| Literature DB >> 20976287 |
S K Soni1, A Magdum, J M Khire.
Abstract
Aspergillus niger NCIM 563 produced two different extracellular phytases (Phy I and Phy II) under submerged fermentation conditions at 30°C in medium containing dextrin-glucose-sodium nitrate-salts. Both the enzymes were purified to homogeneity using Rotavapor concentration, Phenyl-Sepharose column chromatography and Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. The molecular mass of Phy I and II as determined by SDS-PAGE and gel filtration were 66, 264, 150 and 148 kDa respectively, indicating that Phy I consists of four identical subunits and Phy II is a monomer. The pI values of Phy I and II were 3.55 and 3.91, respectively. Phy I was highly acidic with optimum pH of 2.5 and was stable over a broad pH range (1.5-9.0) while Phy II showed a pH optimum of 5.0 with stability in the range of pH 3.5-9.0. Phy I exhibited very broad substrate specificity while Phy II was more specific for sodium phytate. Similarly Phy II was strongly inhibited by Ag(+), Hg(2+) (1 mM) metal ions and Phy I was partially inhibited. Peptide analysis by Mass Spectrometry (MS) MALDI-TOF also indicated that both the proteins were totally different. The K(m) for Phy I and II for sodium phytate was 2.01 and 0.145 mM while V(max) was 5,018 and 1,671 μmol min(-1) mg(-1), respectively. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of Phy I and Phy II were FSYGAAIPQQ and GVDERFPYTG, respectively. Phy II showed no homology with Phy I and any other known phytases from the literature suggesting its unique nature. This, according to us, is the first report of two distinct novel phytases from Aspergillus niger.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20976287 PMCID: PMC2949565 DOI: 10.1007/s11274-010-0385-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0959-3993 Impact factor: 3.312
Summary of purification of Phy I from A. niger NCIM 563
| Purification steps | Total protein (mg) | Total activity (Units) | Specific activity (Units/mg) | Purification (Fold) | Recovery (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culture filtrate | 242 | 50,000 | 206 | 1 | 100 |
| Rotavapor concentration | 169 | 41,130 | 243.3 | 1.18 | 82.20 |
| Phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B (5%) | 17.6 | 31,240 | 1,775 | 8.61 | 62.48 |
| Sephacryl S-200 | 4.4 | 15,120 | 3436.36 | 16.67 | 30.24 |
Summary of purifications steps for Phy II from Aspergillus niger NCIM 563
| Purification steps | Total protein (mg) | Total activity (Units) | Specific activity (Units/mg) | Purification (Fold) | Recovery (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culture filtrate | 242 | 20,600 | 85.12 | 1 | 100 |
| Rotavapor concentration | 169 | 16,312 | 96.5 | 1.13 | 79.10 |
| Phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B (5%) | 14.0 | 10,520 | 751 | 8.83 | 51.06 |
| Sephacryl S-200 | 4.5 | 5,469 | 1215.33 | 14.29 | 26.55 |
Fig. 1a SDS–PAGE of purified Phy I and Phy II from Aspergillus niger NCIM 563. Lane M: Molecular weight markers. Lane 1: Crude filtrate (after rota vapour conc.). Lane 2: Phenyl Sepharose elute (with 5% w/v Ammonium sulphate). Lane 3: Phenyl Sepharose elute (with 15% w/v Ammonium sulphate). Lane 4: Purified Phy I. Lane 5: Purified Phy II. b Iso-electric focusing of purified Phy I and Phy II. Lane M: Standard pI markers (Pharmacia). Lane 1: Purified Phy I. Lane 2: Purified Phy II
Some molecular and biochemical properties of purified Phy I and Phy II from Aspergillus niger NCIM 563
| Properties | Values | |
|---|---|---|
| Phy I | Phy II | |
| pH | ||
| Optimum | 2.5 | 5.0 |
| Stability | 2.0–9.0 | 4.0–8.5 |
| Temperature | ||
| Optimum | 55°C | 55°C |
| Stability |
|
|
| Isoelectric point | 3.65 | 3.95 |
| Molecular mass (kDa) | ||
| Native | 264 | 150–160 |
| Subunit (SDS) | 66 | 150 |
| MALDI | 66 | 74 |
| Glycoprotein nature | Glycosylated | Non-glycosylated |
| Substrate specificity | Broad | Specific for Na phytate |
Fig. 2MALDI-TOF analysis of peptides after in gel tryptic digestion of Phy I and Phy II. a Peptides of Phy I [Molecular weight of peptides (Da) 1563.3011, 2273.9826, 2304.9520, 2611.8672, 2928.8716, 3226.8563]. Inset: Molecular weight of Phy I by MALDI-TOF. b Peptides of Phy II [Molecular weight of peptides (Da) 2176.9194, 2214.9406, 2464.9820, 2693.8450, 3494.7825] Inset: Molecular weight of Phy II by MALDI-TOF
Fig. 3Effect of metal ions on Phy I and Phy II activity
Effect of various reagents on phytase activity
| Solvents and reagents | Residual relative activity (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Phy I | Phy II | |
| None (control) | 100 | 100 |
| Acetic acid (0.1%) | 95 | 92 |
| Oxalic acid (1 mM) | 194 | 91 |
| DTT (1 mM) | 101 | 97 |
| EDTA (1 mM) | 181 | 88 |
| Sodium azide (1 mM) | 101 | 97 |
| SDS (1 mM) | 4 | 4 |
| pCMB (1 mM) | 129 | 77 |
| Triton X-100 (0.1%) | 101 | 93 |
| Tween 80 (0.1%) | 113 | 89 |
| Tween 20 (0.1%) | 114 | 94 |
| Glycerol (0.1%) | 97 | 95 |
| Toluene (0.1%) | 105 | 91 |
| β-Mercaptoethanol (0.1%) | 105 | 93 |
| Ethylene glycol (0.1%) | 104 | 92 |
A suitably diluted enzyme was assayed with different solvents (0.1%) and reagents (1 mM) in reaction mixture. Activities are expressed as percentage of activity compare to the control sample
Substrate specificity of purified phytases
| Substrates (3 mM) | Relative phytase activity (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Phy I | Phy II | |
| Sodium phytate | 100 | 100 |
| Calcium phytate | 72.98 | 92.49 |
|
| 229.00 | 126.99 |
| Sodium phenyl phosphate | 224.41 | 62.99 |
| α- | 137.77 | – |
|
| 166.36 | – |
| 1-Naphthyl phosphate | 196.39 | 24.49 |
| 2-Naphthyl phosphate | 195.39 | 64.66 |
| ATP | 262.91 | 46.16 |
| ADP | 168.95 | 51.66 |
| AMP | 20.97 | 48.33 |
| β-NADP | 215.50 | – |
| Sodium pyrophosphate | 293.37 | 31.83 |
| Glycerol-1-phosphate | 28.44 | – |
| Phenyl phosphate | 132.32 | 31.83 |
The hydrolysis rate of sodium phytate (3 mM) was taken as 100% for comparison
Kinetic parameters of the hydrolysis of different substrates by Phytase I and II
| Substrates |
|
|
|
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | II | I | II | I | II | I | II | |
| Sodium phytate | 2.01 | 0.145 | 5,018 | 1,675 | 2.2 × 104 | 4.2 × 103 | 1.1 × 104 | 2.8 × 104 |
| Calcium phytate | 37.27 | 1.14 | 26,674 | 2,205 | 1.17 × 105 | 5.5 × 103 | 3.14 × 103 | 4.83 × 103 |
|
| 4.07 | 1.18 | 15,029 | 2,169 | 6.6 × 104 | 5.4 × 103 | 1.6 × 104 | 4.59 × 103 |
| Sodium phenyl phosphate | 5.34 | 0.69 | 18,463 | 1,056 | 8.1 × 104 | 2.6 × 103 | 1.5 × 104 | 3.82 × 103 |
| α- | 3.65 | NH | 8,704 | NH | 3.8 × 104 | NH | 1.05 × 104 | NH |
|
| 5.5 | NH | 14,338 | NH | 6.3 × 104 | NH | 1.1 × 104 | NH |
| Glycerol-1- phosphateb | 5.71 | NH | 2,890 | NH | 1.27 × 104 | NH | 2.2 × 103 | NH |
| Phenyl phosphate | 8.32 | 1.51 | 15,470 | 1,436 | 6.8 × 104 | 3.6 × 103 | 8.18 × 103 | 2.37 × 103 |
aDetermined at 55°C under standard assay conditions, incubation time was 30 min. Units of the kinetic parameters are K = mM, V = μmol min−1 mg−1, K = s−1, K /K = mM−1 s−1
b d-Glucose 1-Phosphate and d-glucose 6-phosphate, Glycerol-1-phosphate were not hydrolysed by Phy II (pH 5.0 Active)
Comparision of N-terminal amino acid sequence of phytases from various sources
| Source and gene name | N-terminal sequence |
|---|---|
|
| FSYGAAIPQQ |
|
| GVDERFPYTG |
|
| FSYGAAIPQQ |
|
| -VDERFPYTG |
|
| MVRNTPVIMA |
|
| FSYGAAIPQSTAEKQF |
|
| FSYGAAIPQSTAEKQF |
|
| PASRXQSSCDTV |
|
| ASRXQSTXDTV |
|
| SKSXDTVDLGY |
|
| SDXNSVDHGY |
|
| TALGPXGXHSDX |
|
| SE(P)ELKL(E)AVV |
|
| SDPYHFTVNAAXET |
|
| FYYGAALPQS |
* Present work
aNCBI Protein Blast Data Base
bWyss et al. (1999)
cKim et al. (1998)
dVats and Banerjee (2006)
Amino acid composition of purified phytases (I & II) from Aspergillus niger NCIM 563
| Amino acidsa | Phytase I | Phytase II |
|---|---|---|
| As(X) | 324 | 174 |
| Gl(X) | 232 | 112 |
| Ser | 184 | 120 |
| His | 36 | 40 |
| Gly | 236 | 188 |
| Thr | 176 | 126 |
| Ala | 236 | 116 |
| Arg | 76 | 32 |
| Tyr | 148 | 52 |
| Cysb | 0* | 0* |
| Val | 120 | 90 |
| Met | 32 | 18 |
| Trpc | 55* | 32* |
| Phe | 108 | 58 |
| Ile | 100 | 60 |
| Leu | 196 | 92 |
| Lys | 64 | 48 |
| Pro | 148 | 90 |
| Total | 2,471 | 1,448 |
| Mol. wt(kDa)d | 271.8 | 159.3 |
* Determined by spectrophotometrically
aValues are given in residues/mol
bHabeeb (1972)
cSpande and Witkop (1967)
dCalculated molecular weight