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Query: KEGG:D02011 (
FAD
)
5,530
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Various flavins, FMN,
FAD
, and acriflavin, were immobilized to Sepharose using several different coupling methods. The only product stable enough to permit extended studies was acriflavin coupled to epoxy-substituted Sepharose. The nonenzymic oxidizing capacity towards NAD(P) H was investigated and a 25% specific activity, compared to that of free acriflavin, was observed. The reduced acriflavin was immediately auto-reoxidized in air and could thus be reused. It was shown that acriflavin-Sepharose preparations function as NAD(P)H oxidizing agents in a number of different dehydrogenase systems including lactate dehydrogenase (LDH),
alcohol dehydrogenase
(
ADH
), malate dehydrogenase (MDH), alanine dehydrogenase (alaDH), and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). The amount of expensive coenzyme necessary for high product formation of such systems was thereby markedly reduced.
...
PMID:Continuous regeneration of NAD(P)+ by flavins covalently bound to sepharose. 0 69
The synthesis and purification of the 8-azidoadenine analogs of NAD+ (azido-NAD+) and
FAD
(AZIDO-
FAD
) from 8-azidoadenosine 5'-phosphate and NMN+ or FMN, respectively, is described. The coenzyme analogs are characterized by absorption, nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism spectra. The two latter methods indicate a folded structure of azido-NAD+ and azido-
FAD
. Upon irradiation at 300 mn in aqueous solution, a change of the ultraviolet absorption spectra of the coenzyme analogs indicates photolysis of the azido group. The coenzyme properties of azido-NAD+ are demonstrated with lactate, glutamate and
alcohol dehydrogenase
yielding 14, 154 and 60%, respectively, of the V observed with NAD+. Concomitantly, the Km values of the coenzyme analogs are 1.7, 3.5 and 3-fold higher than those of NAD+. Azido-
FAD
is shown to be coenzyme of apo-glucose oxidase. The recovery of activity, however, is much slower in the presence of azido-
FAD
than with
FAD
. A final value of 66% of the activity with
FAD
is obtained. With apo-D-amino acid oxidase, azido-
FAD
is completely inactive, although it is specifically bound to the enzyme.
...
PMID:8-Azidoacenine analogs of NAD+ and FAD. Synthesis and coenzyme properties with NAD+-dependent and FAD-dependent enzymes. 0 76
Glycerol is catabolized in Aspergillus nidulans by glycerol kinase and a mitochondrial
FAD
-dependent sn-glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The levels of both enzymes are controlled by carbon catabolite repression and by specific induction. Biochemical and genetical analyses show that dihydroxyacetone and D-glyceraldehyde are converted into glycerol and then catabolized by the same pathway. D-Glyceraldehyde can be reduced by NADP(+)-dependent glycerol dehydrogenase or by
alcohol dehydrogenase
I, while dihydroxyacetone is only reduced by the first enzyme. Three new glycerol non-utilizing mutants have been found. These three mutations define three hitherto unknown loci, glcE, glcF and glcG. The mutation in glcG leads to a greatly decreased sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity.
...
PMID:Glycerol catabolism in Aspergillus nidulans. 203 81
In the three-dimensional structures of enzymes that bind NAD or
FAD
, there is an acidic residue that interacts with the 2'- and 3'-hydroxyl groups of the adenosine ribose of the coenzyme. The size and charge of the carboxylate might repel the binding of the 2'-phosphate group of NADP and explain the specificity for NAD. In the NAD-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases, Asp-223 (horse liver
alcohol dehydrogenase
sequence) appears to have this role. The homologous residue in yeast alcohol dehydrogenase I (residue 201 in the protein sequence) was substituted with Gly, and the D223G enzyme was expressed in yeast, purified, and characterized. The wild-type enzyme is specific for NAD. In contrast, the D223G enzyme bound and reduced NAD+ and NADP+ equally well, but, relative to wild-type enzyme, the dissociation constant for NAD+ was increased 17-fold, and the reactivity (V/K) on ethanol was decreased to 1%. Even though catalytic efficiency was reduced, yeast expressing the altered or wild-type enzyme grew at comparable rates, suggesting that equilibration of NAD and NADP pools is not lethal. Asp-223 participates in binding NAD and in excluding NADP, but it is not the only residue important for determining specificity for coenzyme.
...
PMID:An aspartate residue in yeast alcohol dehydrogenase I determines the specificity for coenzyme. 205 45
The enzymatic conversion of phytol to phytanic acid was investigated in rat liver postnuclear and other subcellular fractions using [1-3H]phytol as the substrate. The assay method involved incubation of the substrate with appropriate cofactors and the enzyme source, followed by subjecting the mixture to Folch partition and measuring the radioactivity in the upper layer. The phytol-phytanate conversion activity was present in mitochondrial and microsomal fractions. Cytosol had no activity. In mitochondrial fraction, investigation of cofactor requirements indicated that only NAD was required for activity. Other pyridine nucleotides supported the activity to a lesser extent when compared with NAD.
FAD
at 1 mM concentration did not support the activity. Bovine serum albumin (0.4 mg/ml) stimulated the activity. The reaction did not require molecular oxygen. From substrate kinetic studies, an apparent Km of 14.3 and 11.1 microM was calculated for phytol in mitochondrial and microsomal fractions, respectively. The amount of tritiated water produced from incubation increased linearly up to 7-8 min. The activity was linear with the amount of mitochondrial and microsomal protein up to 200 and 40 micrograms, respectively. Among the various rat tissue homogenates tested, liver had the highest activity. Spleen and kidney had 8-9% of the activity of liver. Brain possessed negligible activity. Both ethanol and pyrazole had no inhibitory effect on phytol-phytanate conversion. This observation and the absence of activity in cytosol suggests that
alcohol dehydrogenase
may not be involved in phytol-phytanate conversion.
...
PMID:Characterization of phytol-phytanate conversion activity in rat liver. 373 Apr 26
Denaturation of recombinant sarcosine oxidase or the natural enzyme isolated from Corynebacterium sp. P-1 with guanidine hydrochloride releases noncovalently bound
FAD
and a second UV-absorbing component (peak 2) which comigrates with NAD+ during reversed-phase HPLC. Both
FAD
and peak 2 are also found in extracts prepared by incubating sarcosine oxidase at 37 degrees C for 30 min, a procedure which causes partial (approximately 50%) release of the enzyme's noncovalently bound
FAD
. Peak 2 in the 37 degrees C extract is heat labile and decomposes upon boiling for 5 min at pH 8.0. A similar instability was observed with NAD+. Reaction of the 37 degrees C extract from sarcosine oxidase with phosphodiesterase yields nicotinamide mononucleotide, AMP, and FMN, as expected for a mixture containing NAD+ and
FAD
. Peak 2 was converted to NADH upon reaction of the 37 degrees C extract with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase in the presence of ethanol. Guanidine hydrochloride extracts, prepared from recombinant or natural enzyme, contain 1 mol of NAD+/mol of
FAD
. Since sarcosine oxidase contains 1 mol of noncovalently bound
FAD
, the results show that the enzyme also contains 1 mol of NAD+. The NAD+ is tightly bound and is not lost during enzyme purification. It is not susceptible toward hydrolysis by NADase, reduction by
alcohol dehydrogenase
, or nucleophilic attack by cyanide. Unlike the flavins in sarcosine oxidase, NAD+ is not reduced by sarcosine and is not in redox equilibrium with the flavins.
...
PMID:Discovery of a third coenzyme in sarcosine oxidase. 852 44
ADP-L-glycero-D-mannoheptose 6-epimerase is required for lipopolysaccharide inner core biosynthesis in several genera of Gram-negative bacteria. The enzyme contains both fingerprint sequences Gly-X-Gly-X-X-Gly and Gly-X-X-Gly-X-X-Gly near its N terminus, which is indicative of an ADP binding fold. Previous studies of this ADP-l-glycero-D-mannoheptose 6-epimerase (ADP-hep 6-epimerase) were consistent with an NAD(+) cofactor. However, the crystal structure of this ADP-hep 6-epimerase showed bound NADP (Deacon, A. M., Ni, Y. S., Coleman, W. G., Jr., and Ealick, S. E. (2000) Structure 5, 453-462). In present studies, apo-ADP-hep 6-epimerase was reconstituted with NAD(+), NADP(+), and
FAD
. In this report we provide data that shows NAD(+) and NADP(+) both restored enzymatic activity, but
FAD
could not. Furthermore, ADP-hep 6-epimerase exhibited a preference for binding of NADP(+) over NAD(+). The K(d) value for NADP(+) was 26 microm whereas that for NAD(+) was 45 microm. Ultraviolet circular dichroism spectra showed that apo-ADP-hep 6-epimerase reconstituted with NADP(+) had more secondary structure than apo-ADP-hep 6-epimerase reconstituted with NAD(+). Perchloric acid extracts of the purified enzyme were assayed with NAD(+)-specific
alcohol dehydrogenase
and NADP(+)-specific isocitric dehydrogenase. A sample of the same perchloric acid extract was analyzed in chromatographic studies, which demonstrated that ADP-hep 6-epimerase binds NADP(+) in vivo. A structural comparison of ADP-hep 6-epimerase with UDP-galactose 4-epimerase, which utilizes an NAD(+) cofactor, has identified the regions of ADP-hep 6-epimerase, which defines its specificity for NADP(+).
...
PMID:Evidence that NADP+ is the physiological cofactor of ADP-L-glycero-D-mannoheptose 6-epimerase. 1131 58
Biological oxidation of cyclic ketones normally results in formation of the corresponding dicarboxylic acids, which are further metabolized in the cell. Rhodococcus ruber strain SC1 was isolated from an industrial wastewater bioreactor that was able to utilize cyclododecanone as the sole carbon source. A reverse genetic approach was used to isolate a 10-kb gene cluster containing all genes required for oxidative conversion of cyclododecanone to 1,12-dodecanedioic acid (DDDA). The genes required for cyclododecanone oxidation were only marginally similar to the analogous genes for cyclohexanone oxidation. The biochemical function of the enzymes encoded on the 10-kb gene cluster, the flavin monooxygenase, the lactone hydrolase, the
alcohol dehydrogenase
, and the aldehyde dehydrogenase, was determined in Escherichia coli based on the ability to convert cyclododecanone. Recombinant E. coli strains grown in the presence of cyclododecanone accumulated lauryl lactone, 12-hydroxylauric acid, and/or DDDA depending on the genes cloned. The cyclododecanone monooxygenase is a type 1 Baeyer-Villiger flavin monooxygenase (
FAD
as cofactor) and exhibited substrate specificity towards long-chain cyclic ketones (C11 to C15), which is different from the specificity of cyclohexanone monooxygenase favoring short-chain cyclic compounds (C5 to C7).
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of a gene cluster for cyclododecanone oxidation in Rhodococcus ruber SC1. 1159 93
This paper summarizes studies on microbial degradation of polyethers. Polyethers are aerobically metabolized through common mechanisms (oxidation of terminal alcohol groups followed by terminal ether cleavage), well-characterized examples being found with polyethylene glycol (PEG). First the polymer is oxidized to carboxylated PEG by alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases and then the terminal ether bond is cleaved to yield the depolymerized PEG by one glycol unit. Most probably PEG is anaerobically metabolized through one step which is catalyzed by PEG acetaldehyde lyase, analogous to diol dehydratase. Whether aerobically or anaerobically, the free OH group is necessary for metabolization of PEG. PEG with a molecular weight of up to 20,000 was metabolized either in the periplasmic space (Pseudomonas stutzeri and sphingomonads) or in the cytoplasm (anaerobic bacteria), which suggests the transport of large PEG through the outer and inner membranes of Gram-negative bacterial cells. Membrane-bound PEG dehydrogenase (PEG-DH) with high activity towards PEG 6,000 and 20,000 was purified from PEG-utilizing sphingomonads. Sequencing of PEG-DH revealed that the enzyme belongs to the group of GMC flavoproteins,
FAD
being the cofactor for the enzyme. On the other hand, alcohol dehydrogenases purified from other bacteria that cannot grow on PEG oxidized PEG. Cytoplasmic NAD-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases with high specificity towards ether-alcohol compound, either crude or purified, showed appreciable activity towards PEG 400 or 600. Liver
alcohol dehydrogenase
(equine) also oxidized PEG homologs, which might cause fatal toxic syndrome in vivo by carboxylating PEG together with aldehyde dehydrogenase when PEG was absorbed. An ether bond-cleaving enzyme was detected in PEG-utilizing bacteria and purified as diglycolic acid (DGA) dehydrogenase from a PEG-utilizing consortium. The enzyme oxidized glycolic acid, glyoxylic acid, as well as PEG-carboxylic acid and DGA. Similarly, dehydrogenation on polypropylene glycol (PPG) and polytetramethylene glycol (PTMG) was suggested with cell-free extracts of PPG and PTMG-utilizing bacteria, respectively. PPG commercially available is atactic and includes many structural (primary and secondary alcohol groups) and optical (derived from pendant methyl groups on the carbon backbone) isomers. Whether PPG dehydrogenase (PPG-DH) has wide stereo- and enantioselective substrate specificity towards PPG isomers or not must await further purification. Preliminary research on PPG-DH revealed that the enzyme was inducibly formed by PPG in the periplasmic, membrane and cytoplasm fractions of a PPG-utilizing bacterium Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. This finding indicated the intracellular metabolism of PPG is the same as that of PEG. Besides metabolization of polyethers, a biological Fenton mechanism was proposed for degradation of PEG, which was caused by extracellular oxidants produced by a brown-rot fungus in the presence of a reductant and Fe3+, although the metabolism of fragmented PEG has not yet been well elucidated.
...
PMID:Microbial degradation of polyethers. 1183 73
Several quinoproteins have been newly indicated in acetic acid bacteria, all of which can be applied to fermentative or enzymatic production of useful materials by means of oxidative fermentation. (1) D-Arabitol dehydrogenase from Gluconobacter suboxydans IFO 3257 was purified from the bacterial membrane and found to be a versatile enzyme for oxidation of various substrates to the corresponding oxidation products. It is worthy of notice that the enzyme catalyzes D-gluconate oxidation to 5-keto-D-gluconate, whereas 2-keto-D-gluconate is produced by a flavoprotein D-gluconate dehydrogenase. (2) Membrane-bound cyclic
alcohol dehydrogenase
was solubilized and purified for the first time from Gluconobacter frateurii CHM 9. When compared with the cytosolic NAD-dependent cyclic
alcohol dehydrogenase
crystallized from the same strain, the reaction rate in cyclic alcohol oxidation by the membrane enzyme was 100 times stronger than the cytosolic NAD-dependent enzyme. The NAD-dependent enzyme makes no contribution to cyclic alcohol oxidation but contributes to the reduction of cyclic ketones to cyclic alcohols. (3) Meso-erythritol dehydrogenase has been purified from the membrane fraction of G. frateurii CHM 43. The typical properties of quinoproteins were indicated in many respects with the enzyme. It was found that the enzyme, growing cells and also the resting cells of the organism are very effective in producing L-erythrulose. Dihydroxyacetone can be replaced by L-erythrulose for cosmetics for those who are sensitive to dihydroxyacetone. (4) Two different membrane-bound D-sorbitol dehydrogenases were indicated in acetic acid bacteria. One enzyme contributing to L-sorbose production has been identified to be a quinoprotein, while another
FAD
-containing D-sorbitol dehydrogenase catalyzes D-sorbitol oxidation to D-fructose. D-Fructose production by the oxidative fermentation would be possible by the latter enzyme and it is superior to the well-established D-glucose isomerase, because the oxidative fermentation catalyzes irreversible one-way oxidation of D-sorbitol to D-fructose without any reaction equilibrium, unlike D-glucose isomerase. (5) Quinate dehydrogenase was found in several Gluconobacter strains and other aerobic bacteria like Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter strains. It has become possible to produce dehydroquinate, dehydroshikimate, and shikimate by oxidative fermentation. Quinate dehydrogenase was readily solubilized from the membrane fraction by alkylglucoside in the presence of 0.1 M KCl. A simple purification by hydrophobic chromatography gave a highly purified quinate dehydrogenase that was monodispersed and showed sufficient purity. When quinate dehydrogenase purification was done with Acinetobacter calcoaceticus AC3, which is unable to synthesize PQQ, purified inactive apo-quinate dehydrogenase appeared to be a dimer and it was converted to the monomeric active holo-quinate dehydrogenase by the addition of PQQ.
...
PMID:New quinoproteins in oxidative fermentation. 1268 1
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