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1.
Aims: To investigate the alkane‐hydroxylating system of isolate SP2B, closely related to Rhodococcus ruber DSM 43338T and uncharacterized so far for its alkane degradation genes. Methods and Results: Although isolate SP2B and reference strain can grow on by‐products from hexane degradation, the type strain R. ruber was unable, unlike SP2B isolate, to use short‐chain alkanes, as assessed by gas chromatography. Using PCR with specific or degenerated primers, inverse PCR and Southern blot, two alkane hydroxylase encoding genes (alkB) were detected in both bacteria, which is in agreement with their alkane range. The first AlkB was related to Rhodococcus AlkB7 enzymes and contains a nonbulky residue at a specific position, suggesting it might be involved in medium‐ and long‐chain alkane oxidation. The second partial alkB gene potentially belongs to alkB5‐type, which was found in bacteria unable to use hexane. Moreover, a partial P450 cytochrome alkane hydroxylase, thought to be responsible for the hexane degradation, was detected only in the isolated strain. Conclusions: Rhodococcus ruber SP2B should prove to be a promising candidate for bioremediation studies of contaminated sites because of its large degradation range of alkanes. Significance and Impact of the Study: This is the first thorough study on R.ruber alkane degradation systems.  相似文献   

2.
The aerobic degradation of cholesterol, testosterone, androsterone, progesterone, and further steroid compounds as sole carbon source has been observed in the newly isolated bacterial Gram-positive strain Chol-4. The 16S rRNA gene sequence shares the greatest similarity with members of the genus Rhodococcus, with the closest shared nucleotide identities of 98–99% with Rhodococcus ruber (DSM 43338T) and Rhodococcus aetherivorans (DSM 44752T). Phylogenetic analysis of Rhodococcus 16S rRNA gene sequences consistently places strain Chol-4 in a clade shared with those both type strains within the Rhodococcus rhodochrous subclade. The results of DNA–DNA hybridization against its two phylogenetically closest neighbors as well as the results of morphological, physiological, and biochemical tests allowed genotypic and phenotypic differentiation of strain Chol-4 from Rhodococcus ruber (DSM 43338T) on the species level and from the other validly described Rhodococcus species on the genus level. Strain Chol-4 therefore merits recognition as a novel strain of the species Rhodococcus ruber and demonstrates for the first time the capability of this species to utilize a great variety of steroid compounds as growth substrates never shown for other species of this genus so far. The genome of strain Chol-4 harbors at least one gene cluster that may be responsible for the degradation of steroid compounds. This gene cluster was identified in a cloned 5458 bp BamHI–EcoRV DNA fragment and compared to similar genes from other Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria described so far.  相似文献   

3.
The Artrobacter globiformis KZT1 fcbA gene responsible for dehalogenase (4-chlorobenzoate-4-hydroxylase) activity was cloned in Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas putida cells. The character of the fcbA gene expression was studied. Notwithstanding amplification of the gene dose and control of the inducible Plac promoter, the level of substrate dehalogenation by recombinant E. coli strains was lower, as compared with that in the original KZT1 strain. Cloning of the fcbA gene in P. putida KZ6R cells utilizing 4HBA resulted in a recombinant pathway of 4CBA degradation, which proved more effective for substrate consumption, in comparison with the original KZT1 strain.  相似文献   

4.
Two bacterial strains, the natural isolate Arthrobacter sp. FG1 and the engineered strain Pseudomonas putida PaW340/pDH5, were compared for their efficiency in the degradation of 4-chlorobenzoic acid in a slurry phase system. The recombinant strain was obtained by cloning the Arthrobacter sp. FG1 dehalogenase encoding genes in P. putida PaW340. In the slurry inoculated with pre-adapted cultures of Arthrobacter sp. FG1, the 4-chlorobenzoic acid degradation was found to be slower than that observed in the slurry inoculated with the recombinant strain P. putida PaW340/pDH5, regardless of the presence or absence of soil indigenous bacteria. Slurry inoculated with mixed cultures of Arthrobacter sp. FG1 and the 4-hyroxybenzoic acid degrader P. putida PaW340 did not show any improvement in 4-chlorobenzoic acid degradation.  相似文献   

5.
Strains of Arthrobacter catalyze a hydrolytic dehalogenation of 4-chlorobenzoate (4-CBA) to p-hydroxybenzoate. The reaction requires ATP and coenzyme A (CoA), indicating activation of the substrate via a thioester, like that reported for Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 (J. D. Scholten, K.-H. Chang, P. C. Babbit, H. Charest, M. Sylvestre, and D. Dunaway-Mariano, Science 253:182-185, 1991). The dehalogenase genes of Arthrobacter sp. strain SU were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Analyses of deletions indicate that dehalogenation depends on three open reading frames (ORFs) which are organized in an operon. There is extensive sequence homology to corresponding gene products in Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3, suggesting that ORF1 and ORF2 encode a 4-CBA-CoA-ligase and a 4-CBA-CoA dehalogenase, respectively. ORF3 possibly represents a thioesterase, although no homology to the enzyme from Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 exists.  相似文献   

6.
Strains of Arthrobacter catalyze a hydrolytic dehalogenation of 4-chlorobenzoate (4-CBA) to p-hydroxybenzoate. The reaction requires ATP and coenzyme A (CoA), indicating activation of the substrate via a thioester, like that reported for Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 (J. D. Scholten, K.-H. Chang, P. C. Babbit, H. Charest, M. Sylvestre, and D. Dunaway-Mariano, Science 253:182-185, 1991). The dehalogenase genes of Arthrobacter sp. strain SU were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Analyses of deletions indicate that dehalogenation depends on three open reading frames (ORFs) which are organized in an operon. There is extensive sequence homology to corresponding gene products in Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3, suggesting that ORF1 and ORF2 encode a 4-CBA-CoA-ligase and a 4-CBA-CoA dehalogenase, respectively. ORF3 possibly represents a thioesterase, although no homology to the enzyme from Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 exists.  相似文献   

7.
Pseudomonas sp. strain DJ-12 is a bacterial isolate capable of degrading 4-chlorobiphenyl (4CBP) as a carbon and energy source. The catabolic degradation of 4CBP by the strain DJ-12 was studied along with the genetic organization of the genes responsible for the crucial steps of the catabolic degradation. The catabolic pathway was characterized as being conducted by consecutive reactions of themeta-cleavage of 4CBP, hydrolytic dechlorination of 4-chlorobenzoate (4CBA), hydroxylation of 4-hydroxybenzoate, andmeta-cleavage of protocatechuate. ThepcbC gene responsible for themeta-cleavage of 4CBP only showed a 30 to 40% homology in its deduced amino acid sequence compared to those of the corresponding genes from other strains. The amino acid sequence of 4CBA-CoA dechlorinase showed an 86% homology with that ofPseudomonas sp. CBS3, yet only a 50% homology with that ofArthrobacter spp. However, thefcb genes for the hydrolytic dechlorination of 4CBA inPseudomonas sp. DJ-12 showed an uniquely different organization from those of CBS3 and other reported strains. Accordingly, these results indicate that strain DJ-12 can degrade 4CBP completely viameta-cleavage and hydrolytic dechlorination using enzymes that are uniquely different in their amino acid sequences from those of other bacterial strains with the same degradation activities.  相似文献   

8.
The genes encoding the 4-chlorobenzoate dehalogenase of Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 were, in an earlier study, cloned in Escherichia coli DH1 with the cosmid vector pPSA843 and then mobilized to the 4-chlorobenzoate dehalogenase minus strain Pseudomonas putida KT2440. In this paper we report on the expression of 4-chlorobenzoate dehalogenase in these clones and on the polypeptide composition of the active enzyme. The dehalogenase activity in whole cells suspended in 3.2 mM 4-chlorobenzoate (30 degrees C) was determined to be approximately 27 units (micromoles 4-hydroxybenzoate produced per minute) per 100 g of E. coli-pPSA843 cells and approximately 28 units per 100 g of P. putida-pPSA843 cells. Dehalogenase activity in fresh cellular extracts (pH 7.4, 30 degrees C) prepared from the E. coli and P. putida clones was unstable and at least 20-fold lower than that observed with the whole cells. The polypeptide components of the dehalogenase were identified by selective expression of the cloned dehalogenase genes and analysis of the gene translation products. Analysis of dehalogenase activity in omega insertion mutants and deletion mutants circumscribed the dehalogenase genes to a 4.8-kilobase (4.8 kb) stretch of the 9.5-kb DNA fragment. Selective expression of the dehalogenase genes from a cloned 4.8-kb DNA fragment in a maxicell system revealed a 30-kDa polypeptide as one of the components of the dehalogenase system. Selective expression of the dehalogenase genes using the T7 polymerase promoter system revealed the 30-kDa polypeptide and 57- and 16-kDa polypeptide products. Determination of which of the three polypeptides were translated in deletion mutants provided the relative positions of the encoding genes on a single DNA strand and the direction in which they are transcribed.  相似文献   

9.
Dehalogenation is the key step in the degradation of halogenated aromatics, while reductive dehalogenation is originally thought to rarely occur in aerobes. In this study, an aerobic strain of Comamonas sp. 7D‐2 was shown to degrade the brominated aromatic herbicide bromoxynil completely and release two equivalents of bromides under aerobic conditions. The enzymes involved in the degradation of bromoxynil to 4‐carboxy‐2‐hydroxymuconate‐6‐semialdehyde, including nitrilase, reductive dehalogenase (BhbA), 4‐hydroxybenzoate 3‐monooxygenase and protocatechuate 4,5‐dioxygenase, were molecularly characterized. The novel dehalogenase BhbA was shown to be a complex of a respiration‐linked reductive dehalogenase (RdhA) domain and a NAD(P)H‐dependent oxidoreductase domain and to have key features of anaerobic respiratory RdhAs, including two predicted binding motifs for [4Fe‐4S] clusters and a close association with a hydrophobic membrane protein (BhbB). BhbB was confirmed to anchor BhbA to the membrane. BhbA was partially purified and found to use NAD(P)H as electron donors. Full‐length bhbA homologues were found almost exclusively in marine aerobic proteobacteria, suggesting that reductive dehalogenation occurs extensively in aerobes and that bhbA is horizontally transferred from marine microorganisms. The discovery of a functional reductive dehalogenase and ring‐cleavage oxygenases in an aerobe opens up possibilities for basic research as well as the potential application for bioremediation.  相似文献   

10.
Bacterial isolates from soils contaminated with (chlorinated) aromatic compounds, which degraded biphenyl/chlorinated biphenyls (CB) and belonged to the genera Rhodococcus and Pseudomonas, were studied. Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences was used to determine the phylogenetic position of the isolates. The Rhodococcus cells were found to contain plasmids of high molecular mass (220–680 kbp). PCR screening for the presence of the bphA1 gene, a marker indicating the possibility for induction of 2,3-dioxygenase (biphenyl/toluene dioxygenase subfamily), revealed the presence of the bphA1 genes with 99–100% similarity to the homologous genes of bacteria of the relevant species in all pseudomonad and most Rhodococcus isolates. A unique bphA1 gene, which had not been previously reported for the genus, was identified in Rhodococcus sp. G10. The absence of specific amplification of the bphA1 genes in some biphenyl-degrading bacteria (Rhodococcus sp. B7b, B106a, G12a, P2kr, P2(51), and P2m), as well as in an active biphenyl degrader Rhodococcus ruber P25, indicated the absence of the genes encoding the proteins of the biphenyl/toluene dioxygenase subfamily and participation of the enzymes other than this protein family in biphenyl/CB degradation.  相似文献   

11.
Pseudomonas sp. CBS3 is capable of growing with 4-chlorobenzoate as sole source of carbon and energy. The removal of the chlorine of 4-chlorobenzoate is performed in the first degradation step by an enzyme system consisting of three proteins. A 4-halobenzoate-coenzyme A ligase activates 4-chlorobenzoate in a coenzyme A, ATP and Mg2+ dependent reaction to 4-chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A. This thioester intermediate is dehalogenated by the 4-chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A dehalogenase. Finally coenzyme A is split off by a 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA thioesterase to form 4-hydroxybenzoate. The involved 4-chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A dehalogenase was purified to apparent homogeneity by a five-step purification procedure. The native enzyme had an apparent molecular mass of 120,000 and was composed of four identical polypeptide subunits of 31 kDa. The enzyme displayed an isoelectric point of 6.7. The maximal initial rate of catalysis was achieved at pH 10 at 60 °C. The apparent K m value for 4-chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A was 2.4–2.7 µM. V max was 1.1 × 10–7 M sec–1 (2.2 µmol min–1 mg–1 of protein). The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence was determined. All 4-halobenzoyl-coenzyme A thioesters, except 4-fluorobenzoyl-coenzyme A, were dehalogenated by the 4-chlorobenzoyl-CoA dehalogenase.Abbreviations CBA chlorobenzoate - CoA coenzyme A - HBA hydroxybenzoate - DTT dithiothreitol - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

12.
Summary Several bacterial strains that can oxidize mono- and dichlorinated biphenyls with one unsubstituted ring have already been described. The major route for this biodegradation leads ultimately to the corresponding chlorobenzoic acid, but several other minor chlorinated metabolites that might possibly be of concern for the environment have also been described previously. Since none of the bacterial strains that are able to oxidize these chlorinated biphenyls in pure culture are known to degrade chlorobenzoic acid, the oxidation of these substrates by axenic cultures always generates chlorobenzoates plus several other metabolites. In the present study, we have estimated the biodegradation of 4-chlorobiphenyl (4CB) by a two-membered bacterial culture containing one strain able to grow on 4CB and to transform it into 4-chlorobenzoate (4CBA) and one strain able to degrade 4CBA. The results were encouraging, since it was shown that the degradation of 4CB was more rapid and complete with the double bacterial culture.  相似文献   

13.
An Arthrobacter strain, able to utilize 4-chlorobenzoic acid as the sole carbon and energy source, was isolated and characterized. The first step of the catabolic pathway was found to proceed via a hydrolytic dehalogenation that leads to the formation of 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. The dehalogenase encoding genes (fcb) were sequenced and found highly homologous to and organized as those of other 4-chlorobenzoic acid degrading Arthrobacter strains. The fcb genes were cloned and successfully expressed in the heterologous host Pseudomonas putida PaW340 and P. putida KT2442 upper TOL, which acquired the ability to grow on 4-chlorobenzoic acid and 4-chlorotoluene, respectively. The cloned dehalogenase displayed a high specificity for para-substituted haloaromatics with affinity Cl > Br > I > F, in the order.  相似文献   

14.
4-chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A (4-CBA-CoA) dehalogenase catalyzes the hydrolytic dehalogenation of 4-CBA-CoA by attack of Asp145 on the C4 of the substrate benzoyl ring to form a Meisenheimer intermediate (EMc), followed by expulsion of chloride ion to form an arylated enzyme intermediate (EAr) and, finally, ester hydrolysis in EAr to form 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA (4-HBA-CoA). This study examines the contribution of the active site His90 to catalysis of this reaction pathway. The His90 residue was replaced with glutamine by site-directed mutagenesis. X-ray crystallographic analysis of H90Q dehalogenase complexed with 4-HBA-CoA revealed that the positions of the catalytic groups are unchanged from those observed in the structure of the 4-HBA-CoA-wild-type dehalogenase complex. The one exception is the Gln90 side chain, which is rotated away from the position of the His90 side chain. The vacated His90 site is occupied by two water molecules. Kinetic techniques were used to evaluate ligand binding and catalytic turnover rates in the wild-type and H90Q mutant dehalogenases. The rate constants for 4-CBA-CoA (both 7 microM(-1) x s(-1)) and 4-HBA-CoA (33 and 11 microM(-1) x s(-1)) binding to the two dehalogenases are similar in value. For wild-type dehalogenase, the rate constant for a single turnover is 2.3 s(-1) while that for multiple turnovers is 0.7 s(-1). For H90Q dehalogenase, these rate constants are 1.6 x 10(-2) and 2 x 10(-4) s(-1). The rate constants for EMc formation in wild-type and mutant dehalogenase are approximately 200 s(-1) while the rate constants for EAr formation are 40 and 0.3 s(-1), respectively. The rate constant for hydrolysis of EAr in wild-type dehalogenase is 20 s(-1) and in the H90Q mutant, 0.13 s(-1). The 133-fold reduction in the rate of EAr formation in the mutant may be the result of active site hydration, while the 154-fold reduction in the rate EAr hydrolysis may be the result of lost general base catalysis. Substitution of the His90 with Gln also introduces a rate-limiting step which follows catalysis, and may involve renewing the catalytic site through a slow conformational change.  相似文献   

15.
A gram-positive Microbacterium sp. strain, ITRC1, that was able to degrade the persistent and toxic hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) isomers was isolated and characterized. The ITRC1 strain has the capacity to degrade all four major isomers of HCH present in both liquid cultures and aged contaminated soil. DNA fragments corresponding to the two initial genes involved in γ-HCH degradative pathway, encoding enzymes for γ-pentachlorocyclohexene hydrolytic dehalogenase (linB) and a 2,5-dichloro-2,5-cyclohexadiene-1,4-diol dehydrogenase (linC), were amplified by PCR and sequenced. Their presence in the ITRC1 genomic DNA was also confirmed by Southern hybridization. Sequencing of the amplified DNA fragment revealed that the two genes present in the ITRC1 strain were homologous to those present in Sphingomonas paucimobilis UT26. Both 16S rRNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis resulted in the identification of the bacteria as a Microbacterium sp. We assume that these HCH-degrading bacteria evolved independently but possessed genes similar to S. paucimobilis UT26. The reported results indicate that catabolic genes for γ-HCH degradation are highly conserved in diverse genera of bacteria, including the gram-positive groups, occurring in various environmental conditions.  相似文献   

16.
An operon encoding enzymes responsible for degradation of the EPA priority contaminant para‐nitrophenol (PNP) from Pseudomonas sp. ENV2030 contains more genes than would appear to be necessary to mineralize PNP. To determine some necessary genes for PNP degradation, the genes encoding the proposed enzymes in the degradation pathway (pnpADEC) were assembled into a broad‐host‐range, BioBricks‐compatible vector under the control of a constitutive promoter. These were introduced into Escherichia coli DH10b and two Pseudomonas putida strains, one with a knockout of the aromatic transport TtgB and the parent with the native transporter. The engineered strains were assayed for PNP removal. E. coli DH10b harboring several versions of the refactored pathway was able to remove PNP from the medium up to a concentration of 0.2 mM; above which PNP was toxic to E. coli. A strain of P. putida harboring the PNP pathway genes was capable of removing PNP from the medium up to 0.5 mM. When P. putida harboring the native PNP degradation cluster was exposed to PNP, pnpADEC were induced, and the resulting production of β‐ketoadipate from PNP induced expression of its chromosomal degradation pathway (pcaIJF). In contrast, pnpADEC were expressed constitutively from the refactored constructs because none of the regulatory genes found in the native PNP degradation cluster were included. Although P. putida harboring the refactored construct was incapable of growing exclusively on PNP as a carbon source, evidence that the engineered pathway was functional was demonstrated by the induced expression of chromosomal pcaIJF. © 2010 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2010  相似文献   

17.
The Arthrobacter sp. strain SU 4-chlorobenzoate (4-CBA) dehalogenation pathway converts 4-CBA to 4-hydroxybenzoate (4-HBA). The pathway operon contains the genes fcbA, fcbB, and fcbC (A. Schmitz, K. H. Gartemann, J. Fiedler, E. Grund, and R. Eichenlaub, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:4068-4071, 1992). Genes fcbA and fcbB encode 4-CBA-coenzyme A (CoA) ligase and 4-CBA-CoA dehalogenase, respectively, whereas the function of fcbC is not known. We subcloned fcbC and expressed it in Escherichia coli, and we purified and characterized the FcbC protein. A substrate activity screen identified benzoyl-CoA thioesters as the most active substrates. Catalysis of 4-HBA-CoA hydrolysis to 4-HBA and CoA occurred with a kcat of 6.7 s−1 and a Km of 1.2 μM. The kcat pH rate profile for 4-HBA-CoA hydrolysis indicated optimal activity over a pH range of 6 to 10. The amino acid sequence of the FcbC protein was compared to other sequences contained in the protein sequence data banks. A large number of sequence homologues of unknown function were identified. On the other hand, the 4-HBA-CoA thioesterases isolated from 4-CBA-degrading Pseudomonas strains did not share significant sequence identity with the FcbC protein, indicating early divergence of the thioesterase-encoding genes.  相似文献   

18.
Pseudomonas sp. strain WBC-3 utilizes para-nitrophenol (PNP) as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen and energy. PnpA (PNP 4-monooxygenase) and PnpB (para-benzoquinone reductase) were shown to be involved in the initial steps of PNP catabolism via hydroquinone. We demonstrated here that PnpA also catalyzed monooxygenation of 4-nitrocatechol (4-NC) to hydroxyquinol, probably via hydroxyquinone. It was the first time that a single-component PNP monooxygenase has been shown to catalyze this conversion. PnpG encoded by a gene located in the PNP degradation cluster was purified as a His-tagged protein and identified as a hydroxyquinol dioxygenase catalyzing a ring-cleavage reaction of hydroxyquinol. Although all the genes necessary for 4-NC metabolism seemed to be present in the PNP degradation cluster in strain WBC-3, it was unable to grow on 4-NC as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen and energy. This was apparently due to the substrate’s inability to trigger the expression of genes involved in degradation. Nevertheless, strain WBC-3 could completely degrade both PNP and 4-NC when PNP was used as the inducer, demonstrating its potential in bioremediation of the environment polluted by both 4-NC and PNP.  相似文献   

19.
Dong J  Lu X  Wei Y  Luo L  Dunaway-Mariano D  Carey PR 《Biochemistry》2003,42(31):9482-9490
4-Chlorobenzoyl-coenzyme A (4-CBA-CoA) dehalogenase catalyzes the hydrolytic dehalogenation of 4-CBA-CoA to 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA by using an active site aspartate as the nucleophile. Formation of the corresponding Meisenheimer complex (EMc) is followed by chloride ion expulsion which forms the arylated intermediate (EAr). This is then hydrolyzed to the product. In this paper, we explore the relationship between active site polarizing forces acting on the benzoyl carbonyl and the rate of formation of the Meisenheimer complex. The polarizing forces at the C[double bond]O group were modulated by introducing site-selected mutations (A112V, Y65D, G113A, G113S, G113N, and F64P), near the C[double bond]O binding site. Using either the substrate, 4-CBA-CoA, or the substrate analogue, 4-methylbenzoyl-CoA (4-MBA-CoA), Raman difference spectroscopy provided the position of the C[double bond]O stretching frequency (nu(C)[double bond](O)) for a total of 10 enzyme-ligand complexes. In turn, the values of the C[double bond]O frequencies could be converted to differences in effective hydrogen bonding strengths between members of the series, based on earlier model studies [Clarkson, J., Tonge, P. J., Taylor, K. L., Dunaway-Mariano, D., and Carey, P. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 10192-10199]. Catalysis in the F64P, G113A, G113S, and G113N dehalogenase mutants was very slow with k(cat) values ranging from 8 x 10(-3) to 7.6 x 10(-6) s(-1). The EAr intermediate did not accumulate to a detectable level on these enzymes during a single turnover. Catalysis in the Y65D and A112V dehalogenase mutants were almost as efficient as catalysis in wild-type dehalogenase with k(cat) values of 0.1-0.6 s(-1). In wild-type dehalogenase, 22% of the bound substrate accumulated as the EAr intermediate during a single turnover (k(obs) for EAr formation = 24 s(-(1)); in the Y65D mutant, the level of accumulation is 17% (k(obs) for EAr formation = 3 s(-1)), and in the A112V mutant, the level is 23% (k(obs) for EAr formation = 17 s(-1)). The k(obs) for EAr formation in wild-type dehalogenase and the more active dehalogenase mutants (Y65D and A112V) was taken to be an estimate of the k for EMc formation, and the k(obs) for EP formation in a single turnover was taken to be an estimate of the k for EMc formation in the severely impaired mutants (F64P, G113A, G113S, and G113N). A plot of the log k(obs) for EMc formation versus the C[double bond]O stretching frequency of bound 4-CBA-CoA (or 4-MBA-CoA) is a straight line (R(2) = 0.9584). Throughout the series, nu(C)[double bond](O) varied by 61 cm(-1), corresponding to the change in hydrogen bonding enthalpy of 67 kJ/mol. The results show that changes in polarizing forces at the benzoyl carbonyl are transmitted to the benzoyl (4) position and correlate with the rate of aromatic nucleophilic addition five chemical bonds away. Interestingly, the relationship between effective polarizing forces and reactivity seen here for dehalogenase is similar to that reported for the addition-elimination reaction involving the hydrolysis of a series of acyl serine proteases.  相似文献   

20.
The secondary structure of the trimeric protein 4-chlorobenzoyl coenzyme A dehalogenase from Arthrobacter sp. strain TM-1, the second of three enzymes involved in the dechlorination of 4-chlorobenzoate to form 4-hydroxybenzoate, has been examined. EmM for the enzyme was 12.59. Analysis by circular dichroism spectrometry in the far uv indicated that 4-chlorobenzoyl coenzyme A dehalogenase was composed mostly of α-helix (56%) with lesser amounts of random coil (21%), β-turn (13%) and β-sheet (9%). These data are in close agreement with a computational prediction of secondary structure from the primary amino acid sequence, which indicated 55.8% α-helix, 33.7% random coil and 10.5% β-sheet; the enzyme is, therefore, similar to the 4-chlorobenzoyl coenzyme A dehalogenase from Pseudomonas sp. CBS-3. The three-dimensional structure, including that of the presumed active site, predicted by computational analysis, is also closely similar to that of the Pseudomonas dehalogenase. Study of the stability and physicochemical properties revealed that at room temperature, the enzyme was stable for 24 h but was completely inactivated by heating to 60°C for 5 min; thereafter by cooling at 1°C min−1 to 45°C, 20.6% of the activity could be recovered. Mildly acidic (pH 5.2) or alkaline (pH 10.1) conditions caused complete inactivation, but activity was fully recovered on returning the enzyme to pH 7.4. Circular dichroism studies also indicated that secondary structure was little altered by heating to 60°C, or by changing the pH from 7.4 to 6.0 or 9.2. Complete, irreversible destruction of, and maximal decrease in the fluorescence yield of the protein at 330–350 nm were brought about by 4.5 M urea or 1.1 M guanidinium chloride. Evidence was obtained to support the hypothetical three-dimensional model, that residues W140 and W167 are buried in a non-polar environment, whereas W182 appears at or close to the surface of the protein. At least one of the enzymes of the dehalogenase system (the combined 4-chlorobenzoate:CoA ligase, the dehalogenase and 4-hydroxybenzoyl coenzyme A thioesterase) appears to be capable of association with the cell membrane.
Anthony R. W. SmithEmail:
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