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1.
In the denitrifying member of the beta-Proteobacteria Thauera aromatica, the anaerobic metabolism of aromatic acids such as benzoate or 2-aminobenzoate is initiated by the formation of the coenzyme A (CoA) thioester, benzoyl-CoA and 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA, respectively. Both aromatic substrates were transformed to the acyl-CoA intermediate by a single CoA ligase (AMP forming) that preferentially acted on benzoate. This benzoate-CoA ligase was purified and characterized as a 57-kDa monomeric protein. Based on V(max)/K(m), the specificity constant for 2-aminobenzoate was 15 times lower than that for benzoate; this may be the reason for the slower growth on 2-aminobenzoate. The benzoate-CoA ligase gene was cloned and sequenced and was found not to be part of the gene cluster encoding the general benzoyl-CoA pathway of anaerobic aromatic metabolism. Rather, it was located in a cluster of genes coding for a novel aerobic benzoate oxidation pathway. In line with this finding, the same CoA ligase was induced during aerobic growth with benzoate. A deletion mutant not only was unable to grow anaerobically on benzoate or 2-aminobenzoate, but also aerobic growth on benzoate was affected. This suggests that benzoate induces a single benzoate-CoA ligase. The product of benzoate activation, benzoyl-CoA, then acts as inducer of separate anaerobic or aerobic pathways of benzoyl-CoA, depending on whether oxygen is lacking or present.  相似文献   

2.
The anaerobic metabolism of 2-hydroxybenzoic acid (salicylic acid) was studied in a denitrifying bacterium. Cells grown with 2-hydroxybenzoate were simultaneously adapted to degrade benzoate. Extract of these cells formed benzoate or benzoyl-CoA when incubated under reducing conditions with salicylate, MgATP, and coenzyme A, suggesting a degradation of 2-hydroxybenzoate via benzoate or benzoyl-CoA. This suggestion was supported by enzyme activity measurements. In extracts of 2-hydroxybenzoate-grown cells, the following enzyme activities were detected: two CoA ligases, one specific for 2-hydroxybenzoate, the other for benzoate, and two different enzyme activities catalyzing the reductive transformation of 2-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA. These findings suggest a degradation of salicylic acid by two new enzymes, 2-hydroxybenzoate-CoA ligase (AMP-forming) and 2-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase (dehydroxylating), catalyzing (1) 2-hydroxybenzoate + MgATP + CoASH → 2-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA + MgAMP + PPi (2) 2-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA + 2[H] → benzoyl-CoA + H2O Benzoyl-CoA was dearomatized by reduction of the ring. This represents another case in which benzoyl-CoA is a central intermediate in anaerobic aromatic metabolism. Received: 1 February 1996 / Accepted: 24 February 1996  相似文献   

3.
The enzymes catalyzing the formation of coenzyme A (CoA) thioesters of benzoate and 2-aminobenzoate were studied in a denitrifying Pseudomonas sp. anaerobically grown with these aromatic acids and nitrate as sole carbon and energy sources. Three different rather specific aromatic acyl-CoA ligases, E1, E2, and E3, were found which catalyze the formation of CoA thioesters of benzoate, fluorobenzoates, and 2-aminobenzoate. ATP is cleaved into AMP and pyrophosphate. The enzymes were purified, their N-terminal amino acid sequences were determined, and their catalytic and molecular properties were studied. Cells anaerobically grown on benzoate and nitrate contain one CoA ligase (AMP forming) for benzoic acid (E1). It is a homodimer of Mr 120,000 which prefers benzoate as a substrate but shows some activity also with 2-aminobenzoate and fluorobenzoates, although with lower Km. Cells anaerobically grown on 2-aminobenzoate and nitrate contain three different CoA ligases for aromatic acids. The first one is identical with benzoate-CoA ligase (E1). The second enzyme is a 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase (E2). It is a monomer of Mr 60,000 which prefers 2-aminobenzoate but also activates benzoate, fluorobenzoates and, less effectively, 2-methylbenzoate, with lower affinities to the latter substrates. The enzymes E1 and E2 have similar activity levels; a third minor CoA ligase activity is due to a different 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase. The enzyme (E3) is a monomer of Mr, 65,000 which 2-aminobenzoate pathway (U. Altenschmidt, C. Eckerskorn, and G. Fuchs, Eur. J. Biochem. 194:647-653, 1990); apparently, it is not completely repressed under anaerobic conditions and therefore also is induced to a small extent by 2-aminobenzoate under anaerobic growth conditions.  相似文献   

4.
A denitrifying Pseudomonas sp. is able to oxidize aromatic compounds compounds completely to CO2, both aerobically and anaerobically. It is shown that benzoate is aerobically oxidized by a new degradation pathway via benzoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA. The organism grew aerobically with benzoate, 3-hydroxybenzoate, and gentisate; catechol, 2-hydroxybenzoate, and protocatechuate were not used, and 4-hydroxybenzoate was a poor substrate. Mutants were obtained which were not able to utilize benzoate as the sole carbon source aerobically but still used 3-hydroxybenzoate or gentisate. Simultaneous adaptation experiments with whole cells seemingly suggested a sequential induction of enzymes of a benzoate oxidation pathway via 3-hydroxybenzoate and gentisate. Cells grown aerobically with benzoate contained a benzoate-CoA ligase (AMP forming) (0.1 mumol min-1 mg-1) which converted benzoate but not 3-hydroxybenzoate into its CoA thioester. The enzyme of 130 kDa composed of two identical subunits of 56 kDa was purified and characterized. Cells grown aerobically with 3-hydroxybenzoate contained a similarly active CoA ligase for 3-hydroxybenzoate, 3-hydroxybenzoate-CoA ligase (AMP forming). Extracts from cells grown aerobically with benzoate catalyzed a benzoyl-CoA- and flavin adenine dinucleotide-dependent oxidation of NADPH with a specific activity of at least 25 nmol NADPH oxidized min-1 mg of protein-1; NADH and benzoate were not used. This new enzyme, benzoyl-CoA 3-monooxygenase, was specifically induced during aerobic growth with benzoate and converted [U-14C]benzoyl-CoA stoichiometrically to [14C]3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA.  相似文献   

5.
In the beta-proteobacterium Azoarcus evansii, the aerobic metabolism of 2-aminobenzoate (anthranilate), phenylacetate, and benzoate proceeds via three unprecedented pathways. The pathways have in common that all three substrates are initially activated to coenzyme A (CoA) thioesters and further processed in this form. The two initial steps of 2-aminobenzoate metabolism are catalyzed by a 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase forming 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA and by a 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA monooxygenase/reductase (ACMR) forming 2-amino-5-oxo-cyclohex-1-ene-1-carbonyl-CoA. Eight genes possibly involved in this pathway, including the genes encoding 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase and ACMR, were detected, cloned, and sequenced. The sequence of the ACMR gene showed that this enzyme is an 87-kDa fusion protein of two flavoproteins, a monooxygenase (similar to salicylate monooxygenase) and a reductase (similar to old yellow enzyme). Besides the genes for the initial two enzymes, genes for three enzymes of a beta-oxidation pathway were found. A substrate binding protein of an ABC transport system, a MarR-like regulator, and a putative translation inhibitor protein were also encoded by the gene cluster. The data suggest that, after monooxygenation/reduction of 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA, the nonaromatic CoA thioester intermediate is metabolized further by beta-oxidation. This implies that all subsequent intermediates are CoA thioesters and that the alicyclic carbon ring is not cleaved oxygenolytically. Surprisingly, the cluster of eight genes, which form an operon, is duplicated. The two copies differ only marginally within the coding regions but differ substantially in the respective intergenic regions. Both copies of the genes are coordinately expressed in cells grown aerobically on 2-aminobenzoate.  相似文献   

6.
In the denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica, the central intermediate of anaerobic aromatic metabolism, benzoyl-coenzyme A (CoA), is dearomatized by the ATP-dependent benzoyl-CoA reductase to cyclohexa-1,5-diene-1-carbonyl-CoA (dienoyl-CoA). The dienoyl-CoA is further metabolized by a series of beta-oxidation-like reactions of the so-called benzoyl-CoA degradation pathway resulting in ring cleavage. Recently, evidence was obtained that obligately anaerobic bacteria that use aromatic growth substrates do not contain an ATP-dependent benzoyl-CoA reductase. In these bacteria, the reactions involved in dearomatization and cleavage of the aromatic ring have not been shown, so far. In this work, a characteristic enzymatic step of the benzoyl-CoA pathway in obligate anaerobes was demonstrated and characterized. Dienoyl-CoA hydratase activities were determined in extracts of Geobacter metallireducens (iron reducing), Syntrophus aciditrophicus (fermenting), and Desulfococcus multivorans (sulfate reducing) cells grown with benzoate. The benzoate-induced genes putatively coding for the dienoyl-CoA hydratases in the benzoate degraders G. metallireducens and S. aciditrophicus were heterologously expressed and characterized. Both gene products specifically catalyzed the reversible hydration of dienoyl-CoA to 6-hydroxycyclohexenoyl-CoA (Km, 80 and 35 microM; Vmax, 350 and 550 micromol min(-1) mg(-1), respectively). Neither enzyme had significant activity with cyclohex-1-ene-1-carbonyl-CoA or crotonyl-CoA. The results suggest that benzoyl-CoA degradation proceeds via dienoyl-CoA and 6-hydroxycyclohexanoyl-CoA in strictly anaerobic bacteria. The steps involved in dienoyl-CoA metabolism appear identical in all nonphotosynthetic anaerobic bacteria, although totally different benzene ring-dearomatizing enzymes are present in facultative and obligate anaerobes.  相似文献   

7.
Toluene and related aromatic compounds can be mineralized to CO2 under anoxic conditions. Oxidation requires new dehydrogenase-type enzymes and water as oxygen source, as opposed to the aerobic enzymatic attack by oxygenases, which depends on molecular oxygen. We studied the anaerobic process in the denitrifying bacterium Thauera sp. strain K172. Toluene and a number of its fluoro-, chloro- and methyl-analogues were transformed to benzoate and the respective analogues by whole cells and by cell extracts. The transformation of xylene isomers to methylbenzoate isomers suggests that xylene degradation is similarly initiated by oxidation of one of the methyl groups. Toluene oxidation was strongly, but reversibly inhibited by benzyl alcohol. The in vitro oxidation of the methyl group was coupled to the reduction of nitrate, required glycerol for activity, and was inhibited by oxygen. Cells also contained benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase (NAD+), benzaldehyde dehydrogenase (NADP+), benzoate-CoA ligase (AMP-forming), and benzoyl-CoA reductase (dearomatizing). The toluene-oxidizing activity was induced when cells were grown anaerobically with toluene and also with benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde, suggesting that benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde acts as inducer. The other enzymes were similarly active in cells grown with toluene, benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, or benzoate. This is the first in vitro study of anaerobic oxidation of an aromatic hydrocarbon and of the whole-cell regulation of the toluene-oxidizing enzyme.Dedicated to Prof. Achim Trebst  相似文献   

8.
The initial steps of anaerobic 4-hydroxybenzoate degradation were studied in whole cells and cell extracts of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. Illuminated suspensions of cells that had been grown anaerobically on 4-hydroxybenzoate and were assayed under anaerobic conditions took up [U-14C]4-hydroxybenzoate at a rate of 0.6 nmol min-1 mg of protein-1. Uptake occurred with high affinity (apparent Km = 0.3 microM), was energy dependent, and was insensitive to external pH in the range of 6.5 to 8.2 Very little free 4-hydroxybenzoate was found associated with cells, but a range of intracellular products was formed after 20-s incubations of whole cells with labeled substrate. When anaerobic pulse-chase experiments were carried out with cells incubated on ice or in darkness, 4-hydroxybenzoyl coenzyme A (4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA) was formed early and disappeared immediately after addition of excess unlabeled substrate, as would be expected of an early intermediate in 4-hydroxybenzoate metabolism. A 4-hydroxybenzoate-CoA ligase activity with an average specific activity of 0.7 nmol min-1 mg of protein-1 was measured in the soluble protein fraction of cells grown anaerobically on 4-hydroxybenzoate. 4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA was the sole product formed from labeled 4-hydroxybenzoate in the ligase reaction mixture. 4-Hydroxybenzoate uptake and ligase activities were present in cells grown anaerobically with benzoate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, and 4-aminobenzoate and were not detected in succinate-grown cells. These results indicate that the high-affinity uptake of 4-hydroxybenzoate by R. palustris is due to rapid conversion of the free acid to its CoA derivative by a CoA ligase and that this is also the initial step of anaerobic 4-hydroxybenzoate degradation.  相似文献   

9.
The initial reactions involved in anaerobic aniline degradation by the sulfate-reducing Desulfobacterium anilini were studied. Experiments for substrate induction indicated the presence of a common pathway for aniline and 4-aminobenzoate, different from that for degradation of 2-aminobenzoate, 2-hydroxybenzoate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, or phenol. Degradation of aniline by dense cell suspensions depended on CO2 whereas 4-aminobenzoate degradation did not. If acetyl-CoA oxidation was inhibited by cyanide, benzoate accumulated during degradation of aniline or 4-aminobenzoate, indicating an initial carboxylation of aniline to 4-aminobenzoate, and further degradation via benzoate of both substrates. Extracts of alinine or 4-aminobenzoategrown cells activated 4-aminobenzoate to 4-aminobenzoyl-CoA in the presence of CoA, ATP and Mg2+. 4-Aminobenzoyl-CoA-synthetase showed a K m for 4-aminobenzoate lower than 10 M and an activity of 15.8 nmol · min-1 · mg-1. 4-Aminobenzoyl-CoA was reductively deaminated to benzoyl-CoA by cell extracts in the presence of low-potential electron donors such as titanium citrate or cobalt sepulchrate (2.1 nmol · min-1 · mg-1). Lower activities for the reductive deamination were measured with NADH or NADPH. Reductive deamination was also indicated by benzoate accumulation during 4-aminobenzoate degradation in cell suspensions under sulfate limitation. The results provide evidence that aniline is degraded via carboxylation to 4-aminobenzoate, which is activated to 4-aminobenzoyl-CoA and further metabolized by reductive deamination to benzoyl-CoA.  相似文献   

10.
Denitrifying bacteria degrade many different aromatic compounds anaerobically via the well-described benzoyl-CoA pathway. We have shown recently that the denitrifiers Azoarcus anaerobius and Thauera aromatica strain AR-1 use a different pathway for anaerobic degradation of resorcinol (1,3-dihydroxybenzene) and 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, respectively. Both substrates are converted to hydroxyhydroquinone (1,2,4-trihydroxybenzene). In the membrane fraction of T. aromatica strain AR-1 cells grown with 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, a hydroxyhydroquinone-dehydrogenating activity of 74 nmol min(-1)(mg protein)-1 was found. This activity was significantly lower in benzoate-grown cells. Benzoate-grown cells were not induced for degradation of 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, and cells grown with 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate degraded benzoate only at a very low rate. With a substrate mixture of benzoate plus 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate, the cells showed diauxic growth. Benzoate was degraded first, while complete degradation of 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate occurred only after a long lag phase. The 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate-oxidizing and the hydroxyhydroquinone-dehydrogenating activities were fully induced only during 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate degradation. Synthesis of benzoyl-CoA reductase appeared to be significantly lower in 3,5-dihydroxybenzoate-grown cells as shown by immunoblotting. These results confirm that T. aromatica strain AR-1 harbors, in addition to the benzoyl-CoA pathway, a second, mechanistically distinct pathway for anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds. This pathway is inducible and subject to catabolite repression by benzoate.  相似文献   

11.
Differential induction of enzymes involved in anaerobic metabolism of aromatic substrates was studied in the denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica. This metabolism is divided into (1) peripheral reactions transforming the aromatic growth substrates to the common intermediate benzoyl-CoA, (2) the central benzoyl-CoA pathway comprising ring-reduction of benzoyl-CoA and subsequent β-oxidation to 3-hydroxypimelyl-CoA, and (3) the pathway of β-oxidation of 3-hydroxypimelyl-CoA to three acetyl-CoA and CO2. Regulation was studied by three methods. 1. Determination of protein patterns of cells grown on different substrates. This revealed several strongly substrate-induced polypeptides that were missing in cells grown on benzoate or other intermediates of the respective metabolic pathways. 2. Measurement of activities of known enzymes involved in this metabolism in cells grown on different substrates. The enzyme pattern found is consistent with the regulatory pattern deduced from simultaneous adaptation of cells to utilisation of other aromatic substrates. 3. Immunological detection of catabolic enzymes in cells grown on different substrates. Benzoate-CoA ligase and 4-hydroxybenzoate-CoA ligase were detected only in cells yielding the respective enzyme activity. However, presence of the subunits of benzoyl-CoA reductase and 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase was also recorded in some cell batches lacking enzyme activity. This possibly indicates an additional level of regulation on protein level for these two reductases. Received: 22 December 1997 / Accepted: 12 May 1998  相似文献   

12.
13.
The initial reactions possibly involved in the acrobic and anaerobic metabolism of aromatic acids by a denitrifying Pseudomonas strain were studied. Several acyl CoA synthetases were found supporting the view that activation of several aromatic acids preceeds degradation. A benzoyl CoA synthetase activity (AMP forming) (apparent K m values of the enzyme from nitrate grown cells: 0.01 mM benzoate, 0.2 mM ATP, 0.2 mM coenzyme A) was present in aerobically grown and anaerobically, nitrate grown cells when benzoate or other aromatic acids were present. In addition to benzoate and fluorobenzoates, also 2-amino-benzoate was activated, albeit with unfavorable K m (0.5 mM 2-aminobenzoate). A 2-aminobenzoyl CoA synthetase (AMP forming) was induced both aerobically and anaerobically with 2-aminobenzoate as growth substrate which had a similar substrate spectrum but a low K m for 2-aminobenzoate (<0.02 mM). Anaerobic growth on 4-hydroxybenzoate induced a 4-hydroxybenzoyl CoA synthetase, and cyclohexanecarboxylate induced another synthetase. In contrast, 3-hydroxybenzoate and phenyl-acetate grown anaerobic cells appeared not to activate the respective substrates at sufficient rates. Contrary to an earlier report extracts from aerobic and anaerobic 2-aminobenzoate grown cells catalysed a 2-aminobenzoyl CoA-dependent NADH oxidation. This activity was 10–20 times higher in aerobic cells and appeared to be induced by 2-aminobenzoate and oxygen. In vitro, 2-aminobenzoyl CoA reduction was dependent on 2-aminobenzoyl CoA NAD(P)H, and oxygen. A novel mechanism of aerobic 2-aminobenzoate degradation is suggested, which proceeds via 2-aminobenzoyl CoA.  相似文献   

14.
15.
A new pathway for the aerobic metabolism of 2-aminobenzoate which proceeds via 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA has recently been revealed in a Pseudomonas strain KB 740-. The enzyme catalyzing the first step, the formation of the coenzyme A (CoA) thioester of 2-aminobenzoate, is 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase. It was purified from cells aerobically grown with 2-aminobenzoate as sole carbon, energy, and nitrogen source and characterized. It is rather specific for 2-aminobenzoate, but activates also benzoate and fluorobenzoates. ATP was cleaved into AMP and pyrophosphate. The ligase is a monomer of M(r) 65,000, as determined by gel filtration and SDS/PAGE. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined and the gene locus of the enzyme was identified by Southern blot hybridization on a small 8-kbp plasmid pKB 740. The 1.8-kb nucleotide sequence of the 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase gene and the derived amino acid sequence of the native enzyme (597 residues) are reported.  相似文献   

16.
The denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica strain AR-1 grows anaerobically with protocatechuate (3,4-dihydroxybenzoate (DHB)) as sole energy and carbon source. This bacterium harbors two distinct pathways for degradation of aromatic compounds, the benzoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) pathway for benzoate degradation and the hydroxyhydroquinone (HHQ) pathway for degradation of 3,5-DHB. In order to elucidate whether protocatechuate is degraded via the benzoyl-CoA or the HHQ pathway, induction experiments were carried out. Dense suspensions of cells grown on protocatechuate or benzoate readily degraded benzoate and protocatechuate but not 3,5-DHB. Dense suspensions of 3,5-DHB-grown cells degraded 3,4- and 3,5-DHB at similar rates, but benzoate was not degraded. 3,5-DHB hydroxylating activity was found only in cells grown with this substrate. HHQ dehydrogenase activity was found in extracts of cells grown with 3,5-DHB and at a low rate also in protocatechuate-grown cells, but not in extracts of cells grown with benzoate. Activities of protocatechuyl-CoA synthetase and protocatechuyl-CoA reductase leading to 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA were found in extracts of cells grown with protocatechuate. There was no repression of the HHQ pathway by the presence of protocatechuate, unlike by degradation of benzoate. We conclude that protocatechuate is not degraded via the HHQ pathway because there was no evidence of a hydroxylation reaction involved in this process. Instead, our results strongly suggest that protocatechuate is degraded via a pathway which connects to the benzoyl-CoA route of degradation.  相似文献   

17.
Pseudomonas KB 740 degrades 2-aminobenzoate aerobically via a chimeric pathway which combines characteristics of anaerobic and aerobic aromatic metabolism. Atypically, 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA is an intermediate, and the activated aromatic acid is not only hydroxylated but also reduced to an alicyclic compound in a single step. The bacterial strain possesses a small plasmid, pKB 740, which carries all essential information of this new pathway. Its total nucleotide sequence was determined. It consists of 8280 bp and contains the genes for the two initial enzymes of the pathway; 2-aminobenzoate-CoA ligase catalyzes the activation of the aromatic acid, and the flavoenzyme 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA monooxygenase/reductase catalyzes the hydroxylation (monooxygenase activity) and subsequent reduction (reductase activity) of the aromatic ring of 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA. Furthermore, five open reading frames (ORF) possibly coding for polypeptides are on the plasmid. Putative promoter sequences were found for two of the ORF. A nucleotide sequence able to form a possible termination loop was located downstream of the gene for 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA monooxygenase/reductase. This gene consists of 2190 bases. The deduced amino acid sequence of the protein (730 residues; calculated molecular mass of the native 729-residue protein, 83,559 Da) contains a consensus sequence for an FAD-binding site at the N-terminus and a possible NAD(P)H-binding site approximately 150 amino acid residues apart from the N-terminus. The monooxygenase/reductase shows low sequence similarity to the flavoprotein salicylate hydroxylase. Functional and evolutionary aspects of this work are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
A new rod-shaped, gram-negative, non-sporing sulfate reducer, strain mAB1, was enriched and isolated from marine sediment samples with 3-aminobenzoate as sole electron and carbon source. Strain mAB1 degraded 3-aminobenzoate completely to CO2 and NH3 with stoichiometric reduction of sulfate to sulfide. Cells contained carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, cytochromes, and sulfite reductase P582. Strain mAB1 degraded also benzoate, 4-aminobenzoate, hydroxybenzoates, and some aliphatic compounds. Besides sulfates, also sulfite was reduced with 3-aminobenzoate as electron donor, but not thiosulfate, sulfur, nitrate, or fumarate. The strain grew in sulfide-reduced mineral medium supplemented with 7 vitamins. Strain mAB1 was tentatively affiliated with the genus Desulfobacterium. Experiments with dense cell supsensions showed benzoate accumulation during 3-aminobenzoate degradation under conditions of sulfate limitation or cyanide inhibition. 3-Aminobenzoate was activated to 3-aminobenzoyl-CoA by cell extracts in the presence of ATP, coenzyme A, and Mg2+. Acitivity of 3-aminobenzoyl-CoA synthetase was 16 nmol per min and mg protein, with a KM for 3-aminobenzoate lower than 50 M. Cell extract of 3-aminobenzoate-grown cells activated also 3-hydroxybenzoate (31.7 nmol per min and mg protein) and benzoate (2.3 nmol per min and mg protein), but not 2-aminobenzoate or 4-aminobenzoate. In the presence of NADH of NADPH, 3-aminobenzoyl-CoA was further metabolized to a not yet identified reduced product.Freshwater enrichments with 3-aminobenzoate in the absence of an extenal electron acceptor led to a stable methanogenic enrichment culture consisting of three types of bacteria. 3-Aminobenzoate was degraded completely to CO2 and stoichiometric amounts of CH4, with intermediary acetate accumulation.  相似文献   

19.
20.
A soluble benzoate-coenzyme A (CoA) ligase was purified from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. Synthesis of the enzyme was induced when cells were grown anaerobically in light with benzoate as the sole carbon source. Purification by chromatography successively on hydroxylapatite, phenyl-Sepharose, and hydroxylapatite yielded an electrophoretically homogeneous enzyme preparation with a specific activity of 25 mumol/min per mg of protein and a molecular weight of 60,000. The purified enzyme was insensitive to oxygen and catalyzed the Mg2+ ATP-dependent formation of acyl-CoA from carboxylate and free reduced CoA, with high specificity for benzoate and 2-fluorobenzoate. Apparent Km values of 0.6 to 2 microM for benzoate, 2 to 3 microM for ATP, and 90 to 120 microM for reduced CoA were determined. The reaction product, benzoyl-CoA, was an effective inhibitor of the ligase reaction. The kinetic properties of the enzyme match the kinetics of substrate uptake by whole cells and confirm a role for benzoate-CoA ligase in maintaining entry of benzoate into cells as well as in catalyzing the first step in the anaerobic degradation of benzoate by R. palustris.  相似文献   

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