Search results for "malolactic enzyme"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Cloning and characterization of the genes encoding the malolactic enzyme and the malate permease of Leuconostoc oenos
1996
Using degenerated primers from conserved regions of the protein sequences of malic enzymes, we amplified a 324-bp DNA fragment by PCR from Leuconostoc oenos and used this fragment as a probe for screening a Leuconostoc oenos genomic bank. Of the 2,990 clones in the genomic bank examined, 7 with overlapping fragments were isolated by performing colony hybridization experiments. Sequencing 3,453 bp from overlapping fragments revealed two open reading frames that were 1,623 and 942 nucleotides long and were followed by a putative terminator structure. The first deduced protein (molecular weight, 59,118) is very similar (level of similarity, 66%) to the malolactic enzyme of Lactococcus lactis; …
A selective medium for the isolation of malolactic mutants of Leuconostoc oenos
1994
We have developed a selective medium for the isolation of Leuconostoc oenos mutants defective in malolactic fermentation. Forty per cent of colonies isolated directly on selective plates after UV mutagenesis had lost their ability to degrade malate. None of the tested mutants showed any detectable malolactic activity and all lacked a protein band corresponding in size to that of the malolactic enzyme. The availability of such mutants provides a valuable tool both for physiological and genetic research on malolactic fermentation.
Genetic organization of the mle locus and identification of a mleR-like gene from Leuconostoc oenos
1996
Characterization of the mle locus harboring the malolactic enzyme gene mleA and malate permease gene mleP from Leuconostoc oenos was completed in this study by mRNA analysis. Northern (RNA) blot experiments revealed a 2.6-kb transcript, suggesting an operon structure harboring mleA and mleP genes. Primer extension analysis showed that the mle operon has a single transcription start site located 17 nucleotides upstream of the ATG translation start site for the mleA gene. We found sequences, TTGACT and TATGAT (which are separated by 18 bp), that are closely related to the gram-positive and Escherichia coli consensus promoter sequences. Upstream of the mleA gene, an 894-bp open reading frame t…