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Disease
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:4.1.2.13 (
aldolase
)
3,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In Escherichia coli, L-fucose is dissimilated via an inducible pathway mediated by L-fucose permease, L-fucose isomerase, L-fucose kinase, and L-fuculose 1-phosphate aldolase. The last enzyme cleaves the six-carbon substrate into dihydroxyacetone phosphate and L-lactaldehyde. Aerobically, lactaldehyde is oxidized to L-lactate by a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-linked dehydrogenase. Anaerobically, lactaldehyde is reduced by an NADH-COUPLED REDUCTASE TO L-1,2-propanediol, which is lost into the medium irretrievably, even when oxygen is subsequently introduced.
Propanediol
excretion is thus the end result of a dismutation that permits further anaerobic metabolism of dihydroxy-acetone phosphate. A mutant selected for its ability to grow aerobically on propanediol as a carbon and energy source was reported to produce lactaldehyde reductase constitutively and at high levels, even aerobically. Under the new situation, this enzyme serves as a propanediol dehydrogenase. It was also reported that the mutant had lost the ability to grow on fucose. In the present study, it is shown that in wild-type cells the full synthesis of lactaldehyde dehydrogenase requires the presence of both molecular oxygen and a small molecule effector, and the full synthesis of lactaldehyde reductase requires anaerobiosis and the presence of a small molecule effector. The failure of mutant cells to grow on fucose reflects the impairment of a regulatory element in the fucose system that prevents the induction of the permease, the isomerase, and the kinase. The
aldolase
, on the other hand, is constitutively synthesized. Three independent fucose-utilizing revertants of the mutant all produce the permease, the isomerase, the kinase, as well as the
aldolase
, constitutively. These strains grow less well than the parental mutant on propanediol.
...
PMID:Disruption of the fucose pathway as a consequence of genetic adaptation to propanediol as a carbon source in Escherichia coli. 18 64
Wild-type strains of Escherichia coli are unable to use L-1,2-propanediol as a carbon and energy source. Strain 3, a mutant selected for the ability to grow on this compound at progressively more rapid rates, synthesizes constitutively a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-linked propanediol oxidoreductase. This enzyme is normally synthesized during anaerobic growth on L-fucose when it functions as a lactaldehyde reductase.
Propanediol
, the end product of this fermentation process, escapes irretrievably into the medium. The propanediol-utilizing mutant can no longer grow on fucose in either the presence or absence of molecular oxygen. In the present study nine independent lines of propanediol-positive mutants were characterized. One mutant, strain 418, attained a propanediol growth rate close to that of strain 3 without loss of the ability to grow on fucose. In all cases examined, however, prolonged selection on propanediol did result in the emergence of fucose-negative mutants. All of these mutants had enzyme patterns similar to that of strain 3; namely, fucose permease, fucose isomerase, and fuculose kinase were noninducible, whereas fuculose 1-phosphate
aldolase
was constitutive. In strain 418 and in the fucose-positive predecessors of the other mutants, the first four enzymes in the pathway remained inducible, as in the wild-type strain. Improvements in the growth rate on propanediol appeared to reflect principally the increased activity level of the oxidoreductase during the early stages of evolution. According to transductional analysis, the mutations affecting the ability to grow on propanediol and those that affect the expression of the first enzymes in the fucose pathway were very closely linked. The loss of the ability to grow on fucose is thought to be a mechanistic consequence incidental to the remodeling of the regulatory system in favor of the utilization of the novel carbon source.
...
PMID:Regulatory changes in the fucose system associated with the evolution of a catabolic pathway for propanediol in Escherichia coli. 40 Jul 96
L-
1,2-Propanediol
is an irretrievable end product of L-fucose fermentation by Escherichia coli. Selection for increased aerobic growth rate on propanediol results in the escalation of basal synthesis of the NAD+-linked oxidoreductase encoded by fucO, a member of the fuc regulon for the utilization of L-fucose. In general, when fucO becomes constitutively expressed, two other simultaneous changes occur: the fucA gene encoding fuculose-1-phosphate
aldolase
becomes constitutively expressed and the fucPIK operon encoding fucose permease, fucose isomerase, and fuculose kinase becomes noninducible. In the present study, we show that fucO and fucA form an operon which is divergently transcribed from the adjacent fucPIK operon. In propanediol-positive and fucose-negative mutants the cis-controlling region shared by the operons fucAO and fucPIK is lengthened by 1.2 kilobases. DNA hybridization identified the insertion element to be IS5. This element, always oriented in the same direction with the left end (the BglII end) proximal to fucA, apparently causes constitutive expression of fucAO and noninducibility of fucPIK. The DNA of the fucAO operon and a part of the adjacent fucP was sequenced.
...
PMID:Constitutive activation of the fucAO operon and silencing of the divergently transcribed fucPIK operon by an IS5 element in Escherichia coli mutants selected for growth on L-1,2-propanediol. 255 71
Alkanediol monoglycolate bisphosphoric esters (P-O-CH2-CO-O-(CH2)n-O-P), which are analogues of the
aldolase
(
D-fructose-1,6-bisphosphate D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-lyase
,
EC 4.1.2.13
) substrate fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, were synthesized and used for probing its active site. The Ki value was lowest when the maximum distance between the phosphorus atoms of the bisphosphate was brought close to that of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. The binding constants estimated from difference spectra correlate well with Ki values for the substrate analogues.
Propanediol
monoglycolate bisphosphoric ester protected
aldolase
from inactivation by 1,2-cyclohexanedione, which preferentially attacks arginine-55. However, propanol phosphate had little protective effect. The synthesized phosphate compounds protected the enzyme against inactivation by trypsin, and also against spontaneous denaturation. These results suggest that the synthesized phosphate compounds bind to
aldolase
at the active site, which tends to keep the distance constant between the two phosphate-binding sites for the open-chain form of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, and stabilize the natural conformation of the enzyme. Both arginine-55 and lysine-146 are shown to participate in the phosphate-binding site for the C-1-phosphate of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate.
...
PMID:An exploration of the binding site of aldolase using alkanediol monoglycolate bisphosphoric esters. 682 94