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1.
The attenuation of the sulfite:cytochrome c activity of sulfite oxidase upon treatment with ferricyanide was demonstrated to be the result of oxidation of the pterin ring of the molybdenum cofactor in the enzyme. Oxidation of molybdopterin (MPT) was detected in several ways. Ferricyanide treatment not only abolished the ability of sulfite oxidase to serve as a source of MPT to reconstitute the aponitrate reductase in extracts of the Neurospora crassa mutant nit-1 but also eliminated the ability of sulfite oxidase to reduce dichlorobenzenoneindophenol after anaerobic denaturation. Additionally, the absorption spectrum of anaerobically denatured ferricyanide-treated molybdenum fragment of rat liver sulfite oxidase was typical of fully oxidized pterins. Ferricyanide treatment had no effect on the protein of sulfite oxidase or on the sulfhydryl-containing side chain of MPT. Quantitation of the ferricyanide reaction showed that 2 mol of ferricyanide were reduced per mol of MPT oxidized, yielding a fully oxidized pterin. These results corroborate the previously reported conclusion that the native state of reduction of MPT in sulfite oxidase is at the dihydro level (Gardlik, S., and Rajagopalan, K.V. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13047-13054). As a result of oxidation of the pterin ring, the affinity of MPT for molybdenum is decreased, leading to eventual loss of molybdenum. Because the loss of molybdenum is slow, a population of sulfite oxidase molecules can exist in which molybdenum is complexed to oxidized MPT. These molecules retain sulfite:O2 activity, a function apparently dependent solely on the molybdenum-thiolate complex, yet have greatly decreased sulfite:cytochrome c activity, a function requiring heme as well as the molybdenum center of holoenzyme. These observations suggest that the pterin ring of MPT participates in enzyme function, possibly in electron transfer, directly in catalysis, or by controlling the oxidation/reduction potential of molybdenum.  相似文献   

2.
Methods have been devised to examine the spectral properties and state of reduction of the pterin ring of molybdopterin (MPT) in milk xanthine oxidase and the Mo-containing domain of rat liver sulfite oxidase. The absorption spectrum of the native pterin was visualized by difference spectroscopy of each protein, denatured anaerobically in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl), versus a sample containing the respective apoprotein and other necessary components. The state of reduction of MPT was also probed using 2,6-dichlorobenzenoneindophenol (DCIP) to measure reducing equivalents/MPT, after anaerobic denaturation of the protein in GdnHCl in the presence or absence of Hg2+. In the case of xanthine oxidase the data indicate that the terminal sulfide ligand of Mo causes the reduction of a native dihydro form of MPT to the tetrahydro level. This reduction does not occur if Hg2+ is added prior to denaturation of the protein. Based on its observed behavior, the native MPT in the Mo cofactor of xanthine oxidase is postulated to exist as a quinonoid dihydropterin. Quantitation of DCIP reduction by MPT of Mo fragment of sulfite oxidase showed a two-electron oxidation of MPT, even when the Mo fragment was denatured in the presence of Hg2+ to prevent internal reduction reactions due to sulfhydryls or sulfide. Difference spectra of DCIP-treated versus untreated Mo fragment showed that MPT had been fully oxidized. These data indicate that the native MPT in sulfite oxidase must be a dihydro isomer different from that in xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

3.

Background  

Phylogenies of certain bioenergetic enzymes have proved to be useful tools for deducing evolutionary ancestry of bioenergetic pathways and their relationship to geochemical parameters of the environment. Our previous phylogenetic analysis of arsenite oxidase, the molybdopterin enzyme responsible for the biological oxidation of arsenite to arsenate, indicated its probable emergence prior to the Archaea/Bacteria split more than 3 billion years ago, in line with the geochemical fact that arsenite was present in biological habitats on the early Earth. Respiratory arsenate reductase (Arr), another molybdopterin enzyme involved in microbial arsenic metabolism, serves as terminal oxidase, and is thus situated at the opposite end of bioenergetic electron transfer chains as compared to arsenite oxidase. The evolutionary history of the Arr-enzyme has not been studied in detail so far.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Arsenite oxidase from Alcaligenes faecalis NCIB 8687 is a molybdenum/iron protein involved in the detoxification of arsenic. It is induced by the presence of AsO(2-) (arsenite) and functions to oxidize As(III)O(2-), which binds to essential sulfhydryl groups of proteins and dithiols, to the relatively less toxic As(V)O(4)(3-) (arsenate) prior to methylation. RESULTS: Using a combination of multiple isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering (MIRAS) and multiple-wavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) methods, the crystal structure of arsenite oxidase was determined to 2.03 A in a P2(1) crystal form with two molecules in the asymmetric unit and to 1.64 A in a P1 crystal form with four molecules in the asymmetric unit. Arsenite oxidase consists of a large subunit of 825 residues and a small subunit of approximately 134 residues. The large subunit contains a Mo site, consisting of a Mo atom bound to two pterin cofactors, and a [3Fe-4S] cluster. The small subunit contains a Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] site. CONCLUSIONS: The large subunit of arsenite oxidase is similar to other members of the dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) reductase family of molybdenum enzymes, particularly the dissimilatory periplasmic nitrate reductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, but is unique in having no covalent bond between the polypeptide and the Mo atom. The small subunit has no counterpart among known Mo protein structures but is homologous to the Rieske [2Fe-2S] protein domain of the cytochrome bc(1) and cytochrome b(6)f complexes and to the Rieske domain of naphthalene 1,2-dioxygenase.  相似文献   

5.
Direct oxidation of sulfite to sulfate occurs in various photo- and chemotrophic sulfur oxidizing microorganisms as the final step in the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds and is catalyzed by sulfite:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (EC ). Here we show that the enzyme from Thiobacillus novellus is a periplasmically located alphabeta heterodimer, consisting of a 40.6-kDa subunit containing a molybdenum cofactor and an 8.8-kDa mono-heme cytochrome c(552) subunit (midpoint redox potential, E(m8.0) = +280 mV). The organic component of the molybdenum cofactor was identified as molybdopterin contained in a 1:1 ratio to the Mo content of the enzyme. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed the presence of a sulfite-inducible Mo(V) signal characteristic of sulfite:acceptor oxidoreductases. However, pH-dependent changes in the electron paramagnetic resonance signal were not detected. Kinetic studies showed that the enzyme exhibits a ping-pong mechanism involving two reactive sites. K(m) values for sulfite and cytochrome c(550) were determined to be 27 and 4 micrometer, respectively; the enzyme was found to be reversibly inhibited by sulfate and various buffer ions. The sorAB genes, which encode the enzyme, appear to form an operon, which is preceded by a putative extracytoplasmic function-type promoter and contains a hairpin loop termination structure downstream of sorB. While SorA exhibits significant similarities to known sequences of eukaryotic and bacterial sulfite:acceptor oxidoreductases, SorB does not appear to be closely related to any known c-type cytochromes.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidation of sulfite to sulfate by sulfite oxidase is inhibited when the enzyme is treated with reagents known to modify imidazole and carboxyl groups. Modification inhibits the oxidation of sulfite by the physiological electron acceptor cytochrome c, but not by the artificial acceptor ferricyanide. This indicates interference with reaction steps that follow the oxidation of sulfite by the enzyme's molybdenum cofactor. Reaction with diethylpyrocarbonate modifies ten histidines per enzyme monomer. Loss of activity is concomitant to the modification of only a single histidine residue. Inactivation takes place at the same rate in free sulfite oxidase and in the sulfite-oxidase--cytochrome-c complex. Blocking of carboxyl groups with water-soluble carbodiimides inactivates the enzyme. But none of the enzyme's carboxyl groups seems to be essential in the sense that its modification fully abolishes activity. The pattern of inactivation by chemical modification of sulfite oxidase is quite similar to that observed previously for cytochrome c peroxidase from yeast [Bosshard, H. R., B?nziger, J., Hasler, T. and Poulos, T. L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5683-5690; Bechtold, R. and Bosshard, H. R. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 5191-5200]. The two enzymes have very different structures yet share cytochrome c as a common substrate of which they recognize the same electron-transfer domain around the exposed heme edge.  相似文献   

7.
Molybdenum insertion into the dithiolene group on the 6-alkyl side-chain of molybdopterin is a highly specific process that is catalysed by the MoeA and MogA proteins in Escherichia coli. Ligation of molybdate to molybdopterin generates the molybdenum cofactor, which can be inserted directly into molybdoenzymes binding the molybdopterin form of the molybdenum cofactor, or is further modified in bacteria to form the dinucleotide form of the molybdenum cofactor. The ability of various metals to bind tightly to sulfur-rich sites raised the question of whether other metal ions could be inserted in place of molybdenum at the dithiolene moiety of molybdopterin in molybdoenzymes. We used the heterologous expression systems of human sulfite oxidase and Rhodobacter sphaeroides dimethylsulfoxide reductase in E. coli to study the incorporation of different metal ions into the molybdopterin site of these enzymes. From the added metal-containing compounds Na(2)MoO(4), Na(2)WO(4), NaVO(3), Cu(NO(3))(2), CdSO(4) and NaAsO(2) during the growth of E. coli, only molybdate and tungstate were specifically inserted into sulfite oxidase and dimethylsulfoxide reductase. Other metals, such as copper, cadmium and arsenite, were nonspecifically inserted into sulfite oxidase, but not into dimethylsulfoxide reductase. We showed that metal insertion into molybdopterin occurs beyond the step of molybdopterin synthase and is independent of MoeA and MogA proteins. Our study shows that the activity of molybdoenzymes, such as sulfite oxidase, is inhibited by high concentrations of heavy metals in the cell, which will help to further the understanding of metal toxicity in E. coli.  相似文献   

8.
Molybdenum Metabolism in Plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract: Among the micronutrients essential for plant growth and for microsymbionts, Mo is required in minute amounts. However, since Mo is often sequestered by Fe- or Al-oxihydrox-ides, especially in acidic soils, the concentration of the water-soluble molybdate anion available for uptake by plants may be limiting for the plant, even when the total Mo content of the soil is sufficient. In contrast to bacteria, no specific molybdenum uptake system is known for plants, but since molybdate and sulfate behave similarly and have similar structure, uptake of molybdate could be mediated unspecifically by one of the sulfate transporters. Transport into the different plant organs proceeds via xylem and phloem. A pterin-bound molybdenum is the cofactor of important plant enzymes involved in redox processes: nitrate reductase, xanthine dehydrogenase, aIdehyde oxidase, and probably sulfite oxidase. Biosynthesis of the molybdenum cofactor (Moco) starts with a guanosine-X-phos-phate. Subsequently, a sulfur-free pterin is synthesized, sulfur is added, and finally molybdenum is incorporated. In addition to the molybdopterin enzymes, small molybdopterin binding proteins without catalytic function are known and are probably involved in the storage of Moco. In symbiotic systems the nitrogen supply of the host plant is strongly influenced by the availability of Mo in soil, since both bacterial nitrogenase and NADPH-dependent nitrate reductase of mycorrhizal fungi are Mo enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
The reduced, metal-free pterin of the molybdenum cofactor has been termed molybdopterin. Oxidation of any molybdopterin-containing protein in the presence or absence of iodine yields oxidized molybdopterin derivatives termed Form A and Form B, respectively. Application of these procedures to whole cells and cell extracts has demonstrated the presence of molybdopterin in wild-type Neurospora crassa, and its absence in the cofactor-deficient mutant nit-1. In order to demonstrate that the reconstitution of nitrate reductase activity in nit-1 extracts results from the incorporation of molybdopterin into the apoprotein, active molybdopterin, free of contaminating amino acids or peptides, was isolated from chicken liver sulfite oxidase and used in the reconstitution system. The results show that, during reconstitution, exogenous molybdopterin is specifically incorporated into the nitrate reductase protein, confirming the role of molybdopterin as the organic moiety of the molybdenum cofactor.  相似文献   

10.
Oxidation of Arsenite by a Soil Isolate of Alcaligenes   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
A strain of Alcaligenes , isolated from soil and grown in nutrient broth in the presence of arsenite, possessed the ability to oxidize arsenite to arsenate. Washed cell suspensions consumed one-half mol of oxygen/mol of arsenite and produced arsenate. The optimum pH for arsenite oxidation was 7.0. The Km for arsenite was 1.5 × 10-4 M and V max was 6.7 μl of oxygen/min. The arsenite-oxidizing enzyme system was induced by growth in arsenite. Response of the arsenite-oxidizing enzyme system to respiratory inhibitors suggested that electrons resulting from arsenite oxidation by an oxido-reductase with a bound flavin are transferred via cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase to oxygen. The presence of the cytochromes in crude extract was confirmed by spectral measurements.  相似文献   

11.
The molybdenum cofactor (Moco)-containing enzymes are divided into three classes that are named after prototypical members of each family, viz. sulfite oxidase, DMSO reductase and xanthine oxidase. Functional or structural models have been prepared for these three prototypical enzymes: (i) The complex [MoO2(mnt)2]2- (mnt2- = 1,2-dicyanoethylenedithiolate) has been found to be able to oxidize hydrogen sulfite to HSO4- and is thus a functional model of sulfite oxidase. Kinetic and computational studies indicate that the reaction proceeds via attack of the substrate at one of the oxo ligands of the complex, rather than at the metal. (ii) The coordination geometries of the mono-oxo [Mo(VI)(O-Ser)(S2)2] entity (S2 = dithiolene moiety of molybdopterin) found in the crystal structure of R. sphaeroides DMSO reductase and the corresponding des-oxo Mo(IV) unit have been reproduced in the complexes [M(VI)O(OSiR3)(bdt)2] and [M(VI)O(OSiR3)(bdt)2] (M = Mo,W; bdt = benzene dithiolate). (iii) A facile route has been developed for the preparation of complexes containing a cis-Mo(VI)OS molybdenum oxo, sulfido moiety similar to that detected in the oxidized form of xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
Recently formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase from the archaebacterium Methanosarcina barkeri has been shown to be a novel molybdo-iron-sulfur protein. We report here that the enzyme contains one mol of a bound pterin cofactor/mol molybdenum, similar but not identical to the molybdopterin of milk xanthine oxidase. The two pterins, after oxidation with I2 at pH 2.5, showed identical fluorescence spectra and, after oxidation with permanganate at pH 13, yielded pterin 6-carboxylic acid. They differed, however, in their apparent molecular mass: the pterin of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase was 400 Da larger than that of milk xanthine oxidase, a property also exhibited by the pterin cofactor of eubacterial molybdoenzymes. A homogeneous formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase preparation was used for these investigations. The enzyme, with a molecular mass of 220 kDa, contained 0.5-0.8 mol molybdenum, 0.6-0.9 mol pterin, 28 +/- 2 mol non-heme iron and 28 +/- 2 mol acid-labile sulfur/mol based on a protein determination with bicinchoninic acid. The specific activity was 175 mumol.min-1.mg-1 (kcat = 640 s-1) assayed with methylviologen (app. Km = 0.02 mM) as artificial electron acceptor. The apparent Km for formylmethanofuran was 0.02 mM.  相似文献   

13.
A large-scale fractionation scheme purified the major molybdenum(Mo)-binding protein (Mop) from crude extracts of Clostridium pasteurianum, with a 10 and 0.2% yield of Mo and protein, respectively. The apparent molecular weight of the purified molybdoprotein is 5,700, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The protein contains 0.7 mol of Mo per mol of protein with a molecular weight of 5,700. Mop, as isolated, has a peak absorbency at 293 nm. Denaturation and oxidation of the molybdoprotein released multiple pterin like fluorescent compounds. Mop appears to contain a pterin derivative and Mo, but phosphate analysis indicated that the pterin at the very least is not phosphorylated; phosphorylation is required for functional molybdenum cofactor. All treatments used to release the putative Mo-pterin species from Mop failed to yield a molybdopterin that had detectable molybdenum cofactor activity.  相似文献   

14.
Xanthine dehydrogenase has been purified from Pseudomonas aeruginosa cultured on a rich medium and induced with hypoxanthine. The enzyme was shown to contain FAD, iron sulfur centers and a molybdenum cofactor as prosthetic groups. Analysis of the molybdenum cofactor in this enzyme has revealed that the cofactor contains molybdopterin (MPT) rather than molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide or molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide which have previously been identified in a number of molybdoenzymes of bacterial origin. The pterin cofactor in P.aeruginosa xanthine dehydrogenase was alkylated and the resulting product was identified as dicarboxamidomethyl molybdopterin. In addition, the pterin released from the enzyme by denaturation with guanidine-HCl was found to chromatograph on Sephadex G-15 with an apparent molecular weight of 350. These results document the first example of a bacterial enzyme with a molybdenum cofactor comprising molybdopterin and the metal only.  相似文献   

15.
The transition element molybdenum is essential for (nearly) all organisms and occurs in more than 30 enzymes catalyzing diverse redox reactions; however, only three Mo-enzymes have been found in plants so far. (1) Nitrate reductase catalyzes the key step in inorganic nitrogen assimilation, (2) aldehyde oxidase(s) recently have been shown to catalyze the last step in the biosynthesis of the phytohormones indole acetic acid and abscisic acid, respectively, and (3) xanthine dehydrogenase is involved in purine catabolism. These enzymes are homodimeric proteins harboring an electron transport chain that involves different prosthetic groups (FAD, heme, or Fe-S, Mo). Among different Mo-enzymes, the alignment of amino acid sequences helps to define regions that are well conserved (domains) and other regions that are highly variable in sequence (interdomain hinge regions). The existence of additional plant Mo-enzymes (like sulfite oxidase) also has to be considered. In this review we focus on structure-function relationships and stress the functional importance of the enzymes for the plant. With the exception of bacterial nitrogenase, Mo-enzymes share a similar pterin compound at their catalytic sites, the molybdenum cofactor. Molybdenum itself seems to be biologically inactive unless it is complexed by the cofactor. This molybdenum cofactor combines with diverse apoproteins where it is responsible for the correct anchoring and positioning of the Mo-center within the holo-enzyme so that the Mo-center can interact with other components of the enzyme's electron transport chain. The organic moiety of the molybdenum cofactor is a unique pterin named molybdopterin. The core structure of molybdopterin is conserved in all organisms. Accordingly, its biosynthetic pathway seems to be conserved because a similar set of cofactor genes has been found in bacteria and higher plants. We describe a model for the biosynthesis of the plant molybdenum cofactor involving the complex interaction of seven proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Partial inactivation of cytochrome c oxidase by nonpolar mercurial reagents   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Purified beef heart cytochrome c oxidase is inactivated to the extent of 35 to 50% by the nonpolar mercurial reagents mercuric chloride and ethylmercuric chloride. The inactivation is complete within 5 min. In titrations of activity, the plateau level of inactivation is attained at added ethylmercuric chloride:heme a ratios of about 1:1. Up to 3 mercury atoms/heme a are bound to the oxidase, although only the first of these affects its enzymatic activity. Incubation of the ethylmercury-modified oxidase with sulfhydryl compounds reverses the inactivation, with 2,3-dimercaptopropanol being most effective of the reagents tested. Spectrophotometric and polarographic assays of enzymatic activity show that Km values for the native and the ethylmercury-modified enzymes are practically indistinguishable, and that the partial inactivation observed for the latter is reflected exclusively in a lower value of Vmax compared to that of the native enzyme. Based on these results, we propose that ethylmercuric chloride reacts with a single crucial--SH group per heme a, and that electron transfer processes in the modified product are partially inhibited.  相似文献   

17.
Biochemistry and physiology of aerobic carbon monoxide-utilizing bacteria   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Abstract The use of CO as a growth substrate by aerobic CO-oxidizing (carboxydotrophic) bacteria requires some features not obvious in other bacteria. These are the presence of the enzyme CO dehydrogenase, a branched respiratory chain with an alternative CO-insensitive terminal oxidase (cytochrome b 653) and formation of reduced pyridine nucleotides by a pmf-driven reversed electron transfer. Immunocytochemical localization studies revealed that CO dehydrogenase is attached to the inner aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane of Pseudomonas carboxydovorans . The enzyme is a molybdo iron-sulfur flavoprotein containing bactopterin as the organic portion of the molybdenum cofactor. Recent findings suggest that this novel pterin is universal to eubacterial molybdenum enzymes, whereas molybdopterin is universal to eukaryotic molybdoenzymes.  相似文献   

18.
A fluorescent oxidation product of the molybdenum cofactor was isolated from Escherichia coli nitrate reductase (EC 1.9.6.1) and bovine milk xanthine oxidase (EC 1.2.3.2), which showed a visible absorption band at 395 nm and was dephosphorylated by alkaline phosphatase but not by phosphodiesterase I. The dephosphorylated species was oxidized by periodate to thieno[3,2-g]pterin-2-carbaldehyde which was quantitatively converted to thieno[3,2-g]pterin-2-carboxylic acid by subsequent treatment with Ag2O in 2 N NaOH. These results indicate that the oxidation product of the molybdenum cofactor is a thieno[3,2-g]pterin derivative with an unidentified side chain in the 2 position.  相似文献   

19.
Cell biology of molybdenum   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The transition element molybdenum (Mo) is of essential importance for (nearly) all biological systems as it is required by enzymes catalyzing diverse key reactions in the global carbon, sulfur and nitrogen metabolism. The metal itself is biologically inactive unless it is complexed by a special cofactor. With the exception of bacterial nitrogenase, where Mo is a constituent of the FeMo-cofactor, Mo is bound to a pterin, thus forming the molybdenum cofactor (Moco) which is the active compound at the catalytic site of all other Mo-enzymes. In eukaryotes, the most prominent Mo-enzymes are (1) sulfite oxidase, which catalyzes the final step in the degradation of sulfur-containing amino acids and is involved in detoxifying excess sulfite, (2) xanthine dehydrogenase, which is involved in purine catabolism and reactive oxygen production, (3) aldehyde oxidase, which oxidizes a variety of aldehydes and is essential for the biosynthesis of the phytohormone abscisic acid, and in autotrophic organisms also (4) nitrate reductase, which catalyzes the key step in inorganic nitrogen assimilation. All Mo-enzymes, except plant sulfite oxidase, need at least one more redox active center, many of them involving iron in electron transfer. The biosynthesis of Moco involves the complex interaction of six proteins and is a process of four steps, which also includes iron as well as copper in an indispensable way. Moco as released after synthesis is likely to be distributed to the apoproteins of Mo-enzymes by putative Moco-carrier proteins. Xanthine dehydrogenase and aldehyde oxidase, but not sulfite oxidase and nitrate reductase, require the post-translational sulfuration of their Mo-site for becoming active. This final maturation step is catalyzed by a Moco-sulfurase enzyme, which mobilizes sulfur from l-cysteine in a pyridoxal phosphate-dependent manner as typical for cysteine desulfurases.  相似文献   

20.
The chemolithoautotroph NT-26 oxidizes arsenite to arsenate by using a periplasmic arsenite oxidase. Purification and preliminary characterization of the enzyme revealed that it (i) contains two heterologous subunits, AroA (98 kDa) and AroB (14 kDa); (ii) has a native molecular mass of 219 kDa, suggesting an alpha2beta2 configuration; and (iii) contains two molybdenum and 9 or 10 iron atoms per alpha2beta2 unit. The genes that encode the enzyme have been cloned and sequenced. Sequence analyses revealed similarities to the arsenite oxidase of Alcaligenes faecalis, the putative arsenite oxidase of the beta-proteobacterium ULPAs1, and putative proteins of Aeropyrum pernix, Sulfolobus tokodaii, and Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Interestingly, the AroA subunit was found to be similar to the molybdenum-containing subunits of enzymes in the dimethyl sulfoxide reductase family, whereas the AroB subunit was found to be similar to the Rieske iron-sulfur proteins of cytochrome bc1 and b6f complexes. The NT-26 arsenite oxidase is probably exported to the periplasm via the Tat secretory pathway, with the AroB leader sequence used for export. Confirmation that NT-26 obtains energy from the oxidation of arsenite was obtained, as an aroA mutant was unable to grow chemolithoautotrophically with arsenite. This mutant could grow heterotrophically in the presence of arsenite; however, the arsenite was not oxidized to arsenate.  相似文献   

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