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Showing papers on "Termitomyces clypeatus published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A xylanolytic amyloglucosidase of Termitomyces clypeatus was characterised with respect to other amyl glucosidases as discussed by the authors, which contained high alpha-helix destabilising amino acids but no sulphur amino acid.

28 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Termitomyces clypeatus secreted a 24-kDa xylanase constitutively in xylan medium, but required a gluconeogenic amino acid or Krebs cycle acid for the secretion of a 56- kDa amyloglucosidase in dextrin medium.
Abstract: Termitomyces clypeatus secreted a 24-kDa xylanase constitutively in xylan medium, but required a gluconeogenic amino acid or Krebs cycle acid for the secretion of a 56-kDa amyloglucosidase in dextrin medium. Aspartate, glutamate, succinate and fumarate all increased secretion of amyloglucosidase from 50% to >90% and enzyme production by 10-fold with little effect on xylanase production. Glutamate or succinate stimulated in vitro release of intracellular amyloglucosidase from washed mycelia in the presence of cycloheximide. Amyloglucosidase accumulated in the absence of glutamate was a high-molecular-mass protein that did not migrate in PAGE. Cellular regulation by the fungus of the secretion of amyloglucosidase is indicated.

12 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For example, Termitomyces clypeatus liberated β-xylosidase (EC 3.2) as mentioned in this paper, a culture filtrate enzyme, which reached 5-6% of that of xylanase liberated in xylan medium but poorly in cellulose medium.
Abstract: Termitomyces clypeatus liberated β-xylosidase (EC 3.2.1.37) optimally in xylan medium but poorly in cellulose medium. The enzyme activity reached 5–6% of that of xylanase liberated in xylan medium. The culture filtrate enzyme, purified 5-fold by ammonium sulfate precipitation, BioGel P-200, and DEAE-Sephadex anion exchange chromatographies at pH 5.0, was homogeneous (190 kDa) in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and in high-performance gel permeation liquid chromatography (HPGPLC) but contained high amounts of cellobiase and sucrase and gave multiple protein bands in SDS-PAGE (SDS = sodium dodecyl sulfate) . The aggregate was subsequently resolved by DEAE−anion exchange chromatography at pH 6.0 into a number of β-xylosidase fractions with decreasing sucrase contents. The sucrase free β-xylosidase fraction was subsequently purified to 55.6-fold by hydrophobic interaction chromatography on a phenyl−sepharose column. The enzyme was a homogeneous 94 kDa protein, both in SDS−PAGE and HPGPLC. The physicochemical properties of the enzyme were similar to those of other fungal β-xylosidases, and the enzyme had no unrelated glycosidase activities. The purified (94 kDa) and aggregated forms (190 kDa) of β-xylosidase had the same pH optima (5.0), temperature optima (60 °C), substrate specificities, and sensitivities toward end product inhibition by xylose or to the actions of SDS, urea, and guanidine hydrochloride. But aggregated enzyme was reasonably stable in the pH and temperature ranges where purified enzyme was completely inactive. The protein−protein aggregation appeared to confer additional stability to the β-xylosidase toward extracellular denaturing conditions.

11 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Production of acetyl esterase by Termitomyces clypeatus was stimulated by xylan, cellulose, arabinose andArabinose-containing polysaccharides in the growth medium and acetyl xylan was completely deacetylated by the enzyme.
Abstract: Production of acetyl esterase by Termitomyces clypeatus was stimulated by xylan, cellulose, arabinose and arabinose-containing polysaccharides in the growth medium. The culture filtrate was equally active with p-nitrophenyl acetate and acetyl xylan. Acetyl xylan was completely deacetylated by the enzyme. Activity was optimum at pH 6.5 and at 50iC. The Km values for p-nitrophenyl acetate and acetyl xylan were 0.83 mM and 0.38% (w/v) with Vm of 48 and 55 mmole acetate produced/min.mg protein, respectively.

9 citations