De Novo Synthesis of 4,5-Dimethoxycatechol and 2,5-Dimethoxyhydroquinone by the Brown Rot FungusGloeophyllum trabeum

1999 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 674-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrzej Paszczynski ◽  
Ronald Crawford ◽  
David Funk ◽  
Barry Goodell

ABSTRACT The new dimethoxycatechol 4,5-dimethoxy-1,2-benzenediol (DMC) and the new dimethoxyhydroquinone 2,5-dimethoxy-1,4-benzenediol (DMH) were isolated from stationary cultures of the brown rot fungusGloeophyllum trabeum growing on a glucose mineral medium protected from light. The structure was elucidated by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry through comparison to a synthetic standard. Further confirmation was obtained by forming a dimethoxyoxazole derivative by condensation of DMC with methylene chloride and through examination of methylated derivatives. DMC and DMH may serve as ferric chelators, oxygen-reducing agents, and redox-cycling molecules, which would include functioning as electron transport carriers to Fenton’s reactions. Thus, they appear to be important components of the brown rot decay system of the fungus.

2016 ◽  
Vol 82 (22) ◽  
pp. 6557-6572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuka Kojima ◽  
Anikó Várnai ◽  
Takuya Ishida ◽  
Naoki Sunagawa ◽  
Dejan M. Petrovic ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTFungi secrete a set of glycoside hydrolases and lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) to degrade plant polysaccharides. Brown-rot fungi, such asGloeophyllum trabeum, tend to have few LPMOs, and information on these enzymes is scarce. The genome ofG. trabeumencodes four auxiliary activity 9 (AA9) LPMOs (GtLPMO9s), whose coding sequences were amplified from cDNA. Due to alternative splicing, two variants ofGtLPMO9A seem to be produced, a single-domain variant,GtLPMO9A-1, and a longer variant,GtLPMO9A-2, which contains a C-terminal domain comprising approximately 55 residues without a predicted function. We have overexpressed the phylogenetically distinctGtLPMO9A-2 inPichia pastorisand investigated its properties. Standard analyses using high-performance anion-exchange chromatography–pulsed amperometric detection (HPAEC-PAD) and mass spectrometry (MS) showed thatGtLPMO9A-2 is active on cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose, and xyloglucan. Importantly, compared to other known xyloglucan-active LPMOs,GtLPMO9A-2 has broad specificity, cleaving at any position along the β-glucan backbone of xyloglucan, regardless of substitutions. Using dynamic viscosity measurements to compare the hemicellulolytic action ofGtLPMO9A-2 to that of a well-characterized hemicellulolytic LPMO,NcLPMO9C fromNeurospora crassarevealed thatGtLPMO9A-2 is more efficient in depolymerizing xyloglucan. These measurements also revealed minor activity on glucomannan that could not be detected by the analysis of soluble products by HPAEC-PAD and MS and that was lower than the activity ofNcLPMO9C. Experiments with copolymeric substrates showed an inhibitory effect of hemicellulose coating on cellulolytic LPMO activity and did not reveal additional activities ofGtLPMO9A-2. These results provide insight into the LPMO potential ofG. trabeumand provide a novel sensitive method, a measurement of dynamic viscosity, for monitoring LPMO activity.IMPORTANCECurrently, there are only a few methods available to analyze end products of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO) activity, the most common ones being liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Here, we present an alternative and sensitive method based on measurement of dynamic viscosity for real-time continuous monitoring of LPMO activity in the presence of water-soluble hemicelluloses, such as xyloglucan. We have used both these novel and existing analytical methods to characterize a xyloglucan-active LPMO from a brown-rot fungus. This enzyme,GtLPMO9A-2, differs from previously characterized LPMOs in having broad substrate specificity, enabling almost random cleavage of the xyloglucan backbone.GtLPMO9A-2 acts preferentially on free xyloglucan, suggesting a preference for xyloglucan chains that tether cellulose fibers together. The xyloglucan-degrading potential ofGtLPMO9A-2 suggests a role in decreasing wood strength at the initial stage of brown rot through degradation of the primary cell wall.


1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 230-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
P L Gendler ◽  
H A Duhan ◽  
H Rapoport

Abstract We describe a method for detecting hemopyrrole and kryptopyrrole in urine, with a detection limit of 100 mug/liter (1 part in 10(7)). Urine is thoroughly extracted with methylene chloride and the extract is concentrated and examined by gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. No hemopyrrole or kryptopyrrole could be detected in 52 samples, from 17 controls, 29 schizophrenics, and six persons with acute intermittent porphyria.


1991 ◽  
Vol 261 (4) ◽  
pp. E479-E486 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Hellerstein ◽  
C. Kletke ◽  
S. Kaempfer ◽  
K. Wu ◽  
C. H. Shackleton

Measurement of hepatic fatty acid (FA) and cholesterol synthesis has been limited by lack of access to the precursor pool, cytosolic acetyl-CoA. We present a method for inferring the enrichment of the true hepatic lipogenic precursor pool in humans using the frequency distribution of mass isotopomers within enriched circulating polymers of acetyl-CoA [very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL)-palmitate, VLDL-stearate]. Human subjects were infused intravenously (n = 16) with [1-13C]- or [2-13C]acetate. Oral sulfamethoxazole (SMX) was administered concurrently, and the acetylated conjugate (SMX acetate) was used to estimate independently the hepatic cytosolic acetyl-CoA enrichment. Isotopomer frequencies in VLDL-FA were determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, whereas high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to measure enrichments in SMX acetate. Based on the excess M2/excess M1 ratio in VLDL-FA, calculated acetyl-CoA enrichments were 5.59 +/- 0.33 molar percent excess (MPE), whereas SMX acetate enrichments were 5.38 +/- 0.31 MPE (the 2 methods were not significantly different). Mass isotopomer-calculated and SMX acetate-measured estimates of acetyl-CoA enrichments correlated very closely in individual subjects (r2 = 0.93; P less than 0.0001). De novo hepatic lipogenesis can be measured using isotopomer-calculated precursor enrichments compared with measured incorporation in specific isotopomers of VLDL-FA. In summary, excess isotopomer frequencies in secreted lipids provide a non-invasive technique for estimating hepatic cytosolic acetyl-CoA enrichments in humans in vivo and correlate closely with enrichments observed using the xenobiotic probe technique. Isotopomeric distributions represent a new strategy for accurate measurement of macromolecule synthesis that may be applicable to other classes of molecules besides lipids.


1992 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 878-882
Author(s):  
Jinren Ko ◽  
Jack Nguyen ◽  
Jim Burleson

Abstract A capillary gas chromatographic (GC) method was developed for the quantitation of cis-9-tricosene in technical material. This method is capable of resolving cis-9-tricosene from the trans-9-tricosene isomer and other impurities in technical 9-tricosene. Samples are dissolved in methylene chloride and analyzed by splitless GC using docosane as an internal standard. The integrity and purity of the peak of interest were confirmed by GC/mass spectrometry. The overall recovery of this method was 101.3 ± 0.82%. The correlation coefficient of the standard calibration curve was 0.9999. The system and method precision for cis-9-tricosene were 0.18 and 0.20%, respectively. The reproducibility of the method by different analysts was within 0.5%.


1987 ◽  
Vol 241 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Yudkoff ◽  
I Nissim ◽  
D Pleasure

The metabolism of 2.5 mM-[15N]aspartate in cultured astrocytes was studied with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Three primary metabolic pathways of aspartate nitrogen disposition were identified: transamination with 2-oxoglutarate to form [15N]glutamate, the nitrogen of which subsequently was transferred to glutamine, alanine, serine and ornithine; condensation with IMP in the first step of the purine nucleotide cycle, the aspartate nitrogen appearing as [6-amino-15N]adenine nucleotides; condensation with citrulline to form argininosuccinate, which is cleaved to yield [15N]arginine. Of these three pathways, the formation of arginine was quantitatively the most important, and net nitrogen flux to arginine was greater than flux to other amino acids, including glutamine. Notwithstanding the large amount of [15N]arginine produced, essentially no [15N]urea was measured. Addition of NaH13CO3 to the astrocyte culture medium was associated with the formation of [13C]citrulline, thus confirming that these cells are capable of citrulline synthesis de novo. When astrocytes were incubated with a lower (0.05 mM) concentration of [15N]aspartate, most 15N was recovered in alanine, glutamine and arginine. Formation of [6-amino-15N]adenine nucleotides was diminished markedly compared with results obtained in the presence of 2.5 mM-[15N]aspartate.


1987 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 749-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry B S Conacher ◽  
Denis B Page ◽  
Benjamin P Y Lau ◽  
James F Lawrence ◽  
Ruth Bailey ◽  
...  

Abstract A method is described for determining ethyl carbamate at low \i%l kg levels in several types of alcoholic beverages by capillary column gas chromatography with Hall electrolytic conductivity detection and confirmation by mass spectrometry. Samples are diluted to obtain a uniform concentration of ethanol (ca 10%) then saturated with NaCl and extracted with methylene chloride. Extracts are evaporated to a small volume and injected in ethyl acetate solution for chromatographic analysis. The method was evaluated by 5 laboratories, 4 employing the Hall detector and one using mass spectrometric detection. Overall between-laboratory mean percent recoveries were: wine, 85.3 ± 21.0% coefficient of variation (CV) (spiking level 20- 45 μg/kg); sherry, 83.8 ± 16.1% CV (spiking level, 81-142 μg/kg);whiskey, 79.5 ± 13.9% CV (spiking level 127-190 Mg/kg); and brandy, 85.0 ± 12.5% CV (spiking level 297-446 μg/kg). Mass spectrometric results agreed well with the Hall results for all commodities. Detection limits were about 5 μg/kg for the Hall detector and about 0.5 μg/kg for mass spectrometric detection.


2020 ◽  
Vol 232 ◽  
pp. 104965
Author(s):  
Patricia Prabutzki ◽  
Jenny Leopold ◽  
Susanna Schubert ◽  
Jürgen Schiller ◽  
Ariane Nimptsch

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