Abstract
A gain of function mutant of Rhodobacter sphaeroides Si4, capable of growing on galactitol, was isolated from a chemostat culture. Continuous cultivation was performed for 54 d with a limiting concentration (1 mM) of the substrate D-glucitol and an excess (20 mM) of the non-metabolizable galactitol. The mutant strain, R. sphaeroides D, grew in galactitol minimal medium with a growth rate of 0.11 h-1 (td = 6.3 h). In crude extracts of R. sphaeroides D, a specific galactitol dehydrogenase (GDH) activity of 380 mU mg-1 was found, while the wild-type strain exhibited GDH activities lower than 50 mU mg-1 when grown on different polyols. Unlike mannitol, sorbitol or ribitol dehydrogenase from the wild-type strain, the new GDH was expressed constitutively. To study whether it was a newly evolved enzyme or an improved side activity of one of the pre-existing polyol dehydrogenases, GDH was purified to apparent homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose, Q-Sepharose, Matrex Gel Red-A and Mono-Q. The relative molecular mass (M(r)) of the native GDH was 110,000. SDS-PAGE resulted in one single band that represented a polypeptide with a M(r) of 28,000, indicating that the native protein is a tetramer. The isoelectric point of GDH was determined to be pH 4.2. The enzyme was specific for NAD+ but catalysed the oxidation of different sugar alcohols as well as different diols and secondary alcohols.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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