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The effect of certain cultural factors on production of dextransucrase by Leuconostoc mesenteroides.

TLDR
Observation on factors affecting production of dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides, strain NRRL B-512 and the possibility that more than one enzyme may be involved in the synthesis ofdextran is recognized.
Abstract
Present knowledge on the characteristics of dextransucrase and its mode of action is based primarily on the important investigations of Hehre (1941, 1946, 1951) and Hehre and Sugg (1942). Hitherto, a serious impediment to studies of this interesting enzyme has been the difficulty of procuring dextransucrase. Development of further knowledge about it would be greatly facilitated by the availability of culture liquors rich in dextransucrase. The rapid formation of dextransucrase in high yields has been reported in a preliminary note (Koepsell and Tsuchiya, 1952). The present report deals in greater detail with our observations on factors affecting production of dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides, strain NRRL B-512.2 However, culture liquors high in activity have been obtained from a large number of the organisms tested. The dextran produced by strain NRRL B-512 in the conventional whole culture procedure contains about 95 per cent a-1,6-glucopyranosidic linkage. Although the non-1,6 linkages have been assumed to be of the a-1,4 type, definite proof on this point is lacking (Jeanes and Wilham, 1950). L. mesenteroides, strain NRRL B-512, or its substrains, is the organism principally used in investigations of clinical dextran in the United States. Although the term \"dextransucrase\" is used in the singular for convenience, the possibility that more than one enzyme may be involved in the synthesis of dextran is recognized.

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Journal ArticleDOI

On the production of dextran by free and immobilized dextransucrase

TL;DR: Dextransucrase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides was produced in a semicontinuous culture with slow addition of a concentrated sucrose solution and immobilized on an amino‐Spherosil support activated with glutaraldehyde looks promising for low‐molecular‐weight dextran production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dextran biosynthesis and dextransucrase production by continuous culture of Leuconostoc mesenteroides

TL;DR: The appearance of fructose in the effluent of the sucrose‐limited chemostat at higher dilution rates indicated that sucrose was being diverted to dextran biosynthesis, indicating an inefficiency in the system of enzyme production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization and biocompatibility of glucan: a safe food additive from probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum DM5.

TL;DR: This is the first report on the structure and biocompatibility of homopolysaccharide α-D-glucan (dextran) from probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum strain and its unique physical and rheological properties that facilitate its application in the food industry as viscosifying and gelling agent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dextransucrase production by Leuconostoc mesenteroides NRRL B-1299. Comparison with L. mesenteroides NRRL B-512F

TL;DR: The use of glucose and sucrose as cosubstrates in a fedbatch reactor experiment makes it possible to improve B-1299 final dextransucrase activity up to 9.7 U ml −1 .
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Enzymatic synthesis of dextran

TL;DR: A study of acceptor specificity in dextran synthesis was undertaken with the object of elucidating the polymerization mechanism and it was hoped that clues leading to the direct enzymatic synthesis of “clinical” dextransucrase with an average molecular weight in the range of 50,000 to 100,000 would be found.
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