Gene order of the histidine utilization (hut) operons in Klebsiella aerogenes. (9/33)

P1-sensitive mutants of Klebsiella aerogenes were isolated and the gene order of the hut region was then determined using P1-mediated transduction. The genes are located in the Klebsiella chromosome between gal and bio as in Salmonella typhimurium. The gene order, gal, hutI, hutG, hutC, huU, hutH, bio is also the same as that observed in S. typhimurium.  (+info)

The purification and properties of urocanase from Pseudomonas testosteroni. (10/33)

Urocanase (urocanate hydratase, EC 4.2.1.49) purified from Pseudomonas testosteroni has a mol.wt. of 118000 determined by sedimentation-equilibrium analysis. Ultracentrifugation in 6M-guanidine hydrochloride and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate show that the enzyme consists of two identical or very similar subunits. It is, like urocanase isolated from other sources, inhibited by reagents that react with carbonyl groups. Although urocanase from Ps. testosteroni is strongly inhibited by NaBH4, no evidence could be obtained for the presence of covalently bound 2-oxobutyrate as a prosthetic group; this is in contrast with findings elsewhere for urocanase from Pseudomonas putida. Urocanase from Ps. testosteroni does not contain pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as a coenzyme and in this respect is similar to all urocanases studied in purified form.  (+info)

The stoichiometry of the tightly bound NAD+ in urocanase. Separation and characterization of fully active and inhibited forms of the enzyme. (11/33)

1. Urocanase, purified by classical methods [Keul, V., Kaeppeli, F., Ghosh, C., Krebs, T., Robinson, J. A. and Retey, J. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 843-851] from Pseudomonas putida was submitted to high-performance liquid chromatography on a TSK-DEAE column. The enzyme was eluted in three resolved peaks (A, B and C) exhibiting specific activities of 3.4 U/mg, 1.85 U/mg and 0.4 U/mg, respectively. 2. The difference spectra of peaks B and A as well as of C and A showed maxima at 330 nm. 3. Irradiation of peaks B and C at 320 nm resulted in an increase of urocanase activity by 45% and 400%, respectively. Peak A could not be photoactivated. Rechromatography of the photoactivated peaks B and C on the TSK-DEAE column confirmed their partial transformation into peak A. 4. Spectroscopic methods for quantitative protein determination were adapted to urocanase. The stoichiometry of bound NAD+/urocanase (form A) was determined to be 1.75 by enzymic analysis of the free NAD+ released upon acid denaturation of the holoenzyme. A similar stoichiometry (1.8-1.9) was found for all three forms (A, B and C) by biosynthetic incorporation of [7-14C]nicotinate into urocanase using a nicotinate auxotrophic mutant of P. putida. 5. Form A of urocanase showed, after treatment with NaBH4 up to 50% inhibition, an elution pattern (TSK-DEAE column) similar to a mixture of forms A, B and C in the approximate ratio of 1:2:1. None of these forms could be photoactivated. 6. We conclude that form A of the urocanase dimer contains two intact NAD+ molecules. In form B one of the two subunits contains an NAD+-nucleophile adduct which is present in both subunits of form C. Full urocanase activity requires intact NAD+ in both subunits. Intact NAD+ can be regenerated from the adduct but not from the reduced form by photolysis. The two subunits of urocanase are independent both in their catalytic activity and in modification reactions.  (+info)

Cloning and expression in Escherichia coli of histidine utilization genes from Pseudomonas putida. (12/33)

A library of the Pseudomonas putida chromosome, prepared through the use of the cosmid pJB8 ligated to a partial Sau3A digest of bacterial DNA, followed by in vitro packaging into bacteriophage lambda particles, was used to construct a strain of Escherichia coli which contained the genes for histidine utilization. This isolate produced a repressor product and all five enzymes required in Pseudomonas spp. for histidine dissimilation, whereas none of these could be detected in the nontransduced parent E. coli strain. When this transductant was grown on various media containing histidine or urocanate as the inducer, it was observed that production of the cloned histidine degradative enzymes was influenced somewhat by the choice of nitrogen source used but not by the carbon source. The recombinant cosmid was isolated and found to consist of 21.1 kilobase pairs of DNA, with approximately 16 kilobase pairs derived from Pseudomonas DNA and the remainder being from the pJB8 vector. Digestion of this insert DNA with EcoRI provided a 6.1-kilobase-pair fragment which, upon ligation in pUC8 and transformation into an E. coli host, was found to encode histidine ammonia-lyase and urocanase. The inducible nature of this production indicated that the hut repressor gene also was present on this fragment. Insertional inactivation of the histidine ammonia-lyase and urocanase genes by the gamma-delta transposon has permitted location of these structural genes and has provided evidence that transcription proceeds from urocanase through histidine ammonia-lyase. Mapping of the 16-kilobase-pair Pseudomonas DNA segment with restriction enzymes and subcloning of additional portions, one of which contained the gene for formiminoglutamate hydrolase and another that could constitutively express activities for both imidazolone propionate hydrolase and formylglutamate hydrolase, has provided evidence for the organization of all hut genes.  (+info)

Activation of urocanase from Pseudomonas putida by electronically excited triplet species. (13/33)

Urocanase from Pseudomonas putida becomes inactive in growing and resting cells and, as shown previously, is activated by the direct absorption of ultraviolet light. In this study, we describe the activation of urocanase by energy transfer from triplet indole-3-aldehyde, generated in the peroxidase-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of indole-3-acetic acid. The activation was time-, temperature-, and pH-dependent. The involvement of reactive oxygen intermediates was excluded by the lack of effect of appropriate quenchers and traps. Triplet quenchers, in contrast, reduced the level of activation. Photoexcited rose bengal, a triplet species of a different nature and origin, was also effective in promoting activation. These results demonstrate a potential mechanism of urocanase regulation not dependent on an environmental source of light, but rather brought about by an enzymically generated excited species.  (+info)

Identification of the prosthetic group of urocanase. The mode of its reaction with sodium borohydride and of its photochemical reactivation. (14/33)

Urocanase from Pseudomonas putida and from beef liver were isolated by modifying described procedures. Both enzymes were inactivated and labeled on treatment with tritiated sodium borohydride and gave, upon subsequent hydrolysis, a radioactive acid. The previously reported identity of this acid as 2-hydroxybutanoic acid was disproved by several criteria. Other hydroxy acids were also proved to be different from the radioactive acid derived from urocanase. A large portion of the radioactive material from P. putida was found to be nicotinic acid by 1H NMR spectroscopy, gas-liquid chromatography of its methyl ester, and co-crystallization with authentic reference compounds both as the acid and as the hydrazide. A significant portion of the radioactive material derived from beef liver urocanase also co-crystallized with nicotinic acid. Sodium borohydride-treated inactive urocanase was partially reactivated by light. The action spectrum of the photoreactivation showed a maximum at 330 nm. Treatment of urocanase with sodium borodeuteride followed by hydrolysis afforded a sample of nicotinic acid which carried deuterium mainly in position 6. Both the reversible reducibility of urocanase and its action spectrum of photoreactivation suggest that urocanase contains an enzyme-bound nicotinamide nucleotide molecule which is essential for enzymic activity.  (+info)

Expression of the hut operons of Salmonella typhimurium in Klebsiella aerogenes and in Escherichia coli. (15/33)

The normal hut (histidine utilization) operons, as well as those with mutations affecting the regulation of their expression, of Salmonella typhimurium were introduced on an F' episome into cells of S. typhimurium and Klebsiella aerogenes whose chromosomal hut genes had been deleted and into cells of Escherichia coli, whose chromosome does not carry hut genes. The episomal hut operons respond in a manner very similar to induction and catabolite repression in all three organisms. The small differences found reflect both different abilities to take up inducers from the medium and different degrees of catabolite repression exerted by glucose.  (+info)

Regulation of the hut operons of Salmonella typhimurium and Klebsiella aerogenes by the heterologous hut repressors. (16/33)

In merodiploid strains of Klebsiella aerogenes with chromosomal hut genes of K. aerogenes and episomal hut genes of Salmonella typhimurium, the repressor of either species can regulate the hut operons of the other species. The repression exerted by the homologous repressor on the left-hand hut operon is, in both organisms, stronger than that exerted by the heterologous repressor.  (+info)