Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (deaminase)
5,113 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bacterial endospores derive much of their longevity and resistance properties from the relative dehydration of their protoplasts. The spore cortex, a peptidoglycan structure surrounding the protoplasm, maintains, and is postulated to have a role in attaining, protoplast dehydration. A structural modification unique to the spore cortex is the removal of all or part of the peptide side chains from the majority of the muramic acid residues and the conversion of 50% of the muramic acid to muramic lactam. A mutation in the cwlD gene of Bacillus subtilis, predicted to encode a muramoyl-L-alanine amidase, results in the production of spores containing no muramic lactam. These spores have normally dehydrated protoplasts but are unable to complete the germination/ outgrowth process to produce viable cells. Addition of germinants resulted in the triggering of germination with loss of spore refractility and the release of dipicolinic acid but no degradation of cortex peptidoglycan. Germination in the presence of lysozyme allowed the cwlD spores to produce viable cells and showed that they have normal heat resistance properties. These results (i) suggest that a mechanical activity of the cortex peptidoglycan is not required for the generation of protoplast dehydration but rather that it simply serves as a static structure to maintain dehydration, (ii) demonstrate that degradation of cortex peptidoglycan is not required for spore solute release or partial spore core rehydration during germination, (iii) indicate that muramic lactam is a major specificity determinant of germination lytic enzymes, and (iv) suggest the mechanism by which the spore cortex is degraded during germination while the germ cell wall is left intact.
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PMID:Muramic lactam in peptidoglycan of Bacillus subtilis spores is required for spore outgrowth but not for spore dehydration or heat resistance. 898 24

A bacterial strain capable of utilizing E-pyridine-3-aldoxime as a nitrogen source was isolated from soil after a 4-month acclimation period and was identified as Rhodococcus sp. The strain contained a novel aldoxime dehydration activity that catalyzed a stoichiometric dehydration of E-pyridine-3-aldoxime to form 3-cyanopyridine. The enzyme activity was induced by various aldoximes and nitriles. The strain metabolized the aldoxime as follows: E-pyridine-3-aldoxime was dehydrated to form 3-cyanopyridine, which was converted to nicotinamide by a nitrile hydratase, and the nicotinamide was successively hydrolyzed to nicotinic acid by an amidase.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a bacterium possessing a novel aldoxime-dehydration activity and nitrile-degrading enzymes. 968 44

Dormant, bacterial endospores are the most resistant living structures known. The spore cell wall (cortex) maintains dormancy, core dehydration, and heat resistance. The cortex peptidoglycan has a unique, spore specific structure that enables it to fulfill its role. The cross-linking index of spore cortex peptidoglycan is very low, occurring at only 2.9% of the muramic acid residues compared to 33% in vegetative cells. The level of cross-linking of the cortex may be important in maintaining spore dormancy and heat resistance. Approximately 50% of the muramic acid residues in spore cortex are substituted with muramic delta-lactam. This modification is spore specific and is the major characteristic feature of the cortex. The muramic delta-lactam has no apparent role in establishing core dehydration, maintaining dormancy or heat resistance. However, the muramic delta-lactam residues are necessary for spore cortex hydrolysis during germination. They constitute part of the substrate recognition profile of the germination specific lytic enzymes (GSLEs) which are responsible for cortex hydrolysis. Germination results in loss of dormant spore properties and hydrolysis of the cortex is essential for later germination events and outgrowth. Application of muropeptide analysis to determine peptidoglycan structural dynamics during germination has revealed an unexpected degree of complexity in peptidoglycan hydrolysis. At least three hydrolytic activities, an N-acetyl glucosaminidase, a lytic transglycosylase and a possible amidase, are involved. A non-hydrolytic activity, likely to be an epimerase of muramic acid also occurs early during germination. The lytic transglycosylase generates anhydro-muropeptides which are released during germination and may be recycled during outgrowth to form part of the new vegetative cell wall.
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PMID:The role of peptidoglycan structure and structural dynamics during endospore dormancy and germination. 1051 Jul 17

Analysis of the nitrile hydratase gene cluster involved in nitrile metabolism of Pseudomonas chlororaphis B23 revealed that it contains one open reading frame encoding aldoxime dehydratase upstream of the amidase gene. The amino acid sequence deduced from this open reading frame shows similarity (32% identity) with that of Bacillus phenylacetaldoxime dehydratase (Kato, Y., Nakamura, K., Sakiyama, H., Mayhew, S. G., and Asano, Y. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 800-809). The gene product expressed in Escherichia coli catalyzed the dehydration of aldoxime into nitrile. The Pseudomonas aldoxime dehydratase (OxdA) was purified from the E. coli transformant and characterized. OxdA shows an absorption spectrum with a Soret peak that is characteristic of heme, demonstrating that it is a hemoprotein. For its activity, this enzyme required a reducing reagent, Na2S2O4, but did not require FMN, which is crucial for the Bacillus enzyme. The enzymatic reaction was found to be catalyzed when the heme iron of the enzyme was in the ferrous state. Calcium as well as iron was included in the enzyme. OxdA reduced by Na2S2O4 had a molecular mass of 76.2 kDa and consisted of two identical subunits. The kinetic parameters of OxdA indicated that aliphatic aldoximes are more effective substrates than aromatic aldoximes. A variety of spectral shifts in the absorption spectra of OxdA were observed upon the addition of each of various compounds (i.e. redox reagents and heme ligands). Moreover, the addition of the substrate to OxdA gave a peak that would be derived from the intermediate in the nitrile synthetic reaction. P. chlororaphis B23 grew and showed the OxdA activity when cultured in a medium containing aldoxime as the sole carbon and nitrogen source. Together with these findings, Western blotting analysis of the extracts using anti-OxdA antiserum revealed that OxdA is responsible for the metabolism of aldoxime in vivo in this strain.
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PMID:Novel aldoxime dehydratase involved in carbon-nitrogen triple bond synthesis of Pseudomonas chlororaphis B23. Sequencing, gene expression, purification, and characterization. 1277 27

Bacterial spore heat resistance is primarily dependent upon dehydration of the spore cytoplasm, a state that is maintained by the spore peptidoglycan wall, the spore cortex. A peptidoglycan structural modification found uniquely in spores is the formation of muramic delta-lactam. Production of muramic delta-lactam in Bacillus subtilis requires removal of a peptide side chain from the N-acetylmuramic acid residue by a cwlD-encoded muramoyl-L-Alanine amidase. Expression of cwlD takes place in both the mother cell and forespore compartments of sporulating cells, though expression is expected to be required only in the mother cell, from which cortex synthesis derives. Expression of cwlD in the forespore is in a bicistronic message with the upstream gene ybaK. We show that ybaK plays no apparent role in spore peptidoglycan synthesis and that expression of cwlD in the forespore plays no significant role in spore peptidoglycan formation. Peptide cleavage by CwlD is apparently followed by deacetylation of muramic acid and lactam ring formation. The product of pdaA (yfjS), which encodes a putative deacetylase, has recently been shown to also be required for muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of CwlD in Escherichia coli results in muramoyl L-Alanine amidase activity but no muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of PdaA alone in E. coli had no effect on E. coli peptidoglycan structure, whereas expression of CwlD and PdaA together resulted in the formation of muramic delta-lactam. CwlD and PdaA are necessary and sufficient for muramic delta-lactam production, and no other B. subtilis gene product is required. PdaA probably carries out both deacetylation and lactam ring formation and requires the product of CwlD activity as a substrate.
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PMID:Production of muramic delta-lactam in Bacillus subtilis spore peptidoglycan. 1467 27

We identified an aldoxime dehydratase (Oxd) gene in the 5'-flanking region of the nitrile hydratase-amidase gene cluster in the photoreactive iron-type nitrile hydratase-producer, Rhodococcus sp. N-771. The enzyme showed 96.3%, 77.6%, and 30.4% identities with the Oxds of Rhodococcus globerulus A-4, Pseudomonas chlororaphis B23, and Bacillus sp. OxB-1, respectively. The enzyme was expressed in Escherichia coli under the control of the lac- or T7 promoters in its intact and His6-tagged forms, purified, and characterized. The enzyme had heme b as a prosthetic group, catalyzed a stoichiometric dehydration of aldoxime into nitrile, and exhibited the highest activity at neutral pH and at around 30 degrees C similar to the known Oxd from Bacillus sp. OxB-1. The activity was enhanced by reducing agents, such as Na2S, Na2S2(O4), 2-mercaptoethanol, and L-cysteine and supplementary additions of electron acceptors such as flavins, sulfite ion, and vitamin K3. The effect of various chemicals on the enzyme activity was different in the presence and absence of the reducing reagent, Na2S. The enzyme preferentially acts on aliphatic-type substrates and the substrate specificity of the enzyme coincides with that reported for nitrile hydratase produced by the strain.
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PMID:Aldoxime dehydratase co-existing with nitrile hydratase and amidase in the iron-type nitrile hydratase-producer Rhodococcus sp. N-771. 1623 24

Recently, multidrug-resistant clinical isolates of Acinetobacter baumannii have been found to have a high capacity to form biofilm. It is well known that bacterial cells within biofilms are highly resistant to antibiotics, UV light, acid exposure, dehydration, and phagocytosis in comparison to their planktonic counterparts, which suggests that the cells in a biofilm have altered metabolic activity. To determine which proteins are up-regulated in A. baumannii biofilm cells, we performed a proteomic analysis. A clinical isolate of A. baumannii 1656-2, which was characterized to have a high biofilm forming ability, was cultivated under biofilm and planktonic conditions. Outer membrane enriched A. baumannii 1656-2 proteins were separated by two-dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis and the differentially expressed proteins were identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The proteins up-regulated or expressed only in biofilm cells of A. baumannii are categorized as follows: (i) proteins processing environmental information such as the outer membrane receptor protein involved in mostly Fe transport, a sensor histidine kinase/response regulator, and diguanylate cyclase (PAS-GGEDF-EAL domain); (ii) proteins involved in metabolism such as NAD-linked malate dehydrogenase, nucleoside-diphosphate sugar epimerase, putative GalE, ProFAR isomerase, and N-acetylmuramoyl-L: -alanine amidase; (iii) bacterial antibiotic resistance related proteins; and (iv) proteins related to gene repair such as exodeoxyribonuclease III and GidA. This proteomic analysis provides a fundamental platform for further studies to reveal the role of biofilm in the persistence and tolerance of A. baumannii.
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PMID:Proteomic analysis of Acinetobacter baumannii in biofilm and planktonic growth mode. 2012 67

Nitrogen recycling and redistribution are important for the environmental stress response of plants. In non-nitrogen-fixing plants, ureide metabolism is crucial to nitrogen recycling from organic sources. Various studies have suggested that the rate-limiting components of ureide metabolism respond to environmental stresses. However, the underlying regulation mechanism is not well understood. In this report, rice ureidoglycolate amidohydrolase (OsUAH), which is a recently identified enzyme catalyzing the final step of ureide degradation, was identified as low-temperature- (LT) but not abscisic acid- (ABA) regulated. To elucidate the LT regulatory mechanism at the transcriptional level, we isolated and characterized the promoter region of OsUAH (P OsUAH ). Series deletions revealed that a minimal region between -522 and -420 relative to the transcriptional start site was sufficient for the cold induction of P OsUAH . Detailed analyses of this 103-bp fragment indicated that a C-repeat/dehydration-responsive (CRT/DRE) element localized at position -434 was essential for LT-responsive expression. A rice C-repeat-binding factors/DRE-binding proteins 1 (CBFs/DREB1s) subfamily member, OsCBF3, was screened to specifically bind to the CRT/DRE element in the minimal region both in yeast one-hybrid assays and in in vitro gel-shift analysis. Moreover, the promoter could be exclusively trans-activated by the interaction between the CRT/DRE element and OsCBF3 in vivo. These findings may help to elucidate the regulation mechanism of stress-responsive ureide metabolism genes and provide an example of the member-specific manipulation of the CBF/DREB1 subfamily.
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PMID:Low-Temperature-Induced Expression of Rice Ureidoglycolate Amidohydrolase is Mediated by a C-Repeat/Dehydration-Responsive Element that Specifically Interacts with Rice C-Repeat-Binding Factor 3. 2661 32