The products of bacterial β-glucosidases with favorable cold-adapted properties have industrial applications. A psychrophilic β-glucosidase gene named bglG from subtropical soil microorganism Exiguobacterium sp. GXG2 was isolated and characterized by function-based screening strategy. Results of multiple alignments showed that the derived protein BglG shared 45.7% identities with reviewed β-glucosidases in the UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot database. Functional characterization of the β-glucosidase BglG indicated that BglG was a 468 aa protein with a molecular weight of 53.2 kDa. The BglG showed the highest activity in pH 7.0 at 35 °C and exhibited consistently high levels of activity within low temperatures ranging from 5 to 35 °C. The BglG appeared to be a psychrophilic enzyme. The values of Km, Vmax, kcat, and kcat/Km of recombinant BglG toward ρNPG were 1.1 mM, 1.4 µg/mL/min, 12.7 s−1, and 11.5 mM/s, respectively. The specific enzyme activity of BglG was 12.14 U/mg. The metal ion of Ca2+ and Fe3+ could stimulate the activity of BglG, whereas Mn2+ inhibited the activity. The cold-adapted β-glucosidase BglG displayed remarkable biochemical properties, making it a potential candidate for future industrial applications.
A cyanide-free gold plating bath was prepared and the complexing capacity of mercaptosuccinic acid with Au(i) was studied through density functional theory.
Several dumbbell conjugates featuring M3N@I
h
-C80 (M = Sc, Y)
and C60 were prepared to systematically investigate interfullerene
electronic interactions and excited state dynamics. From electrochemical
investigations, we concluded that the redox potentials of our M3N@I
h
-C80 (M = Sc, Y) dumbbells depend largely on the interfullerene electronic
interactions. Assisted by DFT calculation, the unique role of metal
atoms was highlighted. Most importantly, ultrafast spectroscopy experiments
revealed symmetry-breaking charge separation in Sc3N@C80-dumbbell to yield an unprecedented (Sc3N@C80)•+-(Sc3N@C80)•– charge separated state. This is, to the best
of our knowledge, the first time that symmetry-breaking charge separation
following photoexcitation is corroborated in a fullerene system. As
such, our work shed light on the significance of interfullerene electronic
interactions and their uniqueness for modulating excited state properties.
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