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1.
Oligodeoxynucleotide sequences that uniquely complemented 16S rRNAs of each group of methylotrophs were synthesized and used as hybridization probes for the identification of methylotrophic bacteria possessing the serine and ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathways for formaldehyde fixation. The specificity of the probes was determined by hybridizing radiolabeled probes with slot-blotted RNAs of methylotrophs and other eubacteria followed by autoradiography. The washing temperature was determined experimentally to be 50 and 52 degrees C for 9-alpha (serine pathway) and 10-gamma (RuMP pathway) probes, respectively. RNAs isolated from serine pathway methylotrophs bound to probe 9-alpha, and RNAs from RuMP pathway methylotrophs bound to probe 10-gamma. Nonmethylotrophic eubacterial RNAs did not bind to either probe. The probes were also labeled with fluorescent dyes. Cells fixed to microscope slides were hybridized with these probes, washed, and examined in a fluorescence microscope equipped with appropriate filter sets. Cells of methylotrophic bacteria possessing the serine or RuMP pathway specifically bind probes designed for each group. Samples with a mixture of cells of type I and II methanotrophs were detected and differentiated with single probes or mixed probes labeled with different fluorescent dyes, which enabled the detection of both types of cells in the same microscopic field.  相似文献   

2.
Oligodeoxynucleotide sequences that uniquely complemented 16S rRNAs of each group of methylotrophs were synthesized and used as hybridization probes for the identification of methylotrophic bacteria possessing the serine and ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathways for formaldehyde fixation. The specificity of the probes was determined by hybridizing radiolabeled probes with slot-blotted RNAs of methylotrophs and other eubacteria followed by autoradiography. The washing temperature was determined experimentally to be 50 and 52 degrees C for 9-alpha (serine pathway) and 10-gamma (RuMP pathway) probes, respectively. RNAs isolated from serine pathway methylotrophs bound to probe 9-alpha, and RNAs from RuMP pathway methylotrophs bound to probe 10-gamma. Nonmethylotrophic eubacterial RNAs did not bind to either probe. The probes were also labeled with fluorescent dyes. Cells fixed to microscope slides were hybridized with these probes, washed, and examined in a fluorescence microscope equipped with appropriate filter sets. Cells of methylotrophic bacteria possessing the serine or RuMP pathway specifically bind probes designed for each group. Samples with a mixture of cells of type I and II methanotrophs were detected and differentiated with single probes or mixed probes labeled with different fluorescent dyes, which enabled the detection of both types of cells in the same microscopic field.  相似文献   

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A restricted facultative methylotrophic RuMP type bacterium that can only utilize methanol and glucose has been found to possess a higher specific activity of methanol dehydrogenase during growth on glucose than during growth on methanol. The increased level of methanol dehydrogenase activity in glucose grown cells was the result of overproduction of the enzyme. In methanol grown cells 8% of the soluble protein consisted of methanol dehydrogenase, whereas in glucose grown cells the proportion amounted to 25%. The type of methanol dehydrogenase produced by this methylotroph could be separated from the crude extract and purified close to homogeneity in a one step procedure using cationic ion exchange chromatography. The enzyme is constitutive, and its level is determined by the growth rate.  相似文献   

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The enzymology of methanol utilization in thermotolerant methylotrophic Bacillus strains was investigated. In all strains an immunologically related NAD-dependent methanol dehydrogenase was involved in the initial oxidation of methanol. In cells of Bacillus sp. C1 grown under methanol-limiting conditions this enzyme constituted a high percentage of total soluble protein. The methanol dehydrogenase from this organism was purified to homogeneity and characterized. In cell-free extracts the enzyme displayed biphasic kinetics towards methanol, with apparent K m values of 3.8 and 166 mM. Carbon assimilation was by way of the fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase cleavage and transketolase/transaldolase rearrangement variant of the RuMP cycle of formaldehyde fixation. The key enzymes of the RuMP cycle, hexulose-6-phosphate synthase (HPS) and hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase (HPI), were present at very high levels of activity. Failure of whole cells to oxidize formate, and the absence of formaldehyde-and formate dehydrogenases indicated the operation of a non-linear oxidation sequence for formaldehyde via HPS. A comparison of the levels of methanol dehydrogenase and HPS in cells of Bacillus sp. C1 grown on methanol and glucose suggested that the synthesis of these enzymes is not under coordinate control.Abbreviations RuMP ribulose monophosphate - HPS hexulose-6-phosphate synthase - HPI hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase - MDH methanol dehydrogenase - ADH acohol dehydrogenase - PQQ pyrroloquinoline, quinone - DTT dithiothreitol - NBT nitrobluetetrazolium - PMS phenazine methosulphate - DCPIP dichlorophenol indophenol  相似文献   

8.
Abstract For a number of years we have tried to isolate versatile methylotrophic bacteria employing the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle of formaldehyde fixation. Recently this has resulted in the development of techniques for the selective enrichment and isolation in pure culture of Bacillus strains able to grow in methanol mineral medium over a temperature range between 35 and 60°C. At the optimum growth temperatures (50–55°C), these isolates display doubling times between 40 and 80 min. The metabolism of the strains studied is strictly respiratory. Methanol assimilation is exclusively via the RuMP cycle variants with the fructose bisphosphate (FBP) aldolase cleavage and transketolase (TK)/transaldolase (TA) rearrangement. Whole cells were unable to oxidize formate, and no activities of NAD-(in)dependent formaldehyde and formate dehydrogenases were detected. Formaldehyde oxidation most likely proceeds via the so-called dissimilatory RuMP cycle. The initial oxidation of methanol is catalyzed by an NAD-dependent methanol dehydrogenase present as an abundant protein in all strains. The enzyme from Bacillus sp. C1 has been purified and characterized.  相似文献   

9.
Engineering biotechnological microorganisms to use methanol as a feedstock for bioproduction is a major goal for the synthetic metabolism community. Here, we aim to redesign the natural serine cycle for implementation in E. coli. We propose the homoserine cycle, relying on two promiscuous formaldehyde aldolase reactions, as a superior pathway design. The homoserine cycle is expected to outperform the serine cycle and its variants with respect to biomass yield, thermodynamic favorability, and integration with host endogenous metabolism. Even as compared to the RuMP cycle, the most efficient naturally occurring methanol assimilation route, the homoserine cycle is expected to support higher yields of a wide array of products. We test the in vivo feasibility of the homoserine cycle by constructing several E. coli gene deletion strains whose growth is coupled to the activity of different pathway segments. Using this approach, we demonstrate that all required promiscuous enzymes are active enough to enable growth of the auxotrophic strains. Our findings thus identify a novel metabolic solution that opens the way to an optimized methylotrophic platform.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract Using inocula from a variety of sources, mixed cultures of methanol-utilizing Bacillus strains were enriched readily at 55°C. Isolation of pure cultures was difficult; the six strains that were obtained eventually in pure culture all possessed the RuMP pathway, grew rapidly on methanol at temperatures up to 60° C, and were tolerant to very high methanol concentrations. An NAD-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase appeared to be involved in the initial oxidation of methanol.  相似文献   

11.
Methanol is an attractive substrate for biological production of chemicals and fuels. Engineering methylotrophic Escherichia coli as a platform organism for converting methanol to metabolites is desirable. Prior efforts to engineer methylotrophic E. coli were limited by methanol dehydrogenases (Mdhs) with unfavorable enzyme kinetics. We engineered E. coli to utilize methanol using a superior NAD-dependent Mdh from Bacillus stearothermophilus and ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathway enzymes from B. methanolicus. Using 13C-labeling, we demonstrate this E. coli strain converts methanol into biomass components. For example, the key TCA cycle intermediates, succinate and malate, exhibit labeling up to 39%, while the lower glycolytic intermediate, 3-phosphoglycerate, up to 53%. Multiple carbons are labeled for each compound, demonstrating a cycling RuMP pathway for methanol assimilation to support growth. By incorporating the pathway to synthesize the flavanone naringenin, we demonstrate the first example of in vivo conversion of methanol into a specialty chemical in E. coli.  相似文献   

12.
The regulation of methanol metabolism in Nocardia sp. 239 was investigated. Growth on mixtures of glucose or acetate plus methanol in batch cultures resulted in simultaneous utilization of the substrates. The presence of glucose, but not of acetate, repressed synthesis of the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle enzymes hexulose-6-phosphate synthase (HPS) and hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase (HPI), and methanol was used as an energy source only. Comparable results were obtained following addition of formaldehyde (fed-batch system) to a culture growing on glucose. The synthesis of the methanol dissimilatory and assimilatory enzymes in Nocardia sp. 239 thus appears to be controlled differently. Methanol and/or formaldehyde induce the synthesis of these enzymes, but under carbon-excess conditions their inducing effect on HPS and HPI synthesis is completely overruled by glucose, or metabolites derived from it. Repression of the synthesis of these RuMP cycle enzymes was of minor importance under carbon- and energy-limiting conditions in chemostat cultures. Addition of a pulse of glucose to a formaldehyde-limited (2.5 mmol l–1 h–1) fed-batch culture resulted in a decrease in the levels of several enzymes of methanol metabolism (including HPI), whereas the HPS levels remained relatively constant. Increasing HPS/HPI activity ratios were also observed with increasing growth rates in formaldehyde-limited chemostat cultures. The data indicate that additional mechanisms, the identity of which remains to be elucidated, are involved in controlling the levels of these C1-specific enzymes in Nocardia sp. 239.Abbreviations HPS hexulose-6-phosphate synthase - HPI hexulose-6-phosphate isomerase - RuMP ribulose monophosphate - FBP fructose-1,6-bisphosphate - PFK 6-phosphofructokinase  相似文献   

13.
The solvent-tolerant bacterium Pseudomonas putida S12 was engineered to efficiently utilize the C1 compounds methanol and formaldehyde as auxiliary substrate. The hps and phi genes of Bacillus brevis, encoding two key steps of the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathway, were introduced to construct a pathway for the metabolism of the toxic methanol oxidation intermediate formaldehyde. This approach resulted in a remarkably increased biomass yield on the primary substrate glucose when cultured in C-limited chemostats fed with a mixture of glucose and formaldehyde. With increasing relative formaldehyde feed concentrations, the biomass yield increased from 35% (C-mol biomass/C-mol glucose) without formaldehyde to 91% at 60% relative formaldehyde concentration. The RuMP-pathway expressing strain was also capable of growing to higher relative formaldehyde concentrations than the control strain. The presence of an endogenous methanol oxidizing enzyme activity in P. putida S12 allowed the replacement of formaldehyde with the less toxic methanol, resulting in an 84% (C-mol/C-mol) biomass yield. Thus, by introducing two enzymes of the RuMP pathway, co-utilization of the cheap and renewable substrate methanol was achieved, making an important contribution to the efficient use of P. putida S12 as a bioconversion platform host.  相似文献   

14.
Acetobacter methanolicus MB58 can grow on methanol. Since this substrate exhibits to be energy deficient there must be a chance to oxidize methanol to CO2 merely for purpose of energy generation. For the assimilation of methanol the FBP variant of the RuMP pathway is used. Hence methanol can be oxidized cyclically via 6-phosphogluconate. Since Acetobacter methanolicus MB58 possesses all enzymes for a linear oxidation via formate the question arises which of both sequences is responsible for generation of the energy required. In order to clarify this the linear sequence was blocked by inhibiting the formate dehydrogenase with hypophosphite and by mutagenesis inducing mutants defective in formaldehyde or formate dehydrogenase. It has been shown that the linear dissimilatory sequence is indispensable for methylotrophic growth. Although the cyclic oxidation of formaldehyde to CO2 has not been influenced by hypophosphite and with mutants both the wild type and the formaldehyde dehydrogenase defect mutants cannot grown on methanol. The cyclic oxidation of formaldehyde does not seem to be coupled to a sufficient energy generation, probably it operates only detoxifying and provides reducing equivalents for syntheses. The regulation between assimilation and dissimilation of formaldehyde in Acetobacter methanolicus MB58 is discussed.Abbreviations ATP Adenosine-5-triphosphate - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorphenolindophenol - DW dry weight - ETP electron transport phosphorylation - FBP fructose-1,6-bisphosphate - MNNG N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine - PMS phenazine methosulfate - RuMP ribulose monophosphate - Ru5P ribulose-5-phosphate - SDS sodiumdodecylsulphate - TCA tricarboxylic acid - TYB toluylene blue Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Dr. S. M. Rapoport on occasion of his 75th birthday  相似文献   

15.
Bacillus methanolicus MGA3 is a facultative methylotroph of industrial relevance that is able to grow on methanol as its sole source of carbon and energy. The Gram‐positive bacterium possesses a soluble NAD+‐dependent methanol dehydrogenase and assimilates formaldehyde via the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle. We used label‐free quantitative proteomics to generate reference proteome data for this bacterium and compared the proteome of B. methanolicus MGA3 on two different carbon sources (methanol and mannitol) as well as two different growth temperatures (50°C and 37°C). From a total of approximately 1200 different detected proteins, approximately 1000 of these were used for quantification. While the levels of 213 proteins were significantly different at the two growth temperatures tested, the levels of 109 proteins changed significantly when cells were grown on different carbon sources. The carbon source strongly affected the synthesis of enzymes related to carbon metabolism, and in particular, both dissimilatory and assimilatory RuMP cycle enzyme levels were elevated during growth on methanol compared to mannitol. Our data also indicate that B. methanolicus has a functional tricarboxylic acid cycle, the proteins of which are differentially regulated on mannitol and methanol. Other proteins presumed to be involved in growth on methanol were constitutively expressed under the different growth conditions. All MS data have been deposited in the ProteomeXchange with the identifiers PXD000637 and PXD000638 ( http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org/dataset/PXD000637 , http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org/dataset/PXD000638 ).  相似文献   

16.
One-carbon feedstock such as methanol and formate has attracted much attention as carbon substrate of industrial biotechnology for production of value-added chemicals and biofuels. Productivity improvement of natural one-carbon metabolic pathways in native hosts such as methanotrophs is somewhat difficult due to inefficient genetic tools and low specific growth rate. As an alternative, metabolic engineering can create new and efficient metabolic pathways of one-carbon substrate that can be readily transferred to non-native hosts. In this paper, recent progresses in protein and metabolic engineering for creation of methanol and formate-utilizing synthetic pathways based on RuMP cycle and formolase are reviewed. Perspectives on one-carbon metabolic pathway engineering in non-native host are also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
In the aerobic methanotrophic bacteria Methylomicrobium alcaliphilum 20Z, Methylococcus capsulatus Bath, and Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, the biochemical properties of hydroxypyruvate reductase (Hpr), an indicator enzyme of the serine pathway for assimilation of reduced C1-compounds, were comparatively analyzed. The recombinant Hpr obtained by cloning and heterologous expression of the hpr gene in Escherichia coli catalyzed NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of hydroxypyruvate or glyoxylate, but did not catalyze the reverse reactions of D-glycerate or glycolate oxidation. The absence of the glycerate dehydrogenase activity in the methanotrophic Hpr confirmed a key role of the enzyme in utilization of C1-compounds via the serine cycle. The enzyme from Ms. trichosporium OB3b realizing the serine cycle as a sole assimilation pathway had much higher special activity and affinity in comparison to Hpr from Mm. alcaliphilum 20Z and Mc. capsulatus Bath assimilating carbon predominantly via the ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) cycle. The hpr gene was found as part of gene clusters coding the serine cycle enzymes in all sequenced methanotrophic genomes except the representatives of the Verrucomicrobia phylum. Phylogenetic analyses revealed two types of Hpr: (i) Hpr of methanotrophs belonging to the Gammaproteobacteria class, which use the serine cycle along with the RuMP cycle, as well as of non-methylotrophic bacteria belonging to the Alphaproteobacteria class; (ii) Hpr of methylotrophs from Alpha- and Betaproteobacteria classes that use only the serine cycle and of non-methylotrophic representatives of Betaproteobacteria. The putative role and origin of hydroxypyruvate reductase in methanotrophs are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The ribulose monophosphate cycle methylotroph Methylobacillus flagellatum was grown under oxyturbidostat conditions on mixtures of methanol and formaldehyde. Formaldehyde when added at low concentration (50 mg/l) increased the methanol consumption and the yield of biomass. The presence of 150–300 mg/l of formaldehyde resulted in an increase of the growth rate from 0.74 to about 0.79–0.82 h-1. The presence of 500 mg/l of formaldehyde in the inflow decreased culture growth characteristics. Activities of methanol dehydrogenase and enzymes participating in formaldehyde oxidation and assimilation were measured. The enzymological profiles obtained are discussed.Abbreviations MDH methanol dehydrogenase - NAD-linked FDDH NAD-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase - DLFDDH dye-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase - DLFDH dye-linked formate dehydrogenase - GPDH glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase - PGDH 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase - RuMP cycle ribulose monophosphate cycle  相似文献   

19.
The ribulose monophosphate (RuMP) pathway is one of the metabolic pathways for the synthesis of compounds containing carbon-carbon bonds from one-carbon units and is found in many methane- and methanol-utilizing bacteria, which are known as methylotrophs. The characteristic enzymes of this pathway are 3-hexulose-6-phosphate synthase (HPS) and 6-phospho-3-hexuloisomerase (PHI), neither of which was thought to exist outside methylotrophs. However, the presumed yckG gene product (YckG) of Bacillus subtilis shows a primary structure similar to that of methylotroph HPS (F. Kunst et al., Nature 390:249-256, 1997). We have also investigated the sequence similarity between the yckF gene product (YckF) and methylotroph PHI (Y. Sakai, R. Mitsui, Y. Katayama, H. Yanase, and N. Kato, FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 176:125-130, 1999) and found that the yckG and yckF genes of B. subtilis express enzymatic activities of HPS and PHI, respectively. Both of these activities were concomitantly induced in B. subtilis by formaldehyde, with induction showing dependence on the yckH gene, but were not induced by methanol, formate, or methylamine. Disruption of either gene caused moderate sensitivity to formaldehyde, suggesting that these enzymes may act as a detoxification system for formaldehyde in B. subtilis. In conclusion, we found an active yckG (for HPS)-yckF (for PHI) gene structure (now named hxlA-hxlB) in a nonmethylotroph, B. subtilis, which inherently preserves the RuMP pathway.  相似文献   

20.
An open-reading-frame fragment of a Methylobacterium sp. strain AM1 gene (moxF) encoding a portion of the methanol dehydrogenase structural protein has been used as a hybridization probe to detect similar sequences in a variety of methylotrophic bacteria. This hybridization was used to isolate clones containing putative moxF genes from two obligate methanotrophic bacteria, Methylococcus capsulatus Bath and Methylomonas albus BG8. The identity of these genes was confirmed in two ways. A T7 expression vector was used to produce methanol dehydrogenase protein in Escherichia coli from the cloned genes, and in each case the protein was identified by immunoblotting with antiserum against the Methylomonas albus methanol dehydrogenase. In addition, a moxF mutant of Methylobacterium strain AM1 was complemented to a methanol-positive phenotype that partially restored methanol dehydrogenase activity, using broad-host-range plasmids containing the moxF genes from each methanotroph. The partial complementation of a moxF mutant in a facultative serine pathway methanol utilizer by moxF genes from type I and type X obligate methane utilizers suggests broad functional conservation of the methanol oxidation system among gram-negative methylotrophs.  相似文献   

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