmethane, heterocyclic and polymeric dyes) was investigated in solid and submerged cultures. Both were able to decolorize completely or partially 8 of 10 dyes (Amido Black, Congo Red, Trypan Blue, Methyl Green, Remazol Brilliant Blue R, Methyl Violet, Ethyl Violet, Brilliant Cresyl Blue). No decolorization of Methylene Blue and Poly R 478 was observed. Of the four phenol-oxidizing enzymes tested in culture filtrates (lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase, aryl alcohol oxidase,
laccase
), P. pulmonarius produced only
laccase
. Both
laccase
activity and dye decolorization were related to
glucose
and ammonium starvation or to induction by ferulic acid. The decolorization in vivo was tested using three dyes--Remazol Brilliant Blue R, Trypan Blue and Methyl Green. All of them were completely decolorized by crude extracellular extracts. Decolorization and
laccase
activity were equally affected by pH and temperature. Laccase can thus be considered to be the major enzyme involved in the ability of P. pulmonarius to decolorize industrial dyes.
...
PMID:Decolorization of industrial dyes by a Brazilian strain of Pleurotus pulmonarius producing laccase as the sole phenol-oxidizing enzyme. 1209 37
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