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1.
A Lack  G Fuchs 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(11):3629-3636
Several lines of evidence indicate that the first step in the anaerobic metabolism of phenol is phenol carboxylation to 4-hydroxybenzoate; this reaction is considered a biological Kolbe-Schmitt carboxylation. A phenol carboxylase system was characterized by using a denitrifying Pseudomonas strain, K 172, which catalyzes an isotope exchange between 14CO2 and the carboxyl group of 4-hydroxybenzoate. The enzymatic isotope exchange activity (100 nmol min-1 mg-1 of protein) requires Mn2+ and K+. We show that this system also catalyzes the carboxylation of phenylphosphate (the phosphoric acid monophenyl ester) to 4-hydroxybenzoate and phosphate. The specific activity of phenylphosphate carboxylation at the optimal pH of 6.5 is 12 nmol of CO2 fixed min-1 mg-1 of protein. Phenylphosphate cannot be replaced by Mg(2+)-ATP and phenol. The carboxylase activity requires Mn2+ but, in contrast to the isotope exchange activity, does not require K+. The apparent Km values are 1.5 mM dissolved CO2 and 0.2 mM phenylphosphate. Several convenient assays for phenylophosphate carboxylation are described. The isotope exchange reaction and the net carboxylation reaction are catalyzed by the same oxygen-sensitive enzyme, which has a half-life in an air-saturated solution of less than 1 min. Both activities cochromatographed with a protein with a Mr of 280,000, and both activities were induced only after anaerobic growth on phenol. The carboxylation of phenylphosphate suggests that phenylphosphate itself is the physiological CO2 acceptor molecular of this novel CO2 fixation reaction. Alternatively, phenylphosphate could simulate the unknown natural precursor. It is suggested that the formation of an enzyme-bound phenolate anion from the activated phenolic compound is the rate-determining step in the carboxylation reaction.  相似文献   

2.
Anaerobic phenol metabolism was studied in three facultative aerobic denitrifying bacteria, Thauera aromatica, “Aromatoleum aromaticum” strain EbN1 (Betaproteobacteria), and Magnetospirillum sp. (Alphaproteobacterium). All species formed phenylphosphate and contained phenylphosphate carboxylase but not phenol carboxylase activity. This is in contrast to direct phenol carboxylation by fermenting bacteria. Antisera raised against subunits of the Thauera phenylphosphate synthase and phenylphosphate carboxylase partly cross-reacted with the corresponding proteins in the other species. Some unsolved features of phenylphosphate carboxylase were addressed in T. aromatica. The core sub-complex of this enzyme consists of three different subunits and catalyzes the exchange of 14CO2 with the carboxyl group of 4-hydroxybenzoate, but not phenylphosphate carboxylation. It was inactivated by oxygen or by the oxidizing agent thionin and fully reactivated under reducing conditions. The purified recombinant phosphatase subunit alone had only low phenylphosphate phosphatase activity in the absence of the other components. However, activity was strongly enhanced in the presence of the core enzyme resulting in phenylphosphate carboxylation. Hence, a tight interaction of the carboxylase subunits is required for dephosphorylation of phenylphosphate, which is coupled to the concomitant carboxylation of the produced phenolate to 4-hydroxybenzoate, thus preventing a futile cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The anaerobic metabolism of phenol in the beta-proteobacterium Thauera aromatica proceeds via para-carboxylation of phenol (biological Kolbe-Schmitt carboxylation). In the first step, phenol is converted to phenylphosphate which is then carboxylated to 4-hydroxybenzoate in the second step. Phenylphosphate formation is catalyzed by the novel enzyme phenylphosphate synthase, which was studied. Phenylphosphate synthase consists of three proteins whose genes are located adjacent to each other on the phenol operon and were overproduced in Escherichia coli. The promoter region and operon structure of the phenol gene cluster were investigated. Protein 1 (70 kDa) resembles the central part of classical phosphoenolpyruvate synthase which contains a conserved histidine residue. It catalyzes the exchange of free [(14)C]phenol and the phenol moiety of phenylphosphate but not the phosphorylation of phenol. Phosphorylation of phenol requires protein 1, MgATP, and another protein, protein 2 (40 kDa), which resembles the N-terminal part of phosphoenol pyruvate synthase. Proteins 1 and 2 catalyze the following reaction: phenol + MgATP + H(2)O-->phenylphosphate + MgAMP + orthophosphate. The phosphoryl group in phenylphosphate is derived from the beta-phosphate group of ATP. The free energy of ATP hydrolysis obviously favors the trapping of phenol (K(m), 0.04 mM), even at a low ambient substrate concentration. The reaction is stimulated severalfold by another protein, protein 3 (24 kDa), which contains two cystathionine-beta-synthase domains of unknown function but does not show significant overall similarity to known proteins. The molecular and catalytic features of phenylphosphate synthase resemble those of phosphoenolpyruvate synthase, albeit with interesting modifications.  相似文献   

4.
Anaerobic phenol degradation has been shown to proceed via carboxylation of phenol to 4-hydroxybenzoate. However, in vitro the carboxylating enzyme was inactive with phenol; only phenylphosphate (phosphoric acid monophenyl ester) was readily carboxylated. We demonstrate in a denitrifying Pseudomonas strain that phenylphosphate is the first detectable product formed from phenol in whole cells and that subsequent phenylphosphate consumption parallels 4-hydroxybenzoate formation. These kinetics are consistent with phosphorylation being the first step in anaerobic phenol degradation. Various cosubstrates failed so far to act as phosphoryl donor for net phosphorylation of phenol in cell extracts. Yet, cells anaerobically grown with phenol contained an enzyme that catalyzed an isotope exchange between [U-14C]phenol and phenylphosphate. This transphosphorylation activity was anaerobically induced by phenol but was stable under aerobic conditions and required Mn2+ and polyethylene glycol. Activity was optimal at pH 5.5 and half-maximal with 0.6 mM Mn2+, 0.2 mM phenylphosphate, and 1 mM phenol. It is proposed that the phenol exchange/transphosphorylation reaction is catalyzed as partial reaction by an inducible phenol phosphorylating enzyme. The isotope exchange demands that a phosphorylated enzyme was formed in the course of the reaction, which might be similar to the phosphotransferase system of sugar transport.  相似文献   

5.
The anaerobic metabolism of phenol proceeds via carboxylation to 4-hydroxybenzoate by a two-step process involving seven proteins and two enzymes ("biological Kolbe-Schmitt carboxylation"). MgATP-dependent phosphorylation of phenol catalyzed by phenylphosphate synthase is followed by phenylphosphate carboxylation. Phenylphosphate synthase shows similarities to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) synthase and was studied for the bacterium Thauera aromatica. It consists of three proteins and transfers the beta-phosphoryl from ATP to phenol; the products are phenylphosphate, AMP, and phosphate. We showed that protein 1 becomes phosphorylated in the course of the reaction cycle by [beta-(32)P]ATP. This reaction requires protein 2 and is severalfold stimulated by protein 3. Stimulation of the reaction by 1 M sucrose is probably due to stabilization of the protein(s). Phosphorylated protein 1 transfers the phosphoryl group to phenolic substrates. The primary structure of protein 1 was analyzed by nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry after CNBr cleavage, trypsin digestion, and online high-pressure liquid chromatography at alkaline pH. His-569 was identified as the phosphorylated amino acid. We propose a catalytic ping-pong mechanism similar to that of PEP synthase. First, a diphosphoryl group is transferred to His-569 in protein 1, from which phosphate is cleaved to render the reaction unidirectional. Histidine phosphate subsequently serves as the actual phosphorylation agent.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The sulfate-reducing highly enriched culture N47 is capable to anaerobically degrade naphthalene, 2-methylnaphthalene, and 2-naphthoic acid. A proteogenomic investigation was performed to elucidate the initial activation reaction of anaerobic naphthalene degradation. This lead to the identification of an alpha-subunit of a carboxylase protein that was two-fold up-regulated in naphthalene-grown cells compared to 2-methylnaphthalene-grown cells. The putative naphthalene carboxylase subunit showed 48% similarity to the anaerobic benzene carboxylase from an iron-reducing, benzene-degrading culture and 45% to alpha-subunit of phenylphosphate carboxylase of Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1. A gene for the beta-subunit of putative naphthalene carboxylase was located nearby on the genome and was expressed with naphthalene. Similar to anaerobic benzene carboxylase, there were no genes for gamma- and delta-subunits of a putative carboxylase protein located on the genome which excludes participation in degradation of phenolic compounds. The genes identified for putative naphthalene carboxylase subunits showed only weak similarity to 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase excluding ATP-independent carboxylation. Several ORFs were identified that possibly encode a 2-naphthoate-CoA ligase, which is obligate for activation before the subsequent ring reduction by naphthoyl-CoA reductase. One of these ligases was exclusively expressed on naphthalene and 2-naphthoic acid and might be the responsible naphthoate-CoA-ligase.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Two 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase activities and a phenol carboxylase activity were found in cell-free extracts of a defined, 4-hydroxybenzoate- or phenol-grown consortium. Both decarboxylase activities were loosely membrane-associated and required K+ but a different pH and ion strength. Loss of activity of both decarboxylases by EDTA could be compensated by Zn2+ ions. The K m values for 4-hydroxybenzoate and K+ of the decarboxylase activities with pH optima at 6.4 or 7.8 were 0.02 and 2.5 or 0.004 and 0.5 mm, respectively. 3,4-Dihydroxybenzoate, 3,4,5-tridydroxybenzoate, 3,5-dimethoxy-4-hydroxybenzoate and 3-chloro-4-hydroxybenzoate were also decarboxylated by both enzyme activities. The phenol carboxylase was a soluble enzyme with its pH optimum at 6.5. It required K+, Rb+ or NH inf4 sup+ as monovalent, Zn2+, Mg2+, Mn2+ or Ni2+ as divalent cations and catalysed the carboxylation of phenol if 2,4-,2,3,4- or 2,4,6-hydroxybezoates were absent. The three enzyme activities were not influenced by Avidin and thus were probably not biotin-dependent enzymes. Offprint requests to: J. Winter  相似文献   

9.
The anaerobic metabolism of catechol (1,2-dihydroxybenzene) was studied in the betaproteobacterium Thauera aromatica that was grown with CO2 as a cosubstrate and nitrate as an electron acceptor. Based on different lines of evidence and on our knowledge of enzymes and genes involved in the anaerobic metabolism of other aromatic substrates, the following pathway is proposed. Catechol is converted to catechylphosphate by phenylphosphate synthase, which is followed by carboxylation by phenylphosphate carboxylase at the para position to the phosphorylated phenolic hydroxyl group. The product, protocatechuate (3,4-dihydroxybenzoate), is converted to its coenzyme A (CoA) thioester by 3-hydroxybenzoate-CoA ligase. Protocatechuyl-CoA is reductively dehydroxylated to 3-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA, possibly by 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase. 3-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA is further metabolized by reduction of the aromatic ring catalyzed by an ATP-driven benzoyl-CoA reductase. Hence, the promiscuity of several enzymes and regulatory proteins may be sufficient to create the catechol pathway that is made up of elements of phenol, 3-hydroxybenzoate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, and benzoate metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
Anaerobic benzene degradation was studied with a highly enriched iron‐reducing culture (BF) composed of mainly Peptococcaceae‐related Gram‐positive microorganisms. The proteomes of benzene‐, phenol‐ and benzoate‐grown cells of culture BF were compared by SDS‐PAGE. A specific benzene‐expressed protein band of 60 kDa, which could not be observed during growth on phenol or benzoate, was subjected to N‐terminal sequence analysis. The first 31 amino acids revealed that the protein was encoded by ORF 138 in the shotgun sequenced metagenome of culture BF. ORF 138 showed 43% sequence identity to phenylphosphate carboxylase subunit PpcA of Aromatoleum aromaticum strain EbN1. A LC/ESI‐MS/MS‐based shotgun proteomic analysis revealed other specifically benzene‐expressed proteins with encoding genes located adjacent to ORF 138 on the metagenome. The protein products of ORF 137, ORF 139 and ORF 140 showed sequence identities of 37% to phenylphosphate carboxylase PpcD of A. aromaticum strain EbN1, 56% to benzoate‐CoA ligase (BamY) of Geobacter metallireducens and 67% to 3‐octaprenyl‐4‐hydroxybenzoate carboxy‐lyase (UbiD/UbiX) of A. aromaticum strain EbN1 respectively. These genes are proposed as constituents of a putative benzene degradation gene cluster (~17 kb) composed of carboxylase‐related genes. The identified gene sequences suggest that the initial activation reaction in anaerobic benzene degradation is probably a direct carboxylation of benzene to benzoate catalysed by putative anaerobic benzene carboxylase (Abc). The putative Abc probably consists of several subunits, two of which are encoded by ORFs 137 and 138, and belongs to a family of carboxylases including phenylphosphate carboxylase (Ppc) and 3‐octaprenyl‐4‐hydroxybenzoate carboxy‐lyase (UbiD/UbiX).  相似文献   

11.
12.
Boll M  Fuchs G 《Biological chemistry》2005,386(10):989-997
Aerobic bacteria use molecular oxygen as a common co-substrate for key enzymes of aromatic metabolism. In contrast, in anaerobes all oxygen-dependent reactions are replaced by a set of alternative enzymatic processes. The anaerobic degradation of phenol to a non-aromatic product involves enzymatic processes that are uniquely found in the aromatic metabolism of anaerobic bacteria: (i) ATP-dependent phenol carboxylation to 4-hydroxybenzoate via a phenylphosphate intermediate (biological Kolbe-Schmitt carboxylation); (ii) reductive dehydroxylation of 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA to benzoyl-CoA; and (iii) ATP-dependent reductive dearomatization of the key intermediate benzoyl-CoA in a 'Birch-like' reduction mechanism. This review summarizes the results of recent mechanistic studies of the enzymes involved in these three key reactions.  相似文献   

13.
Phenol is metabolized in a denitrifying bacterium in the absence of molecular oxygen via para-carboxylation to 4-hydroxybenzoate (biological Kolbe-Schmitt synthesis). The enzyme system catalyzing the presumptive carboxylation of phenol, tentatively named 'phenol carboxylase', catalyzes an isotope exchange between 14CO2 and the carboxyl group of 4-hydroxybenzoate (specific activity 0.1 mumol 14CO2 incorporated into 4-hydroxybenzoate x min-1 x mg-1 cell protein) which is considered a partial reaction of the overall enzyme catalysis; 14C from [14C]phenol was not exchanged into 4-hydroxybenzoate ring positions to a significant extent. The 14CO2 isotope exchange reaction was studied in vitro. The reaction was dependent on the substrates CO2 and 4-hydroxybenzoate and required K+ and Mn2+. The actual substrate was CO2 rather than HCO3-. The apparent Km values were 1 mM dissolved CO2, 0.2 mM 4-hydroxybenzoate, 2 mM K+, and 0.1 mM Mn2+. The cationic cocatalysts could be substituted by ions of similar ionic radius: K+ could be replaced to some extent by Rb+, but not by Li+, Na+, Cs+, or NH4+; Mn2+ could be replaced to some extent by Fe2+ greater than Mg2+, Co2+, but not by Ni2+, Zn2+, Ca2+, or Cu2+. The exchange reaction was not strictly specific for 4-hydroxybenzoate, however it required a p-hydroxyl group; derivatives of 4-hydroxybenzoate with OH, CH3 or Cl substituents in m-position did react, whereas those with substitutions in the o-position were inactive or were inhibitory. The enzyme was induced when cells were grown on phenol, but not on 4-hydroxybenzoate. Comparison of SDS/PAGE protein patterns of cells grown on phenol or 4-hydroxybenzoate revealed several additional protein bands in phenol-grown cells. The possible role of similar enzymes in the anaerobic metabolism of phenolic compounds is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
We found the occurrence of 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase in Enterobacter cloacae P240, isolated from soils under anaerobic conditions, and purified the enzyme to homogeneity. The purified enzyme was a homohexamer of identical 60 kDa subunits. The purified decarboxylase catalyzed the nonoxidative decarboxylation of 4-hydroxybenzoate without requiring any cofactors. Its K m value for 4-hydroxybenzoate was 596 μM. The enzyme also catalyzed decarboxylation of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, for which the K m value was 6.80 mM. In the presence of 3 M KHCO3 and 20 mM phenol, the decarboxylase catalyzed the reverse carboxylation reaction of phenol to form 4-hydroxybenzoate with a molar conversion yield of 19%. The K m value for phenol was calculated to be 14.8 mM. The gene encoding the 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase was isolated from E. cloacae P240. Nucleotide sequencing of recombinant plasmids revealed that the 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase gene codes for a 475-amino-acid protein. The amino acid sequence of the enzyme is similar to those of 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase of Clostridium hydroxybenzoicum (53% identity), VdcC protein (vanillate decarboxylase) of Streptomyces sp. strain D7 (72%) and 3-octaprenyl-4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase of Escherichia coli (28%). The hypothetical proteins, showing 96–97% identities to the primary structure of E. cloacae P240 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase, were found in several bacterial strains.  相似文献   

16.
An expression plasmid incorporating the structural gene for the large subunit of a cyanobacterial ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase, but not the gene for its complementary small subunit, directs the synthesis of large subunits in Escherichia coli. This provides a means for obtaining a preparation of large subunits completely devoid of small subunits, which is not otherwise achievable. In extracts, these large subunits were found predominantly in the form of octamers, but intersubunit interactions were weaker than in the holoenzyme, which contains eight small subunits as well as eight large subunits, and tended to be broken by procedures which separated octamers from lower oligomers and monomers. However, partial purification by anion-exchange chromatography was possible. The large subunits recognized the reaction-intermediate analog, 2'-carboxy-D-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate, thus enabling measurement of catalytic site concentrations, but the binding was much weaker than to the holoenzyme. E. coli-produced large subunits catalyzed carboxylation with a kcat of 1% of that of the holoenzyme and the substrate affinities were 3- to 5-fold weaker. They also assembled with heterologous small subunits isolated from spinach ribulose-P2 carboxylase with a 100-fold increase in catalytic activity under standard assay conditions. Since catalysis can proceed in their absence, the small subunits cannot be directly involved in the catalytic chemistry. Their stimulative influence upon catalysis must be exerted by conformational means.  相似文献   

17.
Role of the small subunit in ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of CO2 fixation in photosynthesis, but O2 competes with CO2 for substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, leading to the loss of fixed carbon. Interest in genetically engineering improvements in carboxylation catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity has focused on the chloroplast-encoded large subunit because it contains the active site. However, there is another type of subunit in the holoenzyme of plants, which, like the large subunit, is present in eight copies. The role of these nuclear-encoded small subunits in Rubisco structure and function is poorly understood. Small subunits may have originated during evolution to concentrate large-subunit active sites, but the extensive divergence of structures among prokaryotes, algae, and land plants seems to indicate that small subunits have more-specialized functions. Furthermore, plants and green algae contain families of differentially expressed small subunits, raising the possibility that these subunits may regulate the structure or function of Rubisco. Studies of interspecific hybrid enzymes have indicated that small subunits are required for maximal catalysis and, in several cases, contribute to CO2/O2 specificity. Although small-subunit genetic engineering remains difficult in land plants, directed mutagenesis of cyanobacterial and green-algal genes has identified specific structural regions that influence catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity. It is thus apparent that small subunits will need to be taken into account as strategies are developed for creating better Rubisco enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis produces a large number of structurally diverse lipids generated from the carboxylation products of acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA. A biotin-dependent acyl-CoA carboxylase was purified from M. tuberculosis H37Rv by avidin affinity chromatography, and the three major protein components were determined by N-terminal sequencing to be the 63-kDa alpha3-subunit (AccA3, Rv3285), the 59-kDa beta5-subunit (AccD5, Rv3280), and the 56-kDa beta4-subunit (AccD4, Rv3799). A minor protein of about 24 kDa that co-purified with the above subunits was identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry to be the product of Rv3281 that is located immediately downstream of the open reading frame encoding the beta5-subunit. This protein displays identity over a short stretch of amino acids with the recently discovered epsilon-subunits of Streptomyces coelicolor, suggesting that it might be an epsilon-subunit of the mycobacterial acyl-CoA carboxylase. To test this hypothesis, the carboxylase subunits were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. Acyl-CoA carboxylase activity was successfully reconstituted for the first time from purified subunits of the acyl-CoA carboxylase of M. tuberculosis. The reconstituted alpha3-beta5 showed higher activity with propionyl-CoA than with acetyl-CoA, and the addition of the epsilon-subunit stimulated the carboxylation by 3.2- and 6.3-fold, respectively. The alpha3-beta4 showed very low activity with the above substrates but carboxylated long chain acyl-CoA. This epsilon-subunit contains five sets of tandem repeats at the N terminus that are required for maximal enhancement of carboxylase activity. The Rv3281 open reading frame is co-transcribed with Rv3280 in the mycobacterial cell, and the level of epsilon-protein was highest during the log phase and decreased during the stationary phase.  相似文献   

19.
Extracts of denitrifying bacteria grown anaerobically with phenol and nitrate catalyzed an isotope exchange between 14CO2 and the carboxyl group of 4-hydroxybenzoate. This exchange reaction is ascribed to a novel enzyme, phenol carboxylase, initiating the anaerobic degradation of phenol by para-carboxylation to 4-hydroxybenzoate. Some properties of this enzyme were determined by studying the isotope exchange reaction. Phenol carboxylase was rapidly inactivated by oxygen; strictly anoxic conditions were essential for preserving enzyme activity. The exchange reaction specifically was catalyzed with 4-hydroxybenzoate but not with other aromatic acids. Only the carboxyl group was exchanged; [U-14C]phenol was not exchanged with the aromatic ring of 4-hydroxybenzoate. Exchange activity depended on Mn2+ and inorganic phosphate and was not inhibited by avidin. Ortho-phosphate could not be substituted by organic phosphates nor by inorganic anions; arsenate had no effect. The pH optimum was between pH 6.5–7.0. The specific activity was 100 nmol 14CO2 exchange · min-1 · mg-1 protein. Phenol grown cells contained 4-hydroxybenzoyl CoA synthetase activity (40 nmol · min-1 · mg-1 protein). The possible role of phenol carboxylase and 4-hydroxybenzoyl CoA synthetase in anaerobic phenol metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
5'-Phosphoribosyl-5-aminoimidazole (AIR) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.21) catalyzes step 6, the carboxylation of AIR to 5'-phosphoribosyl-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxylic acid, in the de novo biosynthesis of purine nucleotides. As deduced from the DNA sequence of restriction fragments encoding AIR carboxylase and supported by maxicell analyses, AIR carboxylase was found to be composed of two nonidentical subunits. In agreement with established complementation data, the catalytic subunit (deduced Mr, 17,782) was encoded by the purE gene, while the CO2-binding subunit (deduced Mr, 39,385) was encoded by the purK gene. These two genes formed an operon in which the termination codon of the purE gene overlapped the initiation codon of the purK gene. The 5' end of the purEK mRNA was determined by mung bean nuclease mapping and was located 41 nucleotides upstream of the proposed initiation codon. The purEK operon is regulated by the purR gene product, and a purR regulatory-protein-binding site related to the sequences found in other pur loci was identified in the purEK operon control region.  相似文献   

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