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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Acetogens ; Aldehyde oxidoreductase ; Immunological distance ; Molybdate ; Tungstate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Besides Clostridium thermoaceticum and C. formicoaceticum other resting acetogenic clostridia such as C. aceticum and C. thermoautotrophicum and to a lesser extent non-clostridial acetogens such as Butyribacterium methylotrophicum and Eubacterium limosum were able to reduce propionate to propanol at the expense of carbon monoxide or formate. Methylviologen usually increased the reduction rate. Ten μM molybdate in the growth medium decreased this capability for C. thermoaceticum but increased it or had no effect for the other organisms. Ten μM tungstate in the growth medium increased the aldehyde oxidoreductase activity in all organisms. Crude extracts of C. thermoaceticum cells grown in the presence of 10 μM or 1 mM molybdate showed by ELISA the same or even a 4 fold concentration of aldehyde oxidoreductase in the latter case. However, the enzymic activity was very low in both cases. Omission of dithionite in the growth medium diminished the antigen by a factor of about 8. The immunological distance between the enzyme from C. thermoaceticum and C. thermoautotrophicum was rather low but very large to C. formicoaceticum and undeterminably large to the other organisms.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Aldehyde oxidoreductase ; Clostridium formicoaceticum ; Molybdenum containing ; Substrate specificity ; Tungsten-containing
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Clostridium formicoaceticum grown in the presence of 1 mM molybdate and about 1.5×10-5 mM tungsten (present in the 5 g yeast extract/l of the growth medium) forms two reversible aldehyde oxidoreductases in an activity ratio of about 45:55. The fraction of 45% does not bind to the octyl-Sepharose column, whereas the 55% aldehyde oxidoreductase binds to this column. From cells grown on a synthetic medium without the addition of tungstate only about 2% of the aldehyde oxidoreductase of the crude extract binds to octyl-Sepharose. The enzyme not binding to octyl-Sepharose has been purified as judged by electrophoresis. It is pure after about 50 fold enrichment. According to SDS gel electrophoresis the enzyme consists of identical 100 kD subunits. Based on gel chromatography it seems to be a trimer. Per subunit 0.6 molybdenum, 7 iron, 6.6 acid labile sulphur, about 0.1 pterin-6-carboxylic and 〈0.05 tungsten have been found. The first 13 amino acids from the amino end show no similarity with the W-containing aldehyde oxidoreductase from the same bacterium. With reduced tetramethylviologen (E0=−550 mV) the new molybdenum containing enzyme can reduce various aliphatic and aromatic acids to aldehydes. The pH optimum is at 6.0. For the dehydrogenation of butyraldehyde a rather broad pH region from pH 6 to 10 shows almost no variation of rate. From 15 different aldehydes acetaldehyde exhibits the highest rate. The Km value for butanal is 0.002 and for propionate 7.0 mM. Compared with the tungsten enzyme the molybdenum enzyme is only moderately oxygen-sensitive.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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