Various concentrations of isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) were used to induce production of the enzyme penicillin G acylase by recombinant Escherichia coli harboring plasmid pQEA11. The plasmid pQEA11 carries a wild-type pga gene, which is under the control of the tac promoter and lacIq. At low IPTG concentrations (0.025-0.1 mM), enzyme activity increased with increasing IPTG concentrations. At higher IPTG concentrations (0.2 and 0.5 mM), enzyme activity declined progressively. Examination of induced recombinant E. coli cells by transmission electron microscopy showed the presence of only periplasmic inclusion bodies at low IPTG concentrations (up to 0.1 mM) and both periplasmic and cytoplasmic inclusion bodies at high IPTG concentrations (0.2 mM and 0.5 mM). Results from sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblots of whole-cell proteins, membrane proteins and inclusion body proteins in these cells indicated that cytoplasmic inclusion bodies constituted an accumulation of preproenzyme (i.e., precursor polypeptide containing a signal peptide) and that periplasmic inclusion bodies constituted an accumulation of proenzyme (i.e., precursor polypeptide lacking a signal peptide).
Of fourteen natural isolates of Trichoderma, no correlation was found between substrate weight loss and phenol oxidase (PO) activity in rice straw cultures. The highest PO producer from these laccase-positive strains was subjected to UV mutagenesis in order to select high and low PO activity mutants. There was no significant difference in substrate weight loss for mutant strains with six times higher and six times lower PO activity than the parent strain. Nor did the enzyme activity result in decreased growth inhibition by inhibitory phenolic compounds. PO enzyme from the parent Trichoderma and one of its high-PO-activity mutants was subsequently purified by ethanol precipitation from liquid cultures optimized by supplementation with copper sulphate and cycloheximide. Protein staining and activity staining of disc electrophoresis gels showed that only one PO enzyme of approximately 71000 Da was produced. The enzyme could be defined as a laccase (benzenediol: oxygen oxidoreductase E.C. 1.10.3.2) because it catalysed the oxidation of syringaldazine and p-phenylenediamine in the absence of hydrogen peroxide, and because it was inhibited by cetyltrimethylammonium bromide but not by cinnamic acid. No specific in-vivo function could be assigned to this enzyme.
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