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1.
To investigate potential complementary activities of multiple enzymes belonging to the same family within a single microorganism, we chose a set of Old Yellow Enzyme (OYE) homologs of Pseudomonas putida. The physiological function of these enzymes is not well established; however, an activity associated with OYE family members from different microorganisms is their ability to reduce nitroaromatic compounds. Using an in silico approach, we identified six OYE homologs in P. putida KT2440. Each gene was subcloned into an expression vector, and each corresponding gene product was purified to homogeneity prior to in vitro analysis for its catalytic activity against 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). One of the enzymes, called XenD, lacked in vitro activity, whereas the other five enzymes demonstrated type I hydride transferase activity and reduced the nitro groups of TNT to hydroxylaminodinitrotoluene derivatives. XenB has the additional ability to reduce the aromatic ring of TNT to produce Meisenheimer complexes, defined as type II hydride transferase activity. The condensations of the primary products of type I and type II hydride transferases react with each other to yield diarylamines and nitrite; the latter can be further reduced to ammonium and serves as a nitrogen source for microorganisms in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Soil and groundwater contaminated by munitions compounds is a crucial issue in environmental protection. Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is highly toxic and carcinogenic; therefore, the control and remediation of TNT contamination is a critical environmental issue. In this study, the authors characterized the indigenous microbial isolates from a TNT-contaminated site and evaluated their activity in TNT biodegradation. The bacteria Achromobacter sp. BC09 and Citrobacter sp. YC4 isolated from TNT-contaminated soil by enrichment culture with TNT as the sole carbon and nitrogen source (strain BC09) and as the sole nitrogen but not carbon source (strain YC4) were studied for their use in TNT bioremediation. The efficacy of degradation of TNT by indigenous microorganisms in contaminated soil without any modification was insufficient in the laboratory-scale pilot experiments. The addition of strains BC09 and YC4 to the contaminated soil did not significantly accelerate the degradation rate. However, the addition of an additional carbon source (e.g., 0.25% sucrose) could significantly increase the bioremediation efficiency (ca. decrease of 200 ppm for 10 days). Overall, the results suggested that biostimulation was more efficient as compared with bioaugmentation. Nevertheless, the combination of biostimulation and bioaugmentation using these indigenous isolates is still a feasible approach for the development of bioremediation of TNT pollution.  相似文献   

3.
Several independent studies of bacterial degradation of nitrate ester explosives have demonstrated the involvement of flavin-dependent oxidoreductases related to the old yellow enzyme (OYE) of yeast. Some of these enzymes also transform the nitroaromatic explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). In this work, catalytic capabilities of five members of the OYE family were compared, with a view to correlating structure and function. The activity profiles of the five enzymes differed substantially; no one compound proved to be a good substrate for all five enzymes. TNT is reduced, albeit slowly, by all five enzymes. The nature of the transformation products differed, with three of the five enzymes yielding products indicative of reduction of the aromatic ring. Our findings suggest two distinct pathways of TNT transformation, with the initial reduction of TNT being the key point of difference between the enzymes. Characterization of an active site mutant of one of the enzymes suggests a structural basis for this difference.  相似文献   

4.
Several independent studies of bacterial degradation of nitrate ester explosives have demonstrated the involvement of flavin-dependent oxidoreductases related to the old yellow enzyme (OYE) of yeast. Some of these enzymes also transform the nitroaromatic explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). In this work, catalytic capabilities of five members of the OYE family were compared, with a view to correlating structure and function. The activity profiles of the five enzymes differed substantially; no one compound proved to be a good substrate for all five enzymes. TNT is reduced, albeit slowly, by all five enzymes. The nature of the transformation products differed, with three of the five enzymes yielding products indicative of reduction of the aromatic ring. Our findings suggest two distinct pathways of TNT transformation, with the initial reduction of TNT being the key point of difference between the enzymes. Characterization of an active site mutant of one of the enzymes suggests a structural basis for this difference.  相似文献   

5.
6.
7.
Explosive contamination in soil is a great concern for environmental health. Following 50 years of munitions manufacturing and loading, soils from two different sites contained ≥ 6,435 mg 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), 2,933 mg hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) and 2,135 mg octahydrol-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) kg? 1 soil. Extractable nitrate-N was as high as 315 and ammonium-N reached 150 mg N kg? 1 soil. Water leachates in the highly contaminated soils showed near saturation levels of TNT and RDX, suggesting great risk to water quality. The long-term contamination resulted in undetectable fungal populations and as low as 180 bacterial colony forming units (CFU) g–1 soil. In the most severely contaminated soil, dehydrogenase activity was undetectable and microbial biomass carbon was very low (< 3.4 mg C mic kg–1 soil). The diminished biological activity was a consequence of long-term contamination because short-term (14 d) contamination of TNT at up to 5000 mg TNT kg–1 soil did not cause a decline in the culturable bacterial population. Natural attenuation may not be a feasible remediation strategy in soils with long-term contamination by high concentrations of explosives.  相似文献   

8.
Acrolein is a ubiquitous reactive aldehyde which is formed as a product of lipid peroxidation in biological systems. In this present study, we screened the complete set of viable deletion strains in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for sensitivity to acrolein to identify cell functions involved in resistance to reactive aldehydes. We identified 128 mutants whose gene products are localized throughout the cell. Acrolein-sensitive mutants were distributed among most major biological processes but particularly affected gene expression, metabolism, and cellular signaling. Surprisingly, the screen did not identify any antioxidants or similar stress-protective molecules, indicating that acrolein toxicity may not be mediated via reactive oxygen species. Most strikingly, a mutant lacking an old yellow enzyme (OYE2) was identified as being acrolein sensitive. Old yellow enzymes are known to reduce alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds in vitro, but their physiological roles have remained uncertain. We show that mutants lacking OYE2, but not OYE3, are sensitive to acrolein, and overexpression of both isoenzymes increases acrolein tolerance. Our data indicate that OYE2 is required for basal levels of tolerance, whereas OYE3 expression is particularly induced following acrolein stress. Despite the range of alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds that have been identified as substrates of old yellow enzymes in vitro, we show that old yellow enzymes specifically mediate resistance to small alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds, such as acrolein, in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Energetic compounds have been used in a variety of industrial and military applications worldwide leading to widespread environmental contamination. Many of these compounds are toxic and resist degradation by oxidative enzymes resulting in a need for alternative remediation methods. It has been shown that trinitrotoluene (TNT)-contaminated soil subjected to treatment in strictly anaerobic bioreactors results in tight binding of TNT transformation products to soil organic matter. The research presented here examined the fate of TNT and its metabolites in bioreactors under three different aeration regimes. In all treatment regimes, the typical metabolites of aminodinitrotoluenes and diaminonitrotoluenes were observed prior to irreversible binding into the soil fraction of the slurry. Significant transformation of TNT into organic acids or simple diols, as others report in prior work, was not observed in any of the treatments and is an unlikely fate of TNT in anaerobic soil slurries. These results indicate that aeration does not dramatically affect transformation or fate of TNT in reactor systems that receive a rich carbon source but does affect the rate at which metabolites become tightly bound to the soil. The most rapid transformations and lowest redox potentials were observed in reactors in which an aerobic headspace was maintained suggesting that aerobes play a role in establishing conditions that are most conducive to TNT reduction.  相似文献   

10.
Plants, as predominantly sessile organisms, have evolved complex detoxification pathways to deal with a diverse range of toxic chemicals. The elasticity of this stress response system additionally enables them to tackle relatively recently produced, novel, synthetic pollutants. One such compound is the explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). Large areas of soil and groundwater are contaminated with TNT, which is both highly toxic and recalcitrant to degradation, and persists in the environment for decades. Although TNT is phytotoxic, plants are able to tolerate low levels of the compound. To identify the genes involved in this detoxification process, we used microarray analysis and then subsequently characterized seven uridine diphosphate (UDP) glycosyltransferases (UGTs) from Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis). Six of the recombinantly expressed UGTs conjugated the TNT-transformation products 2- and 4-hydroxylaminodinitrotoulene, exhibiting individual bias for either the 2- or the 4-isomer. For both 2- and 4-hydroxylaminodinitrotoulene substrates, two monoglucose conjugate products, confirmed by HPLC-MS-MS, were observed. Further analysis indicated that these were conjugated by either an O- or C-glucosidic bond. The other major compounds in TNT metabolism, aminodinitrotoluenes, were also conjugated by the UGTs, but to a lesser extent. These conjugates were also identified in extracts and media from Arabidopsis plants grown in liquid culture containing TNT. Overexpression of two of these UGTs, 743B4 and 73C1, in Arabidopsis resulted in increases in conjugate production, and enhanced root growth in 74B4 overexpression seedlings. Our results show that UGTs play an integral role in the biochemical mechanism of TNT detoxification by plants.  相似文献   

11.
Old yellow enzymes (OYEs, EC 1.6.99.1) are flavin-dependent oxidoreductases that catalyze the stereoselective trans-hydrogenation of the double bond, representing a promising alternative to metal-based catalysis. Bioconversion of ketoisophorone (KIP) by 28 non-conventional yeasts belonging to 16 different species was investigated. Growing cells of most of the strains reduced KIP via OYE and showed high stereoselectivity, producing R-levodione as major product. Competition by carbonyl reductase (CR) activity was observed in several strains. The best performing yeasts belong to Candida castellii, Kazachstania spencerorum and Kluyveromyces marxianus exhibited yields of levodione ≥77% up to 95% e.e., and. Candida freyschussii, the sole strain lacking the OYE gene, reduced KIP only to unsaturated alcohols via CR. Nine unedited OYE genes were cloned, sequenced, and heterologously expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741ΔOye2, a mutant that showed negligible OYE and CR activities. Compared with the corresponding wild-type yeasts, growing cells of the recombinant strains bioconverted KIP with improved yields of OYE products, minor competition by CR activity, and lower enantioselectivity. In particular, resting cells of recombinant S. cerevisae presented the best performance in KIP bioconversion. Based on the results herein reported, selected strains of non-conventional yeasts and novel OYE genes can be profitably used as innovative biocatalysts in asymmetric reductions.  相似文献   

12.
Environmental contamination by nitro compounds is associated principally with the explosives industry. However, global production and use of explosives is unavoidable. The presently widely used nitro-explosives are TNT (Trinitrotoluene), RDX (Royal Demolition Explosive) and HMX (High Melting Explosive). Nevertheless, the problems of these nitro-explosives are almost parallel due to their similarities of production processes, abundance of nitro-explosives and resembling chemical structures. The nitro-explosives per se as well as their environmental transformation products are toxic, showing symptoms as methaemoglobinaemia, kidney trouble, jaundice etc. Hence their removal/degradation from soil/water is essential. Aerobic and anaerobic degradation of TNT and RDX have been reported, while for HMX anaerobic or anoxic degradation have been described in many studies. A multisystem involvement using plants in remediation is gaining importance. Thus the information about degradation of nitro-explosives is available in jigsaw pieces which needs to be arranged and lacunae filled to get concrete degradative schemes so that environmental pollution from nitro-explosives can be dealt with more successfully at a macroscale. An overview of the reports on nitro-explosives degradation, future outlook and studies done by us are presented in this review.  相似文献   

13.
A 410-nm absorbing species which enhanced the reduction rate of cytochrome c by Old Yellow Enzyme (OYE) with NADPH was found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It was solubilized together with OYE by the treatment of yeast cells with 10% ethyl acetate. The purified species showed visible absorption spectra in both oxidized and reduced forms, which were the same as those of the yeast microsomal cytochrome b5. At least 14 amino acid residues of the N-terminal region coincided with those of yeast microsomal b5, but the protein had a lower molecular weight determined to be 12,600 by SDS-PAGE and 9775 by mass spectrometry. The cytochrome b5-like protein enhanced the reduction rate of cytochrome c by OYE, and a plot of the reduction rates against its concentration showed a sigmoidal curve with an inflexion point at 6x10(-8) M of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
We examined the bioremediation of soils contaminated with the munition compounds 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine, and octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetraazocine by a procedure that produced anaerobic conditions in the soils and promoted the biodegradation of nitroaromatic contaminants. This procedure consisted of flooding the soils with 50 mM phosphate buffer, adding starch as a supplemental carbon substrate, and incubating under static conditions. Aerobic heterotrophs, present naturally in the soil or added as an inoculum, quickly removed the oxygen from the static cultures, creating anaerobic conditions. Removal of parent TNT molecules from the soil cultures by the strictly anaerobic microflora occurred within 4 days. The reduced intermediates formed from TNT and hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine were removed from the cultures within 24 days, completing the first stage of remediation. The procedure was effective over a range of incubation temperatures, 20 to 37 degrees C, and was improved when 25 mM ammonium was added to cultures buffered with 50 mM potassium phosphate. Ammonium phosphate buffer (50 mM), however, completely inhibited TNT reduction. The optimal pH for the first stage of remediation was between 6.5 and 7.0. When soils were incubated under aerobic conditions or under anaerobic conditions at alkaline pHs, the TNT biodegradation intermediates polymerized. Polymerization was not observed at neutral to slightly acidic pHs under anaerobic conditions. Completion of the first stage of remediation of munition compound-contaminated soils resulted in aqueous supernatants that contained no munition residues or aminoaromatic compounds.  相似文献   

15.
16.
There is major international concern over the wide-scale contamination of soil and associated ground water by persistent explosives residues. 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is one of the most recalcitrant and toxic of all the military explosives. The lack of affordable and effective cleanup technologies for explosives contamination requires the development of better processes. Significant effort has recently been directed toward the use of plants to extract and detoxify TNT. To explore the possibility of overcoming the high phytotoxic effects of TNT, we expressed bacterial nitroreductase in tobacco plants. Nitroreductase catalyzes the reduction of TNT to hydroxyaminodinitrotoluene (HADNT), which is subsequently reduced to aminodinitrotoluene derivatives (ADNTs). Transgenic plants expressing nitroreductase show a striking increase in ability to tolerate, take up, and detoxify TNT. Our work suggests that expression of nitroreductase (NR) in plants suitable for phytoremediation could facilitate the effective cleanup of sites contaminated with high levels of explosives.  相似文献   

17.
Limited proteolysis of brewer's yeast old yellow enzyme (OYE) was carried out with bovine pancreatic alpha-chymotrypsin. The reaction proceeded with a decrease of the NADPH oxidase activity, generating specifically two peptides (designated as 34K and 14K fragments) with apparent molecular weights of 34,000 and 14,000, respectively. The same proteolytic treatment of apo OYE resulted in rapid and complete digestion of the protein. The 34K and 14K fragments are so intimately associated with each other that the isolation of each peptide from the other in the native form was unsuccessful. However, the complex of the two fragments was separated from the intact OYE and termed "nicked OYE." Nicked OYE still retained FMN and showed a visible-absorption spectrum slightly modified from that of intact OYE. Nicked OYE showed decreased affinity toward rho-bromophenol as compared to intact OYE. Nicked OYE exhibited lower Km and Vmax values than intact OYE in the NADPH oxidase reaction. The 34K and 14K fragments could be separated from each other by reversed-phase HPLC under denaturing conditions and the amino acid sequences of the two fragments and intact OYE in the amino terminal regions were determined. The N-terminal sequence of the 34K fragment coincided with that of intact OYE, indicating that the 34K fragment lies in the N-terminal side of OYE. The N-terminal sequence of the 14K fragment was found to show homology with the site of flavodoxin where it forms an electron-transfer complex with cytochrome c. The characteristic feature of this region is the presence of acidic residues and is shared by the FMN domain of NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase. We interpret these findings as indicating that OYE has a physiological role as an electron transfer component.  相似文献   

18.
A cDNA was isolated and characterized from a tomato shoot cDNA library, the deduced amino acid sequence of which exhibited similarity with yeast Old Yellow Enzymes (OYEs) and related enzymes of bacterial and plant origin. Sequence identity was particularly high with 12-oxophytodienoate 10,11-reductase (OPR) from Arabidopsis thaliana. The cDNA-encoded protein was expressed as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein in Escherichia coli and was purified from bacterial extracts. The protein was found to be a flavoprotein catalyzing the NADPH-dependent reduction of the olefinic bond of alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds, including 12-oxophytodienoic acid. Thus, the tomato enzyme was termed LeOPR. The catalytic efficiency of LeOPR was highest with N-ethylmaleimide followed by 12-oxophytodienoic acid and maleic acid as substrates. Photoreduction of the LeOPR-bound FMN resulted in the formation of a red, anionic semiquinone prior to the formation of the fully reduced flavin dihydroquinone. Spectroscopic characterization of LeOPR revealed the formation of charge transfer complexes upon titration with para-substituted phenolic compounds, a distinctive feature of the enzymes of the OYE family. The ligand binding properties were compared between LeOPR and OYE, and the findings are discussed with respect to structural differences between the active sites of OYE and LeOPR.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: 12-Oxophytodienoate reductase (OPR) is a flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-dependent oxidoreductase in plants that belongs to the family of Old Yellow Enzyme (OYE). It was initially characterized as an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of the plant hormone jasmonic acid, where it catalyzes the reduction of the cyclic fatty acid derivative 9S,13S-12-oxophytodienoate (9S,13S-OPDA) to 1S,2S-3-oxo-2(2'[Z]-pentenyl)-cyclopentane-1-octanoate. Several isozymes of OPR are now known that show different stereoselectivities with regard to the four stereoisomers of OPDA. RESULTS: Here, we report the high-resolution crystal structure of OPR1 from Lycopersicon esculentum and its complex structures with the substrate 9R,13R-OPDA and with polyethylene glycol 400. OPR1 crystallizes as a monomer and folds into a (betaalpha)(8) barrel with an overall structure similar to OYE. The cyclopentenone ring of 9R,13R-OPDA is stacked above the flavin and activated by two hydrogen bonds to His187 and His190. The olefinic bond is properly positioned for hydride transfer from the FMN N(5) and proton transfer from Tyr192 to Cbeta and Calpha, respectively. Comparison of the OPR1 and OYE structures reveals striking differences in the loops responsible for binding 9R,13R-OPDA in OPR1. CONCLUSIONS: Despite extensive biochemical characterization, the physiological function of OYE still remains unknown. The similar catalytic cavity structures and the substrate binding mode in OPR1 strongly support the assumption that alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds are physiological substrates of the OYE family. The specific binding of 9R,13R-OPDA by OPR1 explains the experimentally observed stereoselectivity and argues in favor of 9R,13R-OPDA or a structurally related oxylipin as natural substrate of OPR1.  相似文献   

20.
The explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) is a significant environmental pollutant that is both toxic and recalcitrant to degradation. Phytoremediation is being increasingly proposed as a viable alternative to conventional remediation technologies to clean up explosives-contaminated sites. Despite the potential of this technology, relatively little is known about the innate enzymology of TNT detoxification in plants. To further elucidate this, we used microarray analysis to identify Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genes up-regulated by exposure to TNT and found that the expression of oxophytodienoate reductases (OPRs) increased in response to TNT. The OPRs share similarity with the Old Yellow Enzyme family, bacterial members of which have been shown to transform explosives. The three predominantly expressed forms, OPR1, OPR2, and OPR3, were recombinantly expressed and affinity purified. Subsequent biochemical characterization revealed that all three OPRs are able to transform TNT to yield nitro-reduced TNT derivatives, with OPR1 additionally producing the aromatic ring-reduced products hydride and dihydride Meisenheimer complexes. Arabidopsis plants overexpressing OPR1 removed TNT more quickly from liquid culture, produced increased levels of transformation products, and maintained higher fresh weight biomasses than wild-type plants. In contrast, OPR1,2 RNA interference lines removed less TNT, produced fewer transformation products, and had lower biomasses. When grown on solid medium, two of the three OPR1 lines and all of the OPR2-overexpressing lines exhibited significantly enhanced tolerance to TNT. These data suggest that, in concert with other detoxification mechanisms, OPRs play a physiological role in xenobiotic detoxification.Large amounts of land and water are heavily contaminated by explosives, mainly as a result of the manufacture and military use of munitions. The high financial cost associated with cleaning up these contaminated sites largely precludes the use of many existing remediation technologies, such as soil excavation and incineration or disposal to landfill. There is a great deal of work documenting the global contamination, general toxicity, and microbial metabolism of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) in the environment; however, relatively little is known about the enzymes mediating the detoxification of TNT in plants (for review, see Rylott and Bruce, 2009).Phytoremediation, the use of plants to remove environmental pollutants, offers a low-cost, sustainable alternative to conventional remediation technologies and is attracting considerable attention as a means to clean up sites contaminated with explosives. While TNT is a potent phytotoxin, plants are able to detoxify low levels of TNT. In an effort to determine how plant tolerance could be further improved, we are investigating the biochemistry and enzymology underlying the innate ability of plants to detoxify TNT. The detoxification of xenobiotics has been loosely categorized into three phases (Sandermann, 1992): activation, conjugation, and compartmentation. The proposed route of TNT detoxification follows these phases. The electron-withdrawing properties of the nitro groups of TNT make the aromatic ring electron deficient. This favors reductive transformation reactions in plants, and the TNT molecule is most commonly activated by the reduction of a nitro group to give hydroxylamino and then amino derivatives (Fig. 1, pathway A). Following the introduction of a functional group, more hydrophilic molecules such as Glc are conjugated to the activated TNT molecule (Gandia-Herrero et al., 2008), facilitating transport and subsequent compartmentation or sequestration.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.The transformation of TNT by pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase. Pathway A shows the transformation of the nitro group to nitroso-dinitrotoluene (NODNT), HADNT, and then ADNT products. Pathway B shows the reduction of the aromatic ring to form hydride and dihydride Meisenheimer complexes, then chemical condensation with HADNT to form diarylamines.Data from both our microarray experiments (Gandia-Herrero et al., 2008) and other expression studies (Ekman et al., 2003; Mezzari et al., 2005) have found that members of the small gene family of oxophytodienoate reductases (OPRs) in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) are up-regulated following exposure to TNT. The Arabidopsis genome contains three characterized OPRs: OPR1, OPR2, and OPR3. In addition, there are three as yet uncharacterized putative OPRs, named here as OPR4, OPR5, and OPR6, with OPR4 and OPR5 being identical. The physiological functions of the OPRs remain obscure, with the exception of OPR3, which is involved in jasmonic acid biosynthesis, converting (9S,13S)-12-oxophytodienoic acid to 3-2(2′(Z)-pentyl)cyclopentane-1-octanoic acid in the peroxisome (Sanders et al., 2000; Stintzi and Browse, 2000; for review, see Wasternack, 2007). OPR3 is located on chromosome II within the Arabidopsis genome and contains a C-terminal Ser-Arg-Leu type 1 peroxisome-targeting sequence. The remaining OPRs are all located on chromosome I and do not possess any known organelle-targeting sequences. The spatial expression of OPR1 and OPR2 across root cells where TNT accumulates (Biesgen and Weiler, 1999; Baerenfaller et al., 2008) favors a role in detoxification.The OPRs share similarity with the Old Yellow Enzyme family, a group of flavoenzymes that has been repeatedly associated with the transformation of explosives (Binks et al., 1996; Schaller and Weiler, 1997; Snape et al., 1997; Basran et al., 1998; French et al., 1998; Blehert et al., 1999; Pak et al., 2000; Fitzpatrick et al., 2003; Williams et al., 2004). Studies also indicate that Old Yellow Enzyme homologs function as antioxidants, detoxifying the breakdown products of lipid peroxidation and other toxic electrophilic compounds (Kohli and Massey, 1998; Williams and Bruce, 2002; Fitzpatrick et al., 2003; Trotter et al., 2006). This oxidative stress could result from exposure to xenobiotics including TNT, wounding, or pathogen attack.Pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase, an Old Yellow Enzyme homolog isolated from Enterobacter cloacae (Binks et al., 1996), possesses two catalytic activities toward TNT (Fig. 1): nitroreduction of TNT to form hydroxylamino-dinitrotoluene (HADNT) and then amino-dinitrotoluene (ADNT), and aromatic ring reduction of TNT to yield hydride and dihydride (2H-TNT) Meisenheimer TNT adducts (French et al., 1998; Williams et al., 2004). The TNT ring-reduced compounds condense via a nonenzymatic reaction with HADNTs to form diarylamines, with the liberation of nitrite (Wittich et al., 2008). Expression of pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) confers both resistance to, and the ability to transform, TNT (French et al., 1999). OPR1, OPR2, and OPR3 share 43%, 44%, and 36% identity, respectively, with pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase, and all possess the conserved active site amino acids crucial for TNT transformation by pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase and other members of the Old Yellow Enzyme family (Snape et al., 1997; French et al., 1998; Khan et al., 2004), suggesting that they are capable of transforming TNT.The OPR4/5 protein is predicted to have reduced activity toward TNT, compared with the other OPRs, owing to a C-terminal truncation that removes residues thought to be important in binding the cofactor NADH, Thus, we investigated OPR1, -2, and -3 as likely candidates for the TNT nitroreduction activity in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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