Abstract

NADH-dependent soluble l-α-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase (l-2-hydroxyglutarate: NAD+ 2-oxidoreductase) was found in a bacterium belonging to the genus Alcaligenes obtained from soil by citrate enrichment culture. A mutant with about 2.5-fold higher activity of the enzyme was derived from the bacterium and used as the enzyme source. High level of the enzyme was produced at the late stage of cultivation in the presence of citrate and with limited aeration. The enzyme was purified from the cells to homogeneity to give crystals, and its enzymatic properties were studied. The enzyme strongly reduced α-ketoglutarate to stereochemically pure l-α-hydroxyglutarate with NADH as a coenzyme, but it oxidized d-α-hydroxyglutarate with about 1/10 of the rate for l-form oxidation.

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