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1.
The crystal structure of the 4-chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase from the Gram-positive bacterium Rhodococcus opacus (erythropolis) 1CP, a Fe(III) ion-containing enzyme involved in the aerobic biodegradation of chloroaromatic compounds, has been solved by multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion using the weak anomalous signal of the two catalytic irons (1 Fe/257 amino acids) and refined at a 2.5 A resolution (R(free) 28.7%; R factor 21.4%). The analysis of the structure and its comparison with the structure of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus ADP1 (Ac 1,2-CTD) highlight significant differences between these enzymes. The general topology of the present enzyme comprises two catalytic domains (one for each subunit) related by a noncrystallographic 2-fold axis and separated by a common alpha-helical zipper motif consisting of five N-terminal helices from each subunit; furthermore the C-terminal tail is shortened significantly with respect to the known Ac 1,2-CTD. The presence of two phospholipids binding in a hydrophobic tunnel along the dimer axis is shown here to be a common feature for this class of enzyme. The active site cavity presents several dissimilarities with respect to the known catechol-cleaving enzyme. The catalytic nonheme iron(III) ion is bound to the side chains of Tyr-134, Tyr-169, His-194, and His-196, and a cocrystallized benzoate ion, bound to the metal center, reveals details on a novel mode of binding of bidentate inhibitors and a distinctive hydrogen bond network with the surrounding ligands. Among the amino acid residues expected to interact with substrates, several are different from the corresponding analogs of Ac 1,2-CTD: Asp-52, Ala-53, Gly-76, Phe-78, and Cys-224; in addition, regions of largely conserved amino acid residues in the catalytic cleft show different shapes resulting from several substantial backbone and side chain shifts. The present structure is the first of intradiol dioxygenases that specifically catalyze the cleavage of chlorocatechols, key intermediates in the aerobic catabolism of toxic chloroaromatics.  相似文献   

2.
The combined analysis of peptide mass fingerprinting and 2-DE/MS using the induced and selected protein spots following growth of Pseudomonas sp. DU102 on benzoate or p-hydroxybenzoate revealed not only alpha- and beta-subunits of protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase but also catechol 1,2-dioxygenase responsible for ortho-pathway through ring-cleavage of aromatic compounds. Toluate 1,2-dioxygenase and p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase were also identified. Purification of intradiol dioxygenases such as catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase from the benzoate or p-hydroxybenzoate culture makes it possible to trace the biodegradation pathway of strain DU102 for monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Interestingly, vanillin-induced protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase was identical in amino acid sequences with protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase from p-hydroxybenzoate.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: Catechol dioxygenases catalyze the ring cleavage of catechol and its derivatives in either an intradiol or extradiol manner. These enzymes have a key role in the degradation of aromatic molecules in the environment by soil bacteria. Catechol 2, 3-dioxygenase catalyzes the incorporation of dioxygen into catechol and the extradiol ring cleavage to form 2-hydroxymuconate semialdehyde. Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (metapyrocatechase, MPC) from Pseudomonas putida mt-2 was the first extradiol dioxygenase to be obtained in a pure form and has been studied extensively. The lack of an MPC structure has hampered the understanding of the general mechanism of extradiol dioxygenases. RESULTS: The three-dimensional structure of MPC has been determined at 2.8 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The enzyme is a homotetramer with each subunit folded into two similar domains. The structure of the MPC subunit resembles that of 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl 1,2-dioxygenase, although there is low amino acid sequence identity between these enzymes. The active-site structure reveals a distorted tetrahedral Fe(II) site with three endogenous ligands (His153, His214 and Glu265), and an additional molecule that is most probably acetone. CONCLUSIONS: The present structure of MPC, combined with those of two 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl 1,2-dioxygenases, reveals a conserved core region of the active site comprising three Fe(II) ligands (His153, His214 and Glu265), one tyrosine (Tyr255) and two histidine (His199 and His246) residues. The results suggest that extradiol dioxygenases employ a common mechanism to recognize the catechol ring moiety of various substrates and to activate dioxygen. One of the conserved histidine residues (His199) seems to have important roles in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

4.
The isofunctional enzymes of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase from species of Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, Nocardia, Alcaligenes, and Corynebacterium oxidize 3-methylcatechol according to both the intradiol and extradiol cleavage patterns. However, the enzyme preparations from Brevibacterium and Arthrobacter have only the intradiol cleavage activity. Comparison of substrate specificity among these isofunctional dioxygenases shows striking differences in the oxidation of 3-methylcatechol, 4-methylcatechol and pyrogallol.  相似文献   

5.
Cleavage of pyrogallol by non-heme iron-containing dioxygenases   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Both intradiol and proximal extradiol dioxygenases are thought to produce the same product, alpha-hydroxymuconic acid, when pyrogallol (3-hydroxycatechol) is used as a substrate. However, when these enzymes were reacted with pyrogallol, they gave different products. A proximal extradiol dioxygenase, metapyrocatechase (catechol:oxygen 2,3-d-oxidoreductase (decyclizing), EC 1.13.11.2), gave a product having an absorption maximum at 290 nm, which was gradually converted to a more stable compound having an absorption maximum at 239 nm. On the other hand, an intradiol dioxygenase, protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase (protocatechuate:oxygen 3,4-oxidoreductase (decyclizing), EC 1.13.11.3), gave a product having an absorption maximum at 300 nm. Based on the spectral data and direct comparison with authentic samples, the primary products obtained by the action of the former and the latter enzymes were identified as alpha-hydroxymuconic acid and 2-pyrone-6-carboxylic acid, respectively. While another intradiol dioxygenase, pyrocatechase (catechol:oxygen 1,2-oxidoreductase (decyclizing), EC 1.13.11.1), gave a mixture of nearly equimolar amounts of these two compounds. Isotope labeling experiments indicated that 1 atom of oxygen was incorporated in 2-pyrone-6-carboxylic acid from the atmosphere. Based on these findings, the reaction mechanism for the formation of 2-pyrone-6-carboxylic acid is discussed. This may be the first experimental evidence indicating the presence of a seven-membered lactone intermediate during the oxygenative cleavage of catechols, proposed by Hamilton (Hamilton, G.A. (1974) in Molecular Mechanisms of Oxygen Activation (Hayaishi, O., ed) pp. 405-451, Academic Press, New York).  相似文献   

6.
The crystallographic structures of 4-chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase (4-CCD) complexes with 3,5-dichlorocatechol, protocatechuate (3,4-dihydroxybenzoate), hydroxyquinol (benzen-1,2,4-triol) and pyrogallol (benzen-1,2,3-triol), which act as substrates or inhibitors of the enzyme, have been determined and analyzed. 4-CCD from the Gram-positive bacterium Rhodococcus opacus 1CP is a Fe(III) ion containing enzyme specialized in the aerobic biodegradation of chlorocatechols.The structures of the 4-CCD complexes show that the catechols bind the catalytic iron ion in a bidentate mode displacing Tyr169 and the benzoate ion (found in the native enzyme structure) from the metal coordination sphere, as found in other adducts of intradiol dioxygenases with substrates. The analysis of the present structures allowed to identify the residues selectively involved in recognition of the diverse substrates.Furthermore the structural comparison with the corresponding complexes of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase from the same Rhodococcus strain (Rho-1,2-CTD) highlights significant differences in the binding of the tested catechols to the active site of the enzyme, particularly in the orientation of the aromatic ring substituents. As an example the 3-substituted catechols are bound with the substituent oriented towards the external part of the 4-CCD active site cavity, whereas in the Rho-1,2-CTD complexes the 3-substituents were placed in the internal position. The present crystallographic study shed light on the mechanism that allows substrate recognition inside this class of high specific enzymes involved in the biodegradation of recalcitrant pollutants.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract The extradiol ring-cleavage dioxygenases derived from seven different Pseudomonas strains were expressed in Escherichia coli and the substrate specificities were investigated for a variety of catecholic compounds. The substrate range of four 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenases from biphenyl-utilizing bacteria, 3-methylcatechol dioxygenase from toluene utilizing Pseudomonas putida F1, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase from a NAH7 plasmid, and catechol 2,3-dioxygenase from a TOL plasmid pWW0 were compared. Among the dioxygenases, that from Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes KF707 showed a very narrow substrate range. Contrary to this, the dioxygenase from pWW0 showed a relaxed substrate range. The seven extradiol dioxygenases from the various Pseudomonas strains are highly diversified in terms of substrate specificity.  相似文献   

8.
Dioxygenases that catalyze the cleavage of the aromatic ring are classified into two groups according to their mode of ring fission. Substrates of ring-cleavage dioxygenases usually contain hydroxyl groups on adjacent aromatic carbons, and intradiol enzymes cleave the ring between these two hydroxyl groups. Extradiol enzymes in contrast cleave the ring between one hydroxylated carbon and its adjacent nonhydroxylated carbon. In this study, we determined the complete nucleotide sequence of nahC, the structural gene for 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase encoded in the NAH7 plasmid of Pseudomonas putida. This enzyme is an extradiol ring-cleavage enzyme that cleaves the first ring of 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene. The amino acid sequence of the dioxygenase deduced from the DNA sequence demonstrated that the molecular weight of the enzyme is 33,882. This result was in agreement with those of maxicell analyses that showed that the nahC product was a 36-kDa protein. Interestingly, the amino acid sequence of 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase was 50% homologous with that of 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase, which catalyzes extradiol cleavage of the first ring of 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl (Furukawa, K., Arimura, N., and Miyazaki, T. (1987) J. Bacteriol. 169, 427-429). The amino acid sequence similarity of 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase with catechol 2,3-dioxygenase, which is an authentic extradiol dioxygenase, was rather low (16%). However, a statistical analysis by the method of S. B. Needleman and C. D. Wunsch [1970) J. Mol. Biol. 48, 443-453) clearly showed that these two dioxygenases are evolutionarily related. Therefore, these extradiol enzymes are considered as products of the same gene superfamily. From the significant sequence similarity between intradiol enzymes, it has been shown (Neidle, E. L., Harnett, C., Bonitz, S., and Ornston, L. N. (1988) J. Bacteriol. 170, 4874-4880) that intradiol enzymes evolved from a common ancestor. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of extradiol enzymes with those of intradiol dioxygenases did not show any significant global or localized similarity.  相似文献   

9.
Pyrocatechase (catechol 1,2-oxidoreductase (decyclizing), EC 1.13.11.1), a ferric ion-containing dioxygenase from Pseudomonas arvilla C-1, catalyzes the intradiol cleavage of catechol with insertion of 2 atoms of molecular oxygen to form cis,cis-muconic acid. The enzyme also catalyzed the oxidation of various catechol derivatives, including 4-methylcatechol, 4-chlorocatechol, 4-formylcatechol (protocatechualdehyde), 4,5-dichlorocatechol, 3,5-dichlorocatechol, 3-methylcatechol, 3-methoxycatechol, and 3-hydroxycatechol (pyrogallol). All of these substrates gave products having an absorption maximum at around 260 nm, which is characteristic of cis,cis-muconic acid derivatives. However, when 3-methylcatechol was used as substrate, the product formed showed two absorption maxima at 390 and 260 nm. These two absorption maxima were found to be attributable to two different products, 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-2,4-heptadienoic acid and 5-carboxy-2-methyl-2,4-pentadienoic acid (2-methylmuconic acid). The former was produced by the extradiol cleavage between the carbon atom carrying the hydroxyl group and the carbon atom carrying the hydroxyl group and the carbon atom carrying the methyl group; the latter by an intradiol cleavage between two hydroxyl groups. Since these products were unstable, they were converted to and identified as 6-methylpyridine-2-carboxylic acid and 2-methylmuconic acid dimethylester, respectively. Similarly, 3-methoxycatechol gave two products, namely, 2-hydroxy-5-methoxycarbonyl-2,4-pentadienoic acid and 5-carboxy-2-methoxy-2,4-pentadienoic acid (2-methoxymuconic acid). With 3-methylcatechol as substrate, the ratio of intradiol and extradiol cleavage activities of Pseudomonas pyrocatechase during purification was almost constant and was about 17. The final preparation of the enzyme was homogeneous when examined by disc gel electrophoresis and catalyzed both reactions simultaneously with the same ratio as during purification. All attempts to resolve the enzyme into two components with separate activities, including inactivation of the enzyme with urea or heat, treatment with sulfhydryl-blocking reagents or chelating agents, and inhibition of the enzyme with various inhibitors, proved unsuccessful. These results strongly suggest that Pseudomonas pyrocatechase is a single enzyme, which catalyzes simultaneously both intradiol and extradiol cleavages of some 3-substituted catechols.  相似文献   

10.
1,2-Dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase was purified to homogeneity from a bacterium that degrades naphthalenesulfonic acids (strain BN6). The enzyme requires Fe2+ for maximal activity and consists of eight identical subunits with a molecular weight of about 33,000. Analysis of the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence revealed a high degree of homology (22 of 29 amino acids) with the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase from strain Pseudomonas paucimobilis Q1. 1,2-Dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase from strain BN6 shows a wide substrate specificity and also cleaves 5-, 6-, and 7-hydroxy-1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, 2,3- and 3,4-dihydroxybiphenyl, catechol, and 3-methyl- and 4-methylcatechol. Similar activities against the hydroxy-1,2-dihydroxynaphthalenes were also found in cell extracts from naphthalene-degrading bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
邻苯二酚是芳香族化合物多条生物降解途径中共有的一种重要的中间产物,根据开环方式的不同,可分为邻位降解途径和间位降解途径,其中邻位降解途径中的关键酶是邻苯二酚1,2-双加氧酶。本文主要综述了邻苯二酚1,2-双加氧酶的结构、酶学性质,以及它在芳香烃降解菌中存在的同工酶现象及其功能研究进展。  相似文献   

12.
A purification procedure has been developed for an extradiol dioxygenase expressed in Escherichia coli, which was originally derived from a Pseudomonas putida strain able to grow on toluidine. Physical and kinetic properties of the enzyme have been investigated. The enzyme has a subunit Mr of 33,500 +/- 2000 by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Gel filtration indicates a molecular mass under non-denaturing conditions of 120,000 +/- 20,000. The N-terminal sequence (35 residues) of the enzyme has been determined and exhibits 50% identity with other extradiol dioxygenases. Fe(II) is a cofactor of the enzyme, as it is for other extradiol dioxygenases. The reactivity of this enzyme towards catechol and methyl-substituted catechols is somewhat different from that seen for other catechol 2,3-dioxygenases, with 3-methylcatechol cleaved at a higher rate than catechol or 4-methylcatechol. Km values for these substrates with this enzyme are all around 0.3 microM. The enzyme exhibits a bell-shaped pH profile with pKa values of 6.9 +/- 0.1 and 8.7 +/- 0.1. These results are compared with those found for other extradiol dioxygenases.  相似文献   

13.
We show here that purified chlorocatechol dioxygenase from Pseudomonas putida is able to oxygenate a wide range of substituted catechols with turnover numbers ranging from 2 to 29 s-1. This enzyme efficiently cleaves substituted catechols bearing electron-donating or multiple electron-withdrawing groups in an intradiol manner with kcat/KM values between 0.2 x 10(7) and 1.4 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. These unique catalytic properties prompted a comparison with the related but highly specific enzymes catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase. The chlorocatechol dioxygenase gene (clcA) from the Pseudomonas plasmid pAC27 was subcloned into the expression vector pKK223-3, allowing production of chlorocatechol dioxygenase to approximately 7-8% of total cellular protein. An average of 4 mg of purified enzyme has been obtained per gram of wet cells. Protein and iron analyses indicate an iron stoichiometry of 1 iron/57.5-kDa homodimer, alpha 2Fe. The electronic absorption spectrum contains a broad tyrosinate to iron charge transfer transition centered at 430 nm (epsilon = 3095 M-1 cm-1 based on iron concentration) which shifts to 490 nm (epsilon = 3380 M-1 cm-1) upon catechol binding. The resonance Raman spectrum of the native enzyme exhibits characteristic tyrosine ring vibrations. Electron paramagnetic resonance data for the resting enzyme (g = 4.25, 9.83) is consistent with high-spin iron (III) in a rhombic environment. This similarity between the spectroscopic properties of the Fe(III) centers in chlorocatechol dioxygenase and the more specific dioxygenases suggests a highly conserved catalytic site. We infer that the unique catalytic properties of chlorocatechol dioxygenase are due to other characteristics of its substrate binding pocket.  相似文献   

14.
A key enzyme in the degradation pathways of dibenzo-p-dioxin and dibenzofuran, namely, 2,2',3-trihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase, which is responsible for meta cleavage of the first aromatic ring, has been genetically and biochemically analyzed. The dbfB gene of this enzyme has been cloned from a cosmid library of the dibenzo-p-dioxin- and dibenzofuran-degrading bacterium Sphingomonas sp. strain RW1 (R. M. Wittich, H. Wilkes, V. Sinnwell, W. Francke, and P. Fortnagel, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:1005-1010, 1992) and sequenced. The amino acid sequence of this enzyme is typical of those of extradiol dioxygenases. This enzyme, which is extremely oxygen labile, was purified anaerobically to apparent homogeneity from an Escherichia coli strain that had been engineered to hyperexpress dbfB. Unlike most extradiol dioxygenases, which have an oligomeric quaternary structure, the 2,2',3-trihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase is a monomeric protein. Kinetic measurements with the purified enzyme produced similar Km values for 2,2',3-trihydroxybiphenyl and 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl, and both of these compounds exhibited strong substrate inhibition. 2,2',3-Trihydroxydiphenyl ether, catechol, 3-methylcatechol, and 4-methylcatechol were oxidized less efficiently and 3,4-dihydroxybiphenyl was oxidized considerably less efficiently.  相似文献   

15.
A eukaryotic catechol 1,2-dioxygenase (1,2-CTD) was produced from a Candida albicans TL3 that possesses high tolerance for phenol and strong phenol degrading activity. The 1,2-CTD was purified via ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex G-75 gel filtration, and HiTrap Q Sepharose column chromatography. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity and found to be a homodimer with a subunit molecular weight of 32,000. Each subunit contained one iron. The optimal temperature and pH were 25°C and 8.0, respectively. Substrate analysis showed that the purified enzyme was a type I catechol 1,2-dioxygenase. This is the first time that a 1,2-CTD from a eukaryote (Candida albicans) has been characterized. Peptide sequencing on fragments of 1,2-CTD by Edman degradation and MALDI-TOF/TOF mass analyses provided information of amino acid sequences for BLAST analysis, the outcome of the BLAST revealed that this eukaryotic 1,2-CTD has high identity with a hypothetical protein, CaO19_12036, from Candida albicans SC5314. We conclude that the hypothetical protein is 1,2-CTD.  相似文献   

16.
Two catechol 1,2-dioxygenase (C1,2O) isozymes (IsoA and IsoB) have been purified to homogeneity from a strain of Acinetobacter radioresistens grown on benzoate as the sole carbon and energy source. IsoA and IsoB are both homodimers composed of a single type of subunit with molecular mass of 38,600 and 37,700, Da respectively. In conditions of low ionic strength, IsoA can aggregate as a trimer, in contrast to IsoB, which maintains the dimeric structure, as also supported by the kinetic parameters (Hill numbers). IsoA is identical to the enzyme previously purified from the same bacterium grown on phenol, whereas the IsoB is selectively expressed using benzoate as carbon source. This is the first evidence of the presence of differently expressed C1,2O isozymes in A. radioresistens or more generally of multiple C1,2O isozymes in benzoate-grown Acinetobacter cells. Purified IsoA and IsoB contain approximately 1 iron(III) ion per subunit and both show electronic absorbance and EPR features typical of Fe(III) intradiol dioxygenases. The kinetic properties of the two enzymes such as the specificities toward substituted catechols, the main catalytic parameters, and their behavior in the presence of different kind of inhibitors are, unexpectedly, very similar, in contrast to most of the previously known dioxygenase isozymes.  相似文献   

17.
A meta-cleavage pathway for the aerobic degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons is catalyzed by extradiol dioxygenases via a two-step mechanism: catechol substrate binding and dioxygen incorporation. The binding of substrate triggers the release of water, thereby opening a coordination site for molecular oxygen. The crystal structures of AkbC, a type I extradiol dioxygenase, and the enzyme substrate (3-methylcatechol) complex revealed the substrate binding process of extradiol dioxygenase. AkbC is composed of an N-domain and an active C-domain, which contains iron coordinated by a 2-His-1-carboxylate facial triad motif. The C-domain includes a β-hairpin structure and a C-terminal tail. In substrate-bound AkbC, 3-methylcatechol interacts with the iron via a single hydroxyl group, which represents an intermediate stage in the substrate binding process. Structure-based mutagenesis revealed that the C-terminal tail and β-hairpin form part of the substrate binding pocket that is responsible for substrate specificity by blocking substrate entry. Once a substrate enters the active site, these structural elements also play a role in the correct positioning of the substrate. Based on the results presented here, a putative substrate binding mechanism is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Two Escherichia coli transformants with catechol 1,2-dioxygenase activity were selected from a gene library of the benzamide-assimilating bacterium Arthrobacter species strain BA-5-17, which produces four catechol 1,2-dioxygenase isozymes. A DNA fragment isolated from one transformant contained a complete open reading frame (ORF). The deduced amino acid sequence of the ORF shared high identity with hydroxyquinol 1,2-dioxygenase. An enzyme expressed by the ORF was purified to homogeneity and characterized. When hydroxyquinol was used as a substrate, the purified enzyme showed 6.8-fold activity of that for catechol. On the basis of the sequence identity and substrate specificity of the enzyme, we concluded that the ORF encoded hydroxyquinol 1,2-dioxygenase. When catechol was used as a substrate, cis,cis-muconic acid and 2-hydroxymuconic 6-semialdehyde, which were products by the intradiol and extradiol ring cleavage activities, respectively, were produced. These results showed that the hydroxyquinol 1,2-dioxygenase reported here was a novel dioxygenase that catalyzed both the intradiol and extradiol cleavage of catechol.  相似文献   

19.
Catechol and 3-methylcatechol were produced from benzene and toluene respectively using different mutants of Pseudomonas putida. P. putida 2313 lacked the extradiol cleavage enzyme, catechol 2,3-oxygenase, allowing overproduction of 3-methylcatechol from toluene to a level of 11.5 mM (1.27 g·1-1) in glucose fed-batch culture. P. putida 6(12), a mutant of P. putida 2313, lacked both catechol-oxygenase and catechol 1,2-oxygenase, and accumulated catechol from benzene to a level of 27.5mM(3g·1-1).

In both biotransformations product formation ceased within 10 hours of feeding the aromatic substrate, and this was due to product inhibition by the catechols. The primary site of catechol toxicity was inhibition of the aromatic dioxygenase. Neither cis-toluene dihydrodiol cis-1,2-dihydroxy-3-methylcyclohexa-3,5-diene), nor cis-benzene dihydrodiol (cis-l,2-dihydroxy-3-methylcyclohexa-3,5-diene) dehydrogenase was significantly inhibited by catechol overproduction whereas both ring activating dioxygenases were inhibited within 4-6 hours of the maximum product concentration being attained.

3-Methylcatechol overproduction from toluene was also studied using a continuous product removal system. Granular activated charcoal removed 3-methylcatechol efficiently and was easily regenerated by washing with ethyl acetate. Using P. putida 2313, it was shown that the final product concentration increased approximately fourfold. Additional products were formed and the significance of these are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The DNA sequence of a 1.6-kilobase-pair SalI-KpnI Acinetobacter calcoaceticus restriction fragment carrying catA, the structural gene for catechol 1,2-dioxygenase I, was determined. The 933-nucleotide gene encodes a protein product with a deduced molecular weight of 34,351. The similarly sized Pseudomonas clcA gene encodes catechol 1,2-dioxygenase II, an enzyme with relatively broad substrate specificity and relatively low catalytic efficiency. Comparison of the catA and clcA sequences demonstrated their common ancestry and suggested that acquisitions of direct and inverted sequence repetitions of 6 to 10 base pairs were frequent events in their evolutionary divergence. The catechol 1,2-dioxygenases proved to be evolutionarily homologous with the alpha and beta subunits of Pseudomonas protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, and analysis of conserved residues in the intradiol dioxygenases revealed conserved histidyl and tyrosyl residues that are probably involved in the ligation of ferric ion in their active sites.  相似文献   

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