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

Mutants of Apergillus nidulans with lesions in a gene, areA (formerly called amdT), have been isolated by a variety of different selection methods. The areA mutants show a range of pleiotropic growth responses to a number of compounds as sole nitrogen sources, but are normal in utilization of carbon sources. The levels of two amidase enzymes as well as urease have been investigated in the mutants and have been shown to be affected by this gene. Most of the areA mutants have much lower amidase-specific activities when grown in ammonium-containing medium, compared with mycelium incubated in medium lacking a nitrogen source. Some of the areA mutants do not show derepression of urease upon relief of ammonium repression. The dominance relationships of areA alleles have been investigated in heterozygous diploids, and these studies lend support to the proposal that areA codes for a positively acting regulatory product. One of the new areA alleles is partially dominant to areA+ and areA102. This may be a result of negative complementation or indicate that areA has an additional negative regulatory function. Investigation of various amdR; areA double mutants has led to the conclusion that amdR and areA participate in independent regulatory circuits in the control of acetamide utilization. Studies on an amdRc; areA double mutant indicate that areA is involved in derepression of acetamidase upon relief of ammonium repression.
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PMID:Studies on the role of the areA gene in the regulation of nitrogen catabolism in Aspergillus nidulans. 5 52

Mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were isolated that were acetamide-negative in growth phenotype at 41 degrees C and constitutive for amidase synthesis at 28 degrees C. Two mutants were derived from the magno-constitutive amidase mutant PAC111 (C11), and a third from a mutant that had enhanced inducibility by formamide, PAC153 (F6). The three temperature-sensitive mutants produced amidases with the same thermal stabilities as the wild-type enzyme. Cultures growing exponentially at 28 degrees C, synthesizing amidase constitutively, ceased amidase synthesis almost immediately on transfer to 41 degrees C. Cultures growing at 41 degrees C were transferred to 28 degrees C and had a lag of about 0.5 of a generation before amidase synthesis became detectable. Pulse-heating for 10 min at 45 degrees C of a culture growing exponentially at 28 degrees C resulted in a lag of about 0.5 of a generation before amidase synthesis recommenced after returning to 28 degrees C. Acetamide-negative mutants that were unable to synthesize amidase at any growth temperature were isolated from an inducible strain producing the mutant B amidase PAC398 (IB10). Two mutants were examined that gave revertants producing B amidase but with novel regulatory phenotypes. It is suggested that amidase synthesis is regulated by positive control exerted by gene amiR.
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PMID:Positive regulation of amidase synthesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 9 16

Hydroxyurea inhibited growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain AI 3 on media containing either acetanilide (N-phenyl acetamide) or acetamide as sole carbon sources. Mutants resistant to hydroxyurea inhibition of growth on acetanilide (OUCH strains) and acetamide (AmOUCH strains) displayed altered growth properties on various amide media compared with the parent strain AI3. AI3 amidase, which catalyses the initial step in the metabolism of acetanilide and acetamide, was inhibited by hydroxyurea in a time-dependent reaction that was slowly reversible at pH 7.2. Compared with AI3 amidase, amidases from the OUCH mutants were much less sensitive to inhibition by hydroxyurea and showed altered substrate specificities and pH/activity profiles; amidases from the AmOUCH mutants were more sensitive to hydroxyurea inhibition but showed increased activity towards acetamide. Association of resistance to hydroxyurea inhibition with a mutation in the amidase structural gene of strain OUCH 4 was confirmed by transduction.
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PMID:Relationship between mutant amidases of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and hydroxyurea as an inhibitor. 10 40

The kinetic constants for hydrolysis and transfer (with hydroxylamine as the alternate acceptor) of the aliphatic amidase (acylamide amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.1.4) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa were determined for a variety of acetyl and propionyl derivatives. The results obtained were consistent with a ping-pong or substitution mechanism. Product inhibition, which was pH dependent, implicated an acyl-enzyme compound as a compulsory intermediate and indicated that ammonia combined additionally with the free enzyme in a dead-end manner. The uncompetitive activation of acetamide hydrolysis by hydroxylamine and the observation that the partitioning of products between acetic acid and acetohydroxamate was linearly dependent on the hydroxylamine concentration substantiated these conclusions and indicated that deacylation was at least partially rate limiting. With propionamide as the acyl donor apparently anomalous results, which included inequalities in certain kinetic constants and a hyperbolic dependence of the partition ratio on the hydroxylamine concentration, could be explained by postulating a compulsory isomerisation of the acyl-enzyme intermediate prior to the transfer reaction.
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PMID:Kinetic mechanism of the aliphatic amidase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 11 Mar 50

The time-dependent inhibition of amidase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain AI 3 by urea, hydroxyurea and cyanate displayed saturation kinetics fitting a model for the reaction sequence in which formation of a complex in a reversible step was followed by an irreversible step. Altered amidases from mutant strains AIU 1N and OUCH 4, selected for their resistance to inhibition of growth by urea and hydroxyurea respectively, had altered kinetic constants for inhibition indicating reduced binding capacity for the inhibitors. The substrate acetamide protected AI 3 amidase against inhibition by urea,.and altered Ki values for inhibition of the mutant amidases were paralleled by alterations in Km values for acetamide indicating that urea acted at the active site. Inhibition of AI 3 amidase involved the binding of one molecule of urea per molecule of enzyme. Urea inhibited amidase slowly regained activity at pH 7.2 through release of urea.
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PMID:Inhibition of the aliphatic amidase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa by urea and related compounds. 11 May 89

A thermophilic bacillus growing on acetamide as both carbon and nitrogen sources produces an inducible amidase. This amidase hydrolysed the following amides in decreasing order or activity, in comparison with acetamide (1.00): propionamide (0.97), fluoroacetamide (0.84), formamide (0.35) and glycinamide (0.12). Cyanoacetamide, dimethylacetamide, dimethylformamide and urea also induced the synthesis of the amidase, but were not substrates of the enzyme. Studies with protoplasts suggest that the amidase is located in the cytoplasm. Glucose strongly inhibited amidase synthesis; and limiting nitrogen did not release this inhibition. Urea strongly inhibited amidase activity in a competitive manner; but the inhibition caused by iodoacetamide and cyanoacetamide was non-competitive. Both thioacetamide and thiourea were effective inhibitors of enzyme induction. Bacteria grown on a succinate-minimal medium exhibited a lag in amidase synthesis, which could be eliminated by decreasing the concentration of succinate. Acetate- or pyruvate-grown cultures behaved similarly, while those grown on alanine or glutamate exhibited no lag in enzyme induction. In the mutant strain E21, repression of amidase synthesis by glucose was much less evident and no lag for induction was apparent with any of the other carbon sources mentioned.
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PMID:Regulatory properties of an inducible aliphatic amidase in a thermophilic bacillus. 93 86

A gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium capable of utilizing acrylonitrile as the sole source of nitrogen was isolated from industrial sewage and identified as Klebsiella pneumoniae. The isolate was capable of utilizing aliphatic nitriles containing 1 to 5 carbon atoms or benzonitrile as the sole source of nitrogen and either acetamide or propionamide as the sole source of both carbon and nitrogen. Gas chromatographic and mass spectral analyses of culture filtrates indicated that K. pneumoniae was capable of hydrolyzing 6.15 mmol of acrylonitrile to 5.15 mmol of acrylamide within 24 h. The acrylamide was hydrolyzed to 1.0 mmol of acrylic acid within 72 h. Another metabolite of acrylonitrile metabolism was ammonia, which reached a maximum concentration of 3.69 mM within 48 h. Nitrile hydratase and amidase, the two hydrolytic enzymes responsible for the sequential metabolism of nitrile compounds, were induced by acrylonitrile. The optimum temperature for nitrile hydratase activity was 55 degrees C and that for amidase was 40 degrees C; both enzymes had pH optima of 8.0.
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PMID:Metabolism of acrylonitrile by Klebsiella pneumoniae. 195 6

For investigation of an unknown open reading frame which is present upstream of the nitrile hydratase (NHase) gene from Rhodococcus sp. N-774, a longer DNA fragment covering the entire gene was cloned in Escherichia coli. Nucleotide sequencing and detailed subcloning experiments predicted a single open reading frame consisting of 521 amino acid residues of Mr 54,671. The amino acid sequence, especially its NH2-terminal portion, showed significant homology with those of indoleacetamide hydrolases from Pseudomonas savastanoi and Agrobacterium tumefaciens, and acetamidase from Aspergillus nidulans. The 521-amino acid coding region was therefore expressed by use of the E. coli lac promoter in E. coli, and was found to direct a considerable amidase activity. This amidase hydrolyzed propionamide efficiently, and also hydrolyzed, at a lower efficiency, acetamide, acrylamide and indoleacetamide. These data clearly show that the unknown open reading frame present upstream of the NHase coding region encodes an amidase. Because the TAG translational stop codon of the amidase is located only 75 base pairs apart from the ATG start codon of the alpha-subunit of NHase, these genes are probably translated in a polycistronic manner.
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PMID:Cloning and characterization of an amidase gene from Rhodococcus species N-774 and its expression in Escherichia coli. 200 97

Acrylamide, a neurotoxic monomer with extensive industrial applications was found to be degraded by the microorganisms present in a tropical garden soil. A bacterium capable of degrading acrylamide was isolated from this soil by enrichment. It was found to be aerobic, gram-negative, motile, short rod and identified as Pseudomonas sp. The bacterium degraded high concentrations of acrylamide (4 g/l) to acrylic acid and ammonia which were utilized as sole carbon and nitrogen source for growth. An amidase was involved in the hydrolysis of acrylamide, which could act on other short chain amides like formamide and acetamide but not on acrylamide analogues: methacrylamide and N,N-methylene bisacrylamide. The enzyme was sensitive to catabolite repression by succinate both in presence as well as absence of nitrogen source.
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PMID:Microbial degradation of acrylamide monomer. 240 64

Amidases (acylamide amidohydrolase EC 3.5.1.4) from mutant strains (i.e., B6, AI3, AIU1N, OUCH 4 and L10) of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were purified in one-step by ligand affinity chromatography using Epoxy-activated Sepharose 4B-acetamide. The yields of the purified enzymes were about 90% for all mutant strains with purification factors of about 10 and were apparently homogeneous when analysed by SDS-PAGE and native PAGE. The protein bands on native PAGE coincided with the stained band of enzyme activity for all amidase preparations. Affinity columns had a maximum binding capacity of 0.5 mg amidase protein/ml of sedimented gel and could be regenerated and reused several times without any loss of binding capacity and resolution. Affinity gels containing either semicarbazide or urea were also found useful for the isolation of amidase. The differences in substrate specificity of these amidases reported previously were also observed in the elution behaviour of these enzymes from the affinity columns.
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PMID:One-step affinity purification of amidase from mutant strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 251 78


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