3 resultados para Saccharomyces.

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Succinate is a naturally occurring metabolite in organism’s cell and is industrially important chemical with various applications in food and pharmaceutical industry. It is also widely used to produce bio-degradable plastics, surfactants, detergents etc. In last decades, emphasis has been given to bio-based chemical production using industrial biotechnology route rather than fossil-based production considering sustainability and environment friendly economy. In this thesis I am presenting a computational model for silico metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for large scale production of succinate. For metabolic modelling, I have used OptKnock and OptGene optimization algorithms to identify the reactions to delete from the genome-scale metabolic model of S. cerevisiae to overproduce succinate by coupling with organism’s growth. Both OptKnock and OptGene proposed numerous straightforward and non-intuitive deletion strategies when number of constraints including growth constraint to the model were applied. The most interesting strategy identified by both algorithms was deletion combination of pyruvate decarboxylase and Ubiquinol:ferricytochrome c reductase(respiratory enzyme) reactions thereby also suggesting anaerobic fermentation of the organism in glucose medium. Such strategy was never reported earlier for growth-coupled succinate production in S.cerevisiae.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Työssä tutkittiin sakkaroosin hydrolyysiä anioninvaihtohartseihin immobilisoidun entsyymin avulla tavoitteena löytää sellainen kantaja-entsyymi -yhdistelmä, jolla konversio halutuiksi lopputuotteiksi olisi mahdollisimman korkea. Työhön valittiin aikaisemmissa laboratoriokokeissa parhaita tuloksia saavuttaneet kantaja-entsyymi -parit. Entsyymeinä oli kaksi nestemäistä Saccharomyces cerevisiae -hiivasta eristettyjä entsyymivalmistetta. Kokeissa käytetyt kantajamateriaalit olivat erilaisia heikkoja anioninvaihtohartseja. Entsyymit immobilisoitiin kantajaan sekoitusreaktorissa ja niiden aktiivisuudet määritettiin sitomisen jälkeen. Hydrolyysikokeet tehtiin jatkuvatoimisessa kiintopetireaktorissa ja lisäksi panos-kokeina tutkittiin ominaisuuksiltaan erilaisten kantajien eroja hydrolyysissä. Reaktio-olosuhteet pidettiin kaikissa kokeissa samoina. Sakkaroosiliuoksen pitoisuus oli 50 p-%, reaktiolämpötila 50 oC ja pH 5. Kiintopetikolonnissa tutkittiin myös sakkaroosi-liuoksen viipymäajan vaikutusta sivutuotteiden syntyyn. Näytteet analysoitiin neste-kromatografilla. Kiintopetikolonnissa lyhimmän viipymäajan (15 min) kokeissa ainoastaan hitaimmilla kantaja-entsyymi -pareilla muodostui sivutuotteita, jotka hydrolyysireaktion edetessä kuitenkin hävisivät. Kun viipymäaikaa kasvatettiin sivutuotteiden synty väheni ja lopulta niitä ei havaittu syntyvän lainkaan. Hydrolyysin edetessä viipymäajan ollessa tarpeeksi pitkä pienet sivutuotekomponentit hävisivät sakkaroosin hajotessa kokonaan glukoosiksi ja fruktoosiksi. Verrattaessa partikkelikoon ja hartsimatriisin vaikutusta samaan entsyymiin sidottuna havaittiin, että niillä kummallakin on vaikutusta sekä sakkaroosin hydrolyysi-nopeuteen että sivutuotteiden muodostumiseen.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) are essential enzymes for every living cell. PPases provide the necessary thermodynamic pull for many biosynthetic reactions by hydrolyzing pyrophosphate. There are two types of PPases: integral membrane-bound and soluble enzymes. The latter type is divided into two non-homologous protein families, I and II. Family I PPases are present in all kingdoms of life, whereas family II PPases are only found in prokaryotes, including archae. Family I PPases, particularly that from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, are among the most extensively characterized phosphoryl transfer enzymes. In the present study, we have solved the structures of wild-type and seven active site variants of S. cerevisiae PPase bound to its natural metal cofactor, magnesium ion. These structures have facilitated derivation of the complete enzyme reaction scheme for PPase, fulfilling structures of all the reaction intermediates. The main focus in this study was on a novel subfamily of family II PPases (CBSPPase) containing a large insert formed by two CBS domains and a DRTGG domain within the catalytic domain. The CBS domain (named after cystathionine beta-synthase in which it was initially identified) usually occurs as tandem pairs with two or four copies in many proteins in all kingdoms of life. The structure formed by a pair of CBS domains is also known as a Bateman domain. CBS domains function as regulatory units, with adenylate ligands as the main effectors. The DRTGG domain (designated based on its most conserved residues) occurs less frequently and only in prokaryotes. Often, the domain co-exists with CBS domains, but its function remains unknown. The key objective of the current study was to explore the structural rearrangements in the CBS domains induced by regulatory adenylate ligands and their functional consequences. Two CBS-PPases were investigated, one from Clostridium perfringens (cpCBS-PPase) containing both CBS and DRTGG domains in its regulatory region and the other from Moorella thermoacetica (mt CBS-PPase) lacking the DRTGG domain. We additionally constructed a separate regulatory region of cpCBS-PPase (cpCBS). Both full-length enzymes and cpCBS formed homodimers. Two structures of the regulatory region of cpCBS-PPase complexed with the inhibitor, AMP, and activator, diadenosine tetraphosphate, were solved. The structures were significantly different, providing information on the structural pathway from bound adenylates to the interface between the regulatory and catalytic parts. To our knowledge, these are the first reported structures of a regulated CBS enzyme, which reveal large conformational changes upon regulator binding. The activator-bound structure was more open, consistent with the different thermostabilities of the activator- and inhibitor-bound forms of cpCBS-PPase. The results of the functional studies on wild-type and variant CBS-PPases provide support for inferences made on the basis of structural analyses. Moreover, these findings indicate that CBS-PPase activity is highly sensitive to adenine nucleotide distribution between AMP, ADP and ATP, and hence to the energy level of the cell. CBS-PPase activity is markedly inhibited at low energy levels, allowing PPi energy to be used for cell survival instead of being converted into heat.