Reaction Stability of the Recombinant Tyrosinase-CNK Originating from the Psychrophilic Marine Microorganism Candidatus Nitrosopumilus Koreensis
Author(s) -
Yoo Rae Choi,
Hyunsu Do,
Dawon Jeong,
Junetae Park,
Yoo Seong Choi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
clean technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2288-0690
pISSN - 1598-9712
DOI - 10.7464/ksct.2016.22.3.175
Subject(s) - tyrosinase , chemistry , enzyme , psychrophile , chaotropic agent , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Tyrosinases catalyze the hydroxylation of a monophenol (monophenolase activity) and the conversion of an o-diphenol to o-quinone (diphenolase activity), which are mainly involved in the modification of tyrosine residues into 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl-alanine (DOPA) and DOPA/DOPAquinone-derived intermolecular cross-linking. Previously, we obtained a slightly acidic and cold-active tyrosinase, tyrosinase-CNK, by our recombinant protein approach. The enzyme showed optimal activity at pH 6.0 and 20 ℃ with an abnormally high monophenolase/diphenolase activity ratio and still had approximately 50% activity compared with the highest activity even in ice water. Here, we investigated reaction stability of the recombinant tyrosinase-CNK as a psychrophilic enzyme. The enzyme showed remarkable thermal stability at 0 ℃ and the activity was well conserved in repeated freeze-thaw cycles. Although water-miscible organic solvent as reaction media caused the activity decrease of tyrosinase-CNK as expected, the enzyme activity was not additionally decreased with increased concentration in organic solvents such as ethanol and acetonitrile. Also, the enzyme showed high salt tolerance in chaotropic salts. It was remarkably considered that 2 + metal ions might inhibit the incorporation of Cu 2+ into the active site. We expect that these results could be used to design tyrosinase-mediated enzymatic reaction at low temperature for the production of catechols through minimizing unwanted self-oxidation and enzyme inactivation.
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom