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Dive into the research topics where Per Linå Jørgensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Per Linå Jørgensen.


Chemistry & Biology | 1999

Catalysis and specificity in enzymatic glycoside hydrolysis: a 2,5B conformation for the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate revealed by the structure of the Bacillus agaradhaerens family 11 xylanase

Elisabetta Sabini; Gerlind Sulzenbacher; Miroslava Dauter; Zbigniew Dauter; Per Linå Jørgensen; Martin Schülein; Claude Dupont; Gideon J. Davies; Keith S. Wilson

BACKGROUND The enzymatic hydrolysis of glycosides involves the formation and subsequent breakdown of a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate via oxocarbenium-ion-like transition states. The covalent intermediate may be trapped on-enzyme using 2-fluoro-substituted glycosides, which provide details of the intermediate conformation and noncovalent interactions between enzyme and oligosaccharide. Xylanases are important in industrial applications - in the pulp and paper industry, pretreating wood with xylanases decreases the amount of chlorine-containing chemicals used. Xylanases are structurally similar to cellulases but differ in their specificity for xylose-based, versus glucose-based, substrates. RESULTS The structure of the family 11 xylanase, Xyl11, from Bacillus agaradhaerens has been solved using X-ray crystallography in both native and xylobiosyl-enzyme intermediate forms at 1.78 A and 2.0 A resolution, respectively. The covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate has been trapped using a 2-fluoro-2-deoxy substrate with a good leaving group. Unlike covalent intermediate structures for glycoside hydrolases from other families, the covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate in family 11 adopts an unusual 2,5B conformation. CONCLUSIONS The 2,5B conformation found for the alpha-linked xylobiosyl-enzyme intermediate of Xyl11, unlike the 4C1 chair conformation observed for other systems, is consistent with the stereochemical constraints required of the oxocarbenium-ion-like transition state. Comparison of the Xyl11 covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate with the equivalent structure for the related family 12 endoglucanase, CelB, from Streptomyces lividans reveals the likely determinants for substrate specificity in this clan of glycoside hydrolases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Characterization and Three-Dimensional Structures of Two Distinct Bacterial Xyloglucanases from Families Gh5 and Gh12.

Tracey M. Gloster; Farid M. Ibatullin; Katherine Macauley; Jens M. Eklöf; Shirley M. Roberts; Johan P. Turkenburg; Mads Eskelund Bjørnvad; Per Linå Jørgensen; Steffen Danielsen; Katja Salomon Johansen; Torben Vedel Borchert; Keith S. Wilson; Harry Brumer; Gideon J. Davies

The plant cell wall is a complex material in which the cellulose microfibrils are embedded within a mesh of other polysaccharides, some of which are loosely termed “hemicellulose.” One such hemicellulose is xyloglucan, which displays a β-1,4-linked d-glucose backbone substituted with xylose, galactose, and occasionally fucose moieties. Both xyloglucan and the enzymes responsible for its modification and degradation are finding increasing prominence, reflecting both the drive for enzymatic biomass conversion, their role in detergent applications, and the utility of modified xyloglucans for cellulose fiber modification. Here we present the enzymatic characterization and three-dimensional structures in ligand-free and xyloglucan-oligosaccharide complexed forms of two distinct xyloglucanases from glycoside hydrolase families GH5 and GH12. The enzymes, Paenibacillus pabuli XG5 and Bacillus licheniformis XG12, both display open active center grooves grafted upon their respective (β/α)8 and β-jelly roll folds, in which the side chain decorations of xyloglucan may be accommodated. For the β-jelly roll enzyme topology of GH12, binding of xylosyl and pendant galactosyl moieties is tolerated, but the enzyme is similarly competent in the degradation of unbranched glucans. In the case of the (β/α)8 GH5 enzyme, kinetically productive interactions are made with both xylose and galactose substituents, as reflected in both a high specific activity on xyloglucan and the kinetics of a series of aryl glycosides. The differential strategies for the accommodation of the side chains of xyloglucan presumably facilitate the action of these microbial hydrolases in milieus where diverse and differently substituted substrates may be encountered.


Biotechnology Letters | 1997

Cloning and nucleotide sequence of a thermostable cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase gene from Thermoanaerobacter sp. ATCC 53627 and its expression in Escherichia coli

Steen Troels Jørgensen; Martin Tangney; R.L. Starnes; K. Amemiya; Per Linå Jørgensen

A gene, cgtA, encoding an extremely thermostable cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase) was cloned from a thermophilic anaerobe, Thermoanaerobacter sp. ATCC 53627, and expressed in Escherichia coli. DNA and protein sequencing revealed that the mature enzyme of 683 amino acid residues (MW 75 kDa) was preceded by a signal peptide of 27 amino acid residues. The sequence of the Thermoanaerobacter CGTase was similar to sequences of Bacillus CGTases, with more than 58% identity, and very similar (89% identity) to a CGTase enzyme from Thermoanaerobacterium thermosulfurogenes.


Gene | 1990

In vivo genetic engineering: homologous recombination as a tool for plasmid construction

Per Linå Jørgensen; Christian Hansen; Gitte Bak Poulsen; Børge Diderichsen

This paper describes a novel method for creating exact DNA fusions between any two points in a plasmid carried in Bacillus subtilis. It exploits the homologous in vivo recombination between directly repeated sequences that can be established by insertion of a synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotide. The method was used to enhance the productivity in B. subtilis of a cloned alpha-amylase (Amy)-encoding gene originating from Bacillus stearothermophilus. Thus, an exact fusion between nucleotide sequences encoding the expression signals, including the signal peptide, of a Bacillus licheniformis Amy-encoding gene and the mature Amy of B. stearothermophilus, was created. The resulting hybrid translational product was processed correctly in B. subtilis during secretion, giving rise to an Amy identical to the mature Amy secreted by B. stearothermophilus.


Archive | 1996

Introduction of DNA into bacillus strains by conjugation

Martin Tangney; Christian Hansen; Poul Erik Pedersen; Per Linå Jørgensen; Steen Troels Jørgensen


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1995

A new method for integration and stable DNA amplification in poorly transformable bacilli

Martin Tangney; Per Linå Jørgensen; Børge Diderichsen; Steen Troels Jørgensen


Proteins | 1995

Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of an amylopullulanase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus woesei

Stefan Knapp; Andrea Rüdiger; Garabed Antranikian; Per Linå Jørgensen; Rudolf Ladenstein


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1991

Cloning of a chromosomal α-amylase gene from Bacillus stearothermophilus

Per Linå Jørgensen; Gitte Bak Poulsen; Børge Diderichsen


Archive | 1997

Extracellular expression of cellulose binding domains (CBD) using Bacillus

Mads Eskelund Bjørnvad; Martin Schülein; Per Linå Jørgensen


Archive | 1992

Thermostable Fervidobacterium pullulanases

Garabed Antranikian; Per Linå Jørgensen

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