Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.73, No.2, 339-348, 2006
Molecular cloning of the aspartate 4-decarboxylase gene from Pseudomonas sp ATCC 19121 and characterization of the bifunctional recombinant enzyme
L-Aspartate 4-decarboxylase (Asd) is a major enzyme used in the industrial production of L-alanine. Its gene was cloned from Pseudomonas sp. ATCC 19121 and characterized in the present study. The 1,593-bp asd encodes a protein with a molecular mass of 59,243 Da. The Asd from this Pseudomonas strain was considerably homologous to other Asds and aminotransferases, and has evolved independently of these enzymes from gram-positive microbes. Productivity rate of the C-terminal His-tagged fusion Asd was at 33 mg/l of Escherichia coli transformant culture. The kinetic parameters K-m and V-max of the fusion protein were 11.50 mM and 0.11 mM/min, respectively. Gel filtration analysis demonstrated that Asd is a dodecamer at pH 5.0 while 4.4% of the recombinant protein dissociated into dimer when the pH was increased to 7.0. Asd exhibited its maximum activity at pH 5.0 and specific activity of 280 U/mg, and remained stable over a broad range of pH. The optimum temperature for Asd reaction was 45 degrees C, and 92% of the activity remained when the enzyme was incubated at 40 degrees C for 40 min. This enzyme did not have any preferred divalent cation for catalysis. The recombinant Asd also exhibited aminotransferase activity when D, L-Asp, L-Glu, L-Gln, and L-Ala were utilized as substrates. However, the decarboxylation activity of L-aspartate was 2,477 times higher than its aminotransferase activity. The present study is the first investigation on the important biochemical properties of the purified recombinant Asd.