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Cloning of the Maltose Phosphorylase Gene from<i>Bacillus</i>sp. Strain RK-1 and Efficient Production of the Cloned Gene and the Trehalose Phosphorylase Gene from…
25
Citations
18
References
2002
Year
EngineeringBacteriologyEfficient ProductionMaltose PhosphorylaseBacillus SubtilisBiosynthesisBiochemical EngineeringCloned GeneBiochemistryMolecular MicrobiologyProtein BiosynthesisCellular EnzymologyBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyEnzyme SpecificityMpase GeneMicrobiologyMedicineMaltose Phosphorylase GeneMicrobial Genetics
The maltose phosphorylase (MPase) gene of Bacillus sp. strain RK-1 was cloned by PCR with oligonucleotide primers designed on the basis of a partial N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme. The MPase gene consisted of 2,655 bp encoding a theoretical protein with a Mr of 88,460, and had no secretion signal sequence, although most of the MPase activity was detected in the culture supernatant of RK-1. This cloned MPase gene and the trehalose phosphorylase (TPase) gene from Bacillus stearothermophilus SK-1 were efficiently expressed intracellularly under the control of the Bacillus amyloliquefaciens alpha-amylase promoter in Bacillus subtilis. The production yields were estimated to be more than 2 g of enzyme per liter of medium, about 250 times the production of the original strains, in a simple shake flask. About 60% of maltose was converted into trehalose by the simultaneous action of both enzymes produced in B. subtilis.
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