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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Renz is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Renz.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Activation of spinach pullulanase by reduction results in a decrease in the number of isomeric forms.

Ilka Schindler; Andreas Renz; Franz X. Schmid; Erwin Beck

Spinach starch debranching enzyme, a limit dextrinase or pullulanase (EC 3.2.1.41), is a monomeric protein of 100 kDa that produces up to seven coexisting and mutually interconvertible isomers of different specific activity, a phenomenon that has been termed microheterogeneity and for which a structural explanation has not yet been presented. The enzyme can be activated by reduction, in particular by thiol reagents, and inactivated by oxidation and the concomitant change of the patterns of its isomeric forms could be quantified by chromatofocusing. The hypothesis was examined that reduction of the enzymes thiol groups shifts the isomer pattern towards the forms with a higher specific activity while oxidation favours the less active forms. Using TCEP as reductant only the form with the highest specific activity was obtained. This form was almost inaccessible for proteolysis by trypsin while the oxidized and GSH-activated enzyme yielded four peptides when treated with trypsin. Their sequence indicated cleavage predominantly of loops connecting the beta-strands and alpha-helices of the (beta/alpha)(8)-barrel which forms the catalytic site of the pullulanase. Formation of various disulphide bridges between the loops connecting the barrel structures -- predominantly on one side -- may be the reason for the microheterogeneity of the spinach pullulanase. In vivo, the enzyme maintains its activated state due to the high concentration of GSH in the chloroplast. However, the chloroplasts pH shifts from day (pH 8) to night (pH 7) and thus could also alter the activity of the protein in accordance with the required function in starch metabolism.


Archive | 1995

Dna molecules coding for debranching enzymes derived from plants

Jens Kossmann; Michael Emmermann; Ivar Virgin; Andreas Renz


Plant Journal | 2000

Antisense inhibition of plastidial phosphoglucomutase provides compelling evidence that potato tuber amyloplasts import carbon from the cytosol in the form of glucose-6-phosphate.

Eva Tauberger; Alisdair R. Fernie; Michael Emmermann; Andreas Renz; Jens Kossmann; Lothar Willmitzer; Richard N. Trethewey


Plant Journal | 1999

Antisense inhibition of the GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase reduces the ascorbate content in transgenic plants leading to developmental changes during senescence

Ruth Keller; Franziska Springer; Andreas Renz; Jens Kossmann


Archive | 1999

Isolation of a cDNA encoding a G1-cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (ICDK) from suspension cultured photoautotrophic Chenopodium rubrum L. (accession no. AJ002173) cells

Michelle D. Fountain; Andreas Renz; Erwin Beck


Biochemical Journal | 1998

cDNA sequence and heterologous expression of monomeric spinach pullulanase: multiple isomeric forms arise from the same polypeptide

Andreas Renz; Stephanie Schikora; Roland M. Schmid; Jens Kossmann; Erwin Beck


Biochemical Journal | 1998

Protein heterogeneity of spinach pullulanase results from the coexistence of interconvertible isomeric forms of the monomeric enzyme

Anette Henker; Ilka Schindler; Andreas Renz; Erwin Beck


Archive | 1997

Nucleotide Sequence of a cDNA Encoding a Mitotic Cyclin (Accession No. Y10161) from a Photoautotrophic Cell-Suspension Culture of Chenopodium rubrum L.

Andreas Renz; Birgit Schmelzl; Erwin Beck


Archive | 1997

Nucleotide sequence of a cDNA encoding a CDK34-protein kinase (accession no. Y10160) from a photoautotrophic cell-suspension culture of Chenopodium rubrum L.

Andreas Renz; Birgit Schmelzl; Erwin Beck


Archive | 1993

Regulation of a non-allosteric enzyme by protein microheterogeneity

Andreas Renz; Anette Henker; Erwin Beck

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Erwin Beck

University of Bayreuth

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