trehazolin and arsenic-acid

trehazolin has been researched along with arsenic-acid* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for trehazolin and arsenic-acid

ArticleYear
A novel trehalase from Mycobacterium smegmatis - purification, properties, requirements.
    The FEBS journal, 2007, Volume: 274, Issue:7

    Trehalose is a nonreducing disaccharide of glucose (alpha,alpha-1,1-glucosyl-glucose) that is essential for growth and survival of mycobacteria. These organisms have three different biosynthetic pathways to produce trehalose, and mutants devoid of all three pathways require exogenous trehalose in the medium in order to grow. Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis also have a trehalase that may be important in controlling the levels of intracellular trehalose. In this study, we report on the purification and characterization of the trehalase from M. smegmatis, and its comparison to the trehalase from M. tuberculosis. Although these two enzymes have over 85% identity throughout their amino acid sequences, and both show an absolute requirement for inorganic phosphate for activity, the enzyme from M. smegmatis also requires Mg(2+) for activity, whereas the M. tuberculosis trehalase does not require Mg(2+). The requirement for phosphate is unusual among glycosyl hydrolases, but we could find no evidence for a phosphorolytic cleavage, or for any phosphorylated intermediates in the reaction. However, as inorganic phosphate appears to bind to, and also to greatly increase the heat stability of, the trehalase, the function of the phosphate may involve stabilizing the protein conformation and/or initiating protein aggregation. Sodium arsenate was able to substitute to some extent for the sodium phosphate requirement, whereas inorganic pyrophosphate and polyphosphates were inhibitory. The purified trehalase showed a single 71 kDa band on SDS gels, but active enzyme eluted in the void volume of a Sephracryl S-300 column, suggesting a molecular mass of about 1500 kDa or a multimer of 20 or more subunits. The trehalase is highly specific for alpha,alpha-trehalose and did not hydrolyze alpha,beta-trelalose or beta,beta-trehalose, trehalose dimycolate, or any other alpha-glucoside or beta-glucoside. Attempts to obtain a trehalase-negative mutant of M. smegmatis have been unsuccessful, although deletions of other trehalose metabolic enzymes have yielded viable mutants. This suggests that trehalase is an essential enzyme for these organisms. The enzyme has a pH optimum of 7.1, and is active in various buffers, as long as inorganic phosphate and Mg(2+) are present. Glucose was the only product produced by the trehalase in the presence of either phosphate or arsenate.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Arsenates; Catalysis; Cloning, Molecular; Diphosphates; Disaccharides; Enzyme Stability; Escherichia coli; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Inositol; Kinetics; Magnesium; Molecular Sequence Data; Mycobacterium smegmatis; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Phosphates; Polyphosphates; Recombinant Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Substrate Specificity; Trehalase; Trehalose

2007