Author:
Boonsaeng Vichai,Sullivan Patrick A.,Shepherd Maxwell G.
Abstract
The levels of phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11) and mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.17) have been determined in a number of Mucor and Penicillium species. Mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase was found in only one species of mucor, Mucor rouxii, and this with a specific activity much lower than that found in Penicillium species. All of the fungi tested in the Ascomycetes class exhibited mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase activity. Interference from both mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADH oxidase (EC 1.6.99.5) caused some difficulty initially in detecting phosphofructokinase in Penicillium species; the Penicillium phosphofructokinase is very unstable. Penicillium notatum accumulates mannitol intracellularly; detection of mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase and mannitol-1-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.22) activity in cell-free extracts indicates that the mannitol is formed from glucose via fructose-6-phosphate and mannitol-1-phosphate; no direct reduction of fructose to mannitol could be detected. The mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase was specific for mannitol-1-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate; NADP+(H) could not replace NAD+(H). The phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.22) exhibited a distinct preference for mannitol-1-phosphate as substrate; all other substrates tested exhibited less than 25% of the activity observed with mannitol-1-phosphate.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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