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Esterase

About: Esterase is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7622 publications have been published within this topic receiving 168270 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The newly-isolated extremely thermophilic Bacillus sp.
Abstract: The newly-isolated extremely thermophilic Bacillus sp. strain Wai28A5, able to grow at 70°C on tripalmitin and other triglycerides, possessed a p- nitrophenyl-palmitate esterase activity with a half-life of 60 min at 70°C and 12 min at 85°C. This activity was produced during exponential growth on tripalmitin, and the level of activity decreased once growth stopped. Transfer to tripalmitin-containing medium resulted in induction of the esterase activity. The activity was largely cell-associated (60 to 87% of the total activity). The p-nitrophenyl-palmitate esterase activity was proportional to the amount of culture added to enzyme assays and was destroyed by autoclaving, showing it to be enzymatic. A continuous assay for esterase activity was developed, and proved to be sensitive enough to detect 0.02 mU ml−1 esterase activity. Maximal esterase activity was at 400 μM p-nitrophenyl-palmitate and the optimum pH (at 70°C) was 8.7.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicated that the chain length of the alcohol moiety strongly affected the biodegradability of the AOPP herbicides, whereas the substitutions in the aromatic ring had only a slight influence.
Abstract: Cyhalofop-butyl (CyB) is a widely used aryloxyphenoxy propanoate (AOPP) herbicide for control of grasses in rice fields. Five CyB-degrading strains were isolated from rice field soil and identified as Agromyces sp., Stenotrophomonas sp., Aquamicrobium sp., Microbacterium sp., and Pseudomonas azotoformans; the results revealed high biodiversity of CyB-degrading bacteria in rice soil. One strain, P. azotoformans QDZ-1, degraded 84.5% of 100 mg L(-1) CyB in 5 days of incubation in a flask and utilized CyB as carbon source for growth. Strain QDZ-1 could also degrade a wide range of other AOPP herbicides. An esterase gene, chbH, which hydrolyzes CyB to cyhalofop acid (CyA), was cloned from strain QDZ-1 and functionally expressed. A chbH-disrupted mutant dchbH was constructed by insertion mutation. Mutant dchbH could not degrade and utilize CyB, suggesting that chbH was the only esterase gene responsible for CyB degradation in strain QDZ-1. ChbH hydrolyzed all AOPP herbicides tested as well as permethrin. The catalytic efficiency of ChbH toward different AOPP herbicides followed the order quizalofop-P-ethyl ≈ fenoxaprop-P-ethyl > CyB ≈ fluazifop-P-butyl > diclofop-methyl ≈ haloxyfop-P-methyl; the results indicated that the chain length of the alcohol moiety strongly affected the biodegradability of the AOPP herbicides, whereas the substitutions in the aromatic ring had only a slight influence.

54 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was sensitive to inhibition by several aromatic aldehydes; in particular, ortho-substituted benzaldehydes such as 2-bromo-, 2-chloro- and 2-fluoro-benzaldehyde were potent inhibitors of the enzyme.
Abstract: The apparent Km and maximum velocity values of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus were determined for a range of alcohols and aldehydes and the corresponding turnover numbers and specificity constants were calculated. Benzyl alcohol was the most effective alcohol substrate for benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase. Perillyl alcohol was the second most effective substrate, and was the only non-aromatic alcohol oxidized. The other substrates of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase were all aromatic in nature, with para-substituted derivatives of benzyl alcohol being better substrates than other derivatives. Coniferyl alcohol and cinnamyl alcohol were also substrates. Benzaldehyde was much the most effective substrate for benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II. Benzaldehydes with a single small substituent group in the meta or para position were better substrates than any other benzaldehyde derivatives. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II could also oxidize the aliphatic aldehydes hexan-1-al and octan-1-al, although poorly. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was substrate-inhibited by benzaldehyde when the assay concentration exceeded approx. 10 microM. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II, but not benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, exhibited esterase activity with 4-nitrophenyl acetate as substrate. Both benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II were inhibited by the thiol-blocking reagents iodoacetate, iodoacetamide, 4-chloromercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide. Benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde respectively protected against these inhibitions. NAD+ also gave some protection. Neither benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase nor benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was inhibited by the metal-ion-chelating agents EDTA, 2,2'-bipyridyl, pyrazole or 2-phenanthroline. Neither enzyme was inhibited by a range of plausible metabolic inhibitors such as mandelate, phenylglyoxylate, benzoate, succinate, acetyl-CoA, ATP or ADP. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was sensitive to inhibition by several aromatic aldehydes; in particular, ortho-substituted benzaldehydes such as 2-bromo-, 2-chloro- and 2-fluoro-benzaldehydes were potent inhibitors of the enzyme.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The characterization of Est6 revealed that it was a cold-active esterase and exhibited the highest activity toward p-nitrophenyl butyrate (C4) at 20°C and pH 7.5.
Abstract: A deep-sea sediment metagenomic library was constructed and screened for lipolytic enzymes by activity-based approach. Nine novel lipolytic enzymes were identified, and the amino acid sequences shared 56% to 84% identity to other lipolytic enzymes in the database. Phylogenetic analysis showed that these enzymes belonged to family IV lipolytic enzymes. One of the lipolytic enzymes, Est6, was successfully cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli Rosetta in a soluble form. The recombinant protein was purified by Ni-nitrilotriacetic affinity chromatography column and characterized using p-nitrophenyl esters with various chain lengths. The est6 gene consisted of 909 bp that encoded 302 amino acid residues. Est6 was most similar to a lipolytic enzyme from uncultured bacterium (ACL67845, 61% identity) isolated from the South China Sea marine sediment metagenome. The characterization of Est6 revealed that it was a cold-active esterase and exhibited the highest activity toward p-nitrophenyl butyrate (C4) at 20°C and pH 7.5.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ability of Streptococcus thermophilus ST1 and 19 other dairy lactic acid bacteria to synthesize esters was investigated in an aqueous environment through a transferase reaction (alcoholysis) in which fatty acyl groups from glycerides were transferred to alcohols.
Abstract: The ability of Streptococcus thermophilus ST1 and 19 other dairy lactic acid bacteria (LAB) to synthesize esters was investigated in an aqueous environment. These LAB were able to synthesize esters from alcohols and glycerides via a transferase reaction (alcoholysis) in which fatty acyl groups from glycerides were transferred to alcohols. S. thermophilus ST1 was active on tributyrin and on di- or monoglycerides of up to C10 with ethanol as the acyl acceptor. This strain was also active on a diglyceride of C6 and monoglyceride of C8 with 2-phenyl ethanol as the acyl acceptor. Alcoholysis occurred preferentially over hydrolysis. S. thermophilus ST1 had an apparent K m value of 250 mM for ethanol and an apparent K m value of 1.3 mM for tributyrin, measured against whole cells. Around 80% of both the transferase activity and the esterase activity were detected in the cell-free extract (CFE) of strain ST1. Both activities in the CFEs of five LAB tested were, to a similar degree, enhanced slightly by growth in the presence of ethanol and tributyrin. Using tributyrin and ethanol as substrates, the transferase activities ranged over 0.006–1.37 units/mg cell dry weight among the LAB tested and were both species- and strain-dependent.

54 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202391
2022209
202183
2020112
2019107
2018129