Deacylation of acylamino compounds other than penicillins by the cell-bound penicillin acylase of Escherichia coli.
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ABSTRACT: 1. The action of the penicillin acylase enzyme of Escherichia coli N.C.I.B. 8743 on non-penicillin substrates suggests that the enzyme is an amidohydrolase. 2. The rates of hydrolysis for a small group of penicillins closely parallel those for a corresponding series of N-acylglycines. 3. For a series of E. coli strains, ability to cause rapid hydrolysis of phenylacetylglycine is correlated with ability to hydrolyse benzylpenicillin. 4. Amides and N-acylglycines are hydrolysed to the corresponding acids. The phenylacetyl group is hydrolysed most readily. Benzamide and beta-phenylpropionamide are not substrates. In a series of aliphatic acylglycines only valeryl- and hexanoyl-glycine are substrates. 5. Acylated l- but not d-alpha-amino acids are hydrolysed. d-alpha-Hydroxyphenylacetamide is a better substrate than the l compound.
SUBMITTER: Cole M
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1185201 | biostudies-other | 1969 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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