Abstract

Trehalose phosphorylase from the basidiomycete Pleurotus ostreatus (PoTPase) was isolated from fungal fruit bodies through approximately 500-fold purification with a yield of 44%. Combined analyses by SDS-PAGE and gelfiltration show that PoTPase is a functional monomer of approximately 55 kDa molecular mass. PoTPase catalyzes the phosphorolysis of alpha,alpha-trehalose, yielding alpha-d-glucose 1-phosphate (alphaGlc 1-P) and alpha-d-glucose as the products. The optimum pH of PoTPase for alpha,alpha-trehalose phosphorolysis and synthesis is 6.8 and 6.2, respectively. Apparent substrate binding affinities (K(m)) were determined at pH 6.8 and 30 degrees C: alpha,alpha-trehalose (79 mM); phosphate (3.5 mM); d-glucose (40 mM); alphaGlc 1-P (4.1mM). A series of structural analogues of d-glucose were tested as glucosyl acceptors for the enzymatic reaction with alphaGlc 1-P, and robust activity with d-mannose (3%), 2-deoxy d-glucose (8%), 2-fluoro d-glucose (15%) and 2-keto-d-glucose (50%) was detected. Arsenate replaces, with 30% relative activity, phosphate in the conversion of alpha,alpha-trehalose, and vanadate strongly inhibits the enzyme activity (K(i) approximately 4 microM). PoTPase has a half-life (t(0.5)) of approximately 1 h at 30 degrees C in the absence of stabilizing compounds such as alpha,alpha-trehalose (300 mM; t(0.5)=11.5 h), glycerol (20%, w/v; t(0.5)=6.5h) or polyethylenglycol (PEG) 4000 (26%, w/v; t(0.5)=70 h). Covalent modification of PoTPase with activated derivatives of PEG 5000 increases the stability by up to 600-fold. Sucrose was converted to alpha,alpha-trehalose in approximately 60% yield using a coupled enzyme system composed of sucrose phosphorylase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides, glucose isomerase from Streptomyces murinus and the appropriately stabilized PoTPase.

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