0000000000814987
AUTHOR
José V. Cañizares
Characteristics of rice straw and sewage sludge as composting materials in Valencia (Spain).
This work supports the idea that composting can be useful for minimizing the rice straw and sewage sludge environmental impact. Several physical, chemical and microbiological properties of these raw materials were analyzed. The characteristics of the rice straw were complementary to those of the sewage sludge for the application of composting. The C/N ratios suitable for a rapid increased in microbial activity were the lowest (17-24). A temperature of 62 degrees C during 48 h removed pathogenic microorganisms from rice straw and sewage sludge mixture. The results obtained in the present work suggested that these materials could be use in the composting process.
The use of trypsin to solubilize wall proteins from Candida albicans led to the identification of chitinase 2 as an enzyme covalently linked to the yeast wall structure
The use of trypsin to break proteins covalently linked to the yeast walls of Candida albicans released approx. 50% of the proteins, but also glucose and N-acetylglucosamine. Analysis by affinity chromatography indicated that glucose and/or N-acetylglucosamine formed part of the same supramolecular complexes with mannoproteins. These complexes would represent a new type of cell wall structuration in which beta-1,6 glucan and chitin are linked to proteins. An internal peptide from a 50-kDa protein released by trypsin was sequenced, showing 100% identity with chitinase 2 protein and 92% with chitinase 3. The electrophoretic mobility of the chitinase 2 protein was changed by treatment with Endo…
Transglutaminase activity is involved in Saccharomyces cerevisiae wall construction
Transglutaminase activity, which forms the interpeptidic cross-link N(epsilon)-(gamma-glutamyl)-lysine, was demonstrated in cell-free extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by incorporation of [(14)C]lysine into an exogenous acceptor, N,N'-dimethylcasein. Higher levels of the activity were present in the cell wall, which also contained endogenous acceptors. The enzyme activity in the wall was inhibited by cystamine, a known inhibitor of transglutaminase, and by EDTA, indicating a cation-dependent activity. After the endogenous wall acceptors were labelled radioactively by transglutaminase, extraction with SDS solubilized about 50% of the total radioactivity, while Zymolyase and chitinase each…
Isolation and characterization of anavirulent Candida albicansyeast monomorphic mutant
Mutagenesis of Candida albicans strain ATCC 26555 with N-methyl-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine followed by plating on solid yeast nitrogen base-N-acetylglucosamine medium at 37 degrees C yielded colony morphology variants that were characterized as forming smooth colonies, in contrast to the rough colonies formed by the parental strain. One yeast monomorphic mutant, CAL4, was studied in detail. Strain CAL4 is defective in filamentous growth, unable to form hyphae or pseudohyphae in vivo and in vitro. These filamentous structures are not elicited by commonly used external stimuli such as serum. The mutant had no obvious alterations in its mannan, glucan or chitin content. The total quantity of non…