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)

We report, for the first time, the presence in Helicobacter pylori of an aliphatic amidase that, like urease, contributes to ammonia production. Aliphatic amidases are cytoplasmic acylamide amidohydrolases (EC 3.5.1.4) hydrolysing short-chain aliphatic amides to produce ammonia and the corresponding organic acid. The finding of an aliphatic amidase in H. pylori was unexpected as this enzyme has only previously been described in bacteria of environmental (soil or water) origin. The H. pylori amidase gene amiE (1017 bp) was sequenced, and the deduced amino acid sequence of AmiE (37746Da) is very similar (75% identity) to the other two sequenced aliphatic amidases, one from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and one from Rhodococcus sp. R312. Amidase activity was measured as the release of ammonia by sonicated crude extracts from H. pylori strains and from recombinant Escherichia coli strains overproducing the H. pylori amidase. The substrate specificity was analysed with crude extracts from H. pylori cells grown in vitro; the best substrates were propionamide, acrylamide and acetamide. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of an internal amiE sequence was obtained with each of 45 different H. pylori clinical isolates, suggesting that amidase is common to all H. pylori strains. A H. pylori mutant (N6-836) carrying an interrupted amiE gene was constructed by allelic exchange. No amidase activity could be detected in N6-836. In a N6-urease negative mutant, amidase activity was two- to threefold higher than in the parental strain N6. Crude extracts of strain N6 slowly hydrolysed formamide. This activity was affected in neither the amidase negative strain (N6-836) nor a double mutant strain deficient in both amidase and urease activities, suggesting the presence of an independent discrete formamidase in H. pylori. The existence of an aliphatic amidase, a correlation between the urease and amidase activities and the possible presence of a formamidase indicates that H. pylori has a large range of possibilities for intracellular ammonia production.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of an aliphatic amidase in Helicobacter pylori. 936 23

Thiocyanate hydrolase is a newly found enzyme from Thiobacillus thioparus THI 115 that converts thiocyanate to carbonyl sulfide and ammonia (Y. Katayama, Y. Narahara, Y. Inoue, F. Amano, T. Kanagawa, and H. Kuraishi, J. Biol. Chem. 267:9170-9175, 1992). We have cloned and sequenced the scn genes that encode the three subunits of the enzyme. The scnB, scnA, and scnC genes, arrayed in this order, contained open reading frames encoding sequences of 157, 126, and 243 amino acid residues, respectively, for the beta, alpha, and gamma subunits, respectively. Each open reading frame was preceded by a typical Shine-Dalgarno sequence. The deduced amino-terminal peptide sequences for the three subunits were in fair agreement with the chemically determined sequences. The protein molecular mass calculated for each subunit was compatible with that determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. From a computer analysis, thiocyanate hydrolase showed significant homologies to bacterial nitrile hydratases known to convert nitrile to the corresponding amide, which is further hydrolyzed by amidase to form acid and ammonia. The two enzymes were homologous over regions corresponding to almost the entire coding regions of the genes: the beta and alpha subunits of thiocyanate hydrolase were homologous to the amino- and carboxyl-terminal halves of the beta subunit of nitrile hydratase, and the gamma subunit of thiocyanate hydrolase was homologous to the alpha subunit of nitrile hydratase. Comparisons of the catalytic properties of the two homologous enzymes support the model for the reaction steps of thiocyanate hydrolase that was previously presented on the basis of biochemical analyses.
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PMID:Cloning of genes coding for the three subunits of thiocyanate hydrolase of Thiobacillus thioparus THI 115 and their evolutionary relationships to nitrile hydratase. 957 40

The plant hormone ethylene is generated from a unique precursor, 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC). In previous studies, ACC deaminase, which degrades ACC to alpha-ketobutyrate and ammonia, was found in four strains of Pseudomonas, characterized, and sequenced. To verify the wider distribution of ACC deaminase in microorganisms, we purified and sequenced ACC deaminase from the yeast Hansenula saturnus. The purified enzyme was active toward ACC, D-serine and dl-coronamic acid, indicating the same stereospecificity as the Pseudomonas enzyme, but unlike the bacterial enzyme it was not active toward beta-chloro-D-alanine and O-acetyl-D-serine. Analyses of peptides from proteolytic digests of the purified and modified ACC deaminase covered more than 90% of its amino acid sequence and showed a blocked N-terminal residue as N-acetylserine. A cDNA encoding the ACC deaminase was isolated from H. saturnus cells incubated in alpha-aminoisobutyrate medium, and sequenced. The yeast enzyme has 441 amino acid residues, of which 60 to 63% are identical to those of reported Pseudomonas enzymes. The open reading frame encoding ACC deaminase was subcloned into pET-11d and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) as an active enzyme.
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PMID:Properties, sequence, and synthesis in Escherichia coli of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase from Hansenula saturnus. 960

Agrobacterium sp. strain KNK712, which produced N-carbamyl-D-amino acid amidohydrolase (DCase) was isolated from soil. The bacterium had D-specific hydantoinase activity also. Both enzymes are suitable for use in the production of D-amino acids. The DCase gene from Agrobacterium sp. strain KNK712 was cloned into Escherichia coli. The cloned DNA fragment contained one open reading frame, predicted to encode a peptide of 304 amino acids, with a calculated molecular weight of 34,285. The DCase gene was overexpressed under the control of the lac promoter, and DCase accounted for 50% of the soluble protein in the cells. The enzyme was purified and some properties were investigated. Both the optimum pH and the pH that gave greatest stability were about pH 7.0. The optimum temperature was 65 degrees C, and the enzyme was stable at 55 degrees C. The enzyme had strict specificity toward N-carbamyl-D-amino acids, and was inhibited by thiol reagents, Cu2+, Hg2+, Ag+, and ammonia.
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PMID:Isolation of Agrobacterium sp. strain KNK712 that produces N-carbamyl-D-amino acid amidohydrolase, cloning of the gene for this enzyme, and properties of the enzyme. 964 17

Membrane enzyme reactors constitute an attempt at integrating catalytic conversion, product separation and/or concentration and catalyst recovery into a single operation. Whereas conventional membrane reactors confine an enzyme, in a free form, to one side of a membrane by size exclusion, electrostatic repulsion, or physical or chemical immobilization onto an intermediate support (gel, liposome), the membrane reactor here described is shown to operate under an entirely new principle: enzyme confinement into an isoelectric trap located in a multicompartment electrolyzer operating in an electric field. Two isoelectric membranes, having pI values encompassing both the enzyme pI and the pH of its optimum of activity, act by continuously titrating the enzyme trapped inside, thus preventing it from escaping the reaction chamber. Charged products generated by the enzyme catalysis are continuously electrophoretically transported away from the reaction chamber and collected into other chambers stacked either towards the cathodic or anodic sides. In a urease reactor, ammonia is continuously harvested towards the cathode, thus allowing >95% substrate consumption with maintenance of enzyme integrity over much longer time periods than in a batch reactor. In a trypsin reactor, casein is digested and biologically active peptides are continuously harvested in a pure form into appropriate isoelectric traps. In a third example, pure D-phenylglycine is produced from a racemate mixture, via an acylation reaction onto a cosubstrate (the ester methyl-4-hydroxyphenyl acetate), brought about by the enzyme penicillin G acylase.
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PMID:An isoelectrically trapped enzyme reactor operating in an electric field. 966 67

Abnormal elevations in ammonia have been implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. However, the biochemical mechanism(s) leading to increased ammonia in Alzheimer's disease have not yet been identified. A potential source of increased ammonia production is adenosine monophosphate (AMP) deaminase, an important enzyme in the regulation of the purine nucleotide cycle and adenylate energy charge. AMP deaminase activity is expressed in human brain and converts AMP to inosine monophosphate with the release of ammonia. We have investigated AMP deaminase activity in postmortem brain tissue from Alzheimer's disease subjects and age-matched controls. Compared to control brain, Alzheimer's disease brain AMP deaminase activity is 1.6- to 2.4-fold greater in the regions examined--the cerebellum, occipital cortex, and temporal cortex. Similar increases in AMP deaminase protein and mRNA levels are observed in Alzheimer's disease brain. These results suggest that increased AMP deaminase activity may augment ammonia levels in the brain in Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Elevated adenosine monophosphate deaminase activity in Alzheimer's disease brain. 988 40

The amidase from Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1, which hydrolyses amide to acid and ammonia, was found to catalyze the synthesis of hydrazide using hydrazine as a substrate. This is the first report on the hydrazide synthesis through enzymatic reactions. The enzyme also acted on benzoic acid in the presence of hydrazine, yielding benzoic hydrazide. Together with the finding that benzoic hydrazide was converted into benzoic acid (when it was used as a substrate in the absence of hydrazine), these unique characteristics suggest that the reaction route for the formation of the acid from the hydrazide and that of the hydrazide from the acid are reversible to each other via the acyl-enzyme. Not only aromatic hydrazides but also aliphatic hydrazides were synthesized from the corresponding amides and hydrazine.
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PMID:Hydrazide synthesis: novel substrate specificity of amidase. 1007 99

Adenosine monophosphate deaminase (AMPD; EC 3.5.4.6) catalyses the hydrolysis of adenosine monophosphate (AMP) to commensurate amounts of inosine monophosphate (IMP) and ammonia. The production of AMP deaminase in Candida albicans was measured in Lee's medium grown cultures. The highest AMPD activity was observed at 24 h of growth. The enzyme had an optimum pH and temperature at 6-7 and 28 degrees C, respectively. This enzyme was inhibited under iron-limited growth conditions as well as by protease inhibitors. The AMPD of C. albicans showed a moderate increase in activity when cultures were grown in the presence of the divalent cations Mg2+, Ca2+, and Zn2+. Moreover, ADP, ATP, adenine, adenosine, deoxyribose and hypoxanthine increased the enzyme activity. Cultures grown in trypticase soy broth exhibited maximum AMPD activity compared with those grown in Sabouraud dextrose broth or Lee's medium.
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PMID:Properties of adenosine monophosphate deaminase of Candida albicans. 1039 42

Pesticides based on the s-triazine ring structure are widely used in cultivation of food crops. Cleavage of the s-triazine ring is an important step in the mineralization of s-triazine compounds and hence in their complete removal from the environment. Cyanuric acid amidohydrolase cleaves cyanuric acid (2,4,6-trihydroxy-s-triazine), which yields carbon dioxide and biuret; the biuret is subject to further metabolism, which yields CO(2) and ammonia. The trzD gene encoding cyanuric acid amidohydrolase was cloned into pMMB277 from Pseudomonas sp. strain NRRLB-12227, a strain that is capable of utilizing s-triazines as nitrogen sources. Hydrolysis of cyanuric acid was detected in crude extracts of Escherichia coli containing the cloned gene by monitoring the disappearance of cyanuric acid and the appearance of biuret by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). DEAE and hydrophobic interaction HPLC were used to purify cyanuric acid amidohydrolase to homogeneity, and a spectrophotometric assay for the purified enzyme was developed. The purified enzyme had an apparent K(m) of 0.05 mM for cyanuric acid at pH 8.0. The enzyme did not cleave any other s-triazine or hydroxypyrimidine compound, although barbituric acid (2,4, 6-trihydroxypyrimidine) was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor. Neither the nucleotide sequence of trzD nor the amino acid sequence of the gene product exhibited a significant level of similarity to any known gene or protein.
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PMID:Gene sequence and properties of an s-triazine ring-cleavage enzyme from Pseudomonas sp. strain NRRLB-12227. 1042 42

L-Vinylglycine (L-VG) has been shown to be a mechanism-based inhibitor of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) synthase [Satoh, S., and Yang, S. F. (1989) Plant Physiol. 91, 1036-1039] as well as of other pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzymes. This report demonstrates that L-VG is primarily an alternative substrate for the enzyme. The L-VG deaminase activity of ACC synthase yields the products alpha-ketobutyrate and ammonia with a k(cat) value of 1.8 s(-1) and a K(m) value of 1.4 mM. The k(cat)/K(m) of 1300 M(-1) s(-1) is 0.17% that of the diffusion-controlled reaction with the preferred substrate, S-adenosyl-L-methionine. The enzyme-L-VG complex partitions to products 500 times for every inactivation event. The catalytic mechanism proceeds through a spectrophotometrically detected quinonoid with lambda(max) of 530 nm, which must rearrange to a 2-aminocrotonate aldimine to yield final products. Alternative mechanisms for the inactivation reaction are presented, and the observed kinetics for the full reaction course are satisfactorily modeled by kinetic simulation. The inactive enzyme is an aldimine with lambda(max) of 432 nm. It is resistant to NaBH(3)CN but is reduced by NaBH(4). ACC synthase is now expressed in Pichia pastoris with an improved yield of 10 mg/L.
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PMID:L-Vinylglycine is an alternative substrate as well as a mechanism-based inhibitor of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase. 1070 93


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