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1.
The serine cycle methylotroph Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 contains two pterin-dependent pathways for C(1) transfers, the tetrahydrofolate (H(4)F) pathway and the tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT) pathway, and both are required for growth on C(1) compounds. With the exception of formate-tetrahydrofolate ligase (FtfL, alternatively termed formyl-H(4)F synthetase), all of the genes encoding the enzymes comprising these two pathways have been identified, and the corresponding gene products have been purified and characterized. We present here the purification and characterization of FtfL from M. extorquens AM1 and the confirmation that this enzyme is encoded by an ftfL homolog identified previously through transposon mutagenesis. Phenotypic analyses of the ftfL mutant strain demonstrated that FtfL activity is required for growth on C(1) compounds. Unlike mutants defective for the H(4)MPT pathway, the ftfL mutant strain does not exhibit phenotypes indicative of defective formaldehyde oxidation. Furthermore, the ftfL mutant strain remained competent for wild-type conversion of [(14)C]methanol to [(14)C]CO(2). Collectively, these data confirm our previous presumptions that the H(4)F pathway is not the key formaldehyde oxidation pathway in M. extorquens AM1. Rather, our data suggest an alternative model for the role of the H(4)F pathway in this organism in which it functions to convert formate to methylene H(4)F for assimilatory metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
In serine cycle methylotrophs, methylene tetrahydrofolate (H4F) is the entry point of reduced one-carbon compounds into the serine cycle for carbon assimilation during methylotrophic metabolism. In these bacteria, two routes are possible for generating methylene H4F from formaldehyde during methylotrophic growth: one involving the reaction of formaldehyde with H4F to generate methylene H4F and the other involving conversion of formaldehyde to formate via methylene tetrahydromethanopterin-dependent enzymes and conversion of formate to methylene H4F via H4F-dependent enzymes. Evidence has suggested that the direct condensation reaction is the main source of methylene H4F during methylotrophic metabolism. However, mutants lacking enzymes that interconvert methylene H4F and formate are unable to grow on methanol, suggesting that this route for methylene H4F synthesis should have a significant role in biomass production during methylotrophic metabolism. This problem was investigated in Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. Evidence was obtained suggesting that the existing deuterium assay might overestimate the flux through the direct condensation reaction. To test this possibility, it was shown that only minor assimilation into biomass occurred in mutants lacking the methylene H4F synthesis pathway through formate. These results suggested that the methylene H4F synthesis pathway through formate dominates assimilatory flux. A revised kinetic model was used to validate this possibility, showing that physiologically plausible parameters in this model can account for the metabolic fluxes observed in vivo. These results all support the suggestion that formate, not formaldehyde, is the main branch point for methylotrophic metabolism in M. extorquens AM1.  相似文献   

3.
Ten novel methylotrophy genes of the facultative methylotroph Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 were identified from a transposon mutagenesis screen. One of these genes encodes a product having identity with dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). This mutant has a C(1)-defective and methanol-sensitive phenotype that has previously only been observed for strains defective in tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT)-dependent formaldehyde oxidation. These results suggest that this gene, dmrA, may encode dihydromethanopterin reductase, an activity analogous to that of DHFR that is required for the final step of H(4)MPT biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 is a facultative methylotroph, which is a potential candidate to be used in commercial processes to convert simple one-carbon compounds to a variety of multicarbon chemicals and products. To better understand C(1) metabolism in M. extorquens AM1 at the systems level, metabolite profiling tools were developed and applied in this bacterium. Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC x GC-TOFMS) was used to obtain metabolite profiles of M. extorquens AM1 (primarily organic acids) and to identify the metabolite differences between cells grown on methanol (C(1) substrate) and succinate (multicarbon substrate). In this study, a list of compounds that included amino acids and major intermediates of central C(1) and multicarbon metabolism were studied as target metabolites. For these, calibration curves were obtained for absolute quantification by spiking different amounts of standard mixtures to cell cultures. Parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) was used for accurate peak quantification. Unknown chemical differences between cells grown on methanol and succinate were identified by applying Fisher ratio analysis at a selective mass channel (m/z 147). Thirty-six compounds were discovered to be statistically differentially expressed between C(1) and multicarbon metabolism. Among these, 13 were identified by matching to library mass spectra, and the rest were novel compounds that were not included in libraries. These differentially expressed compounds have provided clues to new pathways that are specifically linked to C(1) metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
The methylotrophic proteobacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 possesses tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT)-dependent enzymes, which are otherwise specific to methanogenic and sulfate-reducing archaea and which have been suggested to be involved in formaldehyde oxidation to CO(2) in M. extorquens AM1. The distribution of H(4)MPT-dependent enzyme activities in cell extracts of methylotrophic bacteria from 13 different genera are reported. H(4)MPT-dependent activities were detected in all of the methylotrophic and methanotrophic proteobacteria tested that assimilate formaldehyde by the serine or ribulose monophosphate pathway. H(4)MPT-dependent activities were also found in autotrophic Xanthobacter strains. However, no H(4)MPT-dependent enzyme activities could be detected in other autotrophic alpha-proteobacteria or in gram-positive methylotrophic bacteria. Genes encoding methenyl H(4)MPT cyclohydrolase (mch genes) were cloned and sequenced from several proteobacteria. Bacterial and archaeal Mch sequences have roughly 35% amino acid identity and form distinct groups in phylogenetic analysis.  相似文献   

6.
Methylotrophic bacteria can grow on a number of substrates as energy source with only one carbon atom, such as methanol, methane, methylamine, and dichloromethane. These compounds are metabolized via the cytotoxin formaldehyde. The formaldehyde consumption pathways, especially the pathways for the oxidation of formaldehyde to CO(2) for energy metabolism, are a central and critical part of the metabolism of these aerobic bacteria. Principally, two main types of pathways for the conversion of formaldehyde to CO(2) have been described: (1) a cyclic pathway initiated by the condensation of formaldehyde with ribulose monophosphate, and (2) distinct linear pathways that involve a dye-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase or C(1) unit conversion bound to the cofactors tetrahydrofolate (H(4)F), tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT), glutathione (GSH), or mycothiol (MySH). The pathways involving the four cofactors have in common the following sequence of events: the spontaneous or enzyme-catalyzed condensation of formaldehyde and the respective C(1) carrier, the oxidation of the cofactor-bound C(1) unit and its conversion to formate, and the oxidation of formate to CO(2). However, the H(4)MPT pathway is more complex and involves intermediates that were previously known solely from the energy metabolism of methanogenic archaea. The occurrence of the different formaldehyde oxidation pathways is not uniform among different methylotrophic bacteria. The pathways are in part also used by other organisms to provide C(1) units for biosynthetic reactions (e.g., H(4)F-dependent enzymes) or detoxification of formaldehyde (e.g., GSH-dependent enzymes).  相似文献   

7.
Recently it was found that Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 contains both tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) and tetrahydrofolate (H4F) as carriers of C1 units. In this paper we report that the aerobic methylotroph contains a methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase (0.9 U x mg-1 cell extract protein) and a methenyl H4F cyclohydrolase (0.23 U x mg-1). Both enzymes, which were specific for their substrates, were purified and characterized and the encoding genes identified via the N-terminal amino acid sequence. The purified methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase with a specific activity of 630 U x mg-1 (Vmax = 1500 U x mg-1; Km = 30 microm) was found to be composed of two identical subunits of molecular mass 33 kDa. Its sequence was approximately 40% identical to that of methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolases from methanogenic archaea. The methenyl H4F cyclohydrolase with a specific activity of 100 U x mg-1 (Vmax = 330 U x mg-1; Km = 80 microm) was found to be composed of two identical subunits of molecular mass 22 kDa. Its sequence was not similar to that of methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolases or to that of other methenyl H4F cyclohydrolases. Based on the specific activities in cell extract and from the growth properties of insertion mutants it is suggested that the methenyl H4MPT cyclohydrolase might have a catabolic, and the methenyl-H4F cyclohydrolase an anabolic function in the C1-unit metabolism of M. extorquens AM1.  相似文献   

8.
During growth on one-carbon (C1) compounds, the aerobic alpha-proteobacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 synthesizes the tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) derivative dephospho-H4MPT as a C1 carrier in addition to tetrahydrofolate. The enzymes involved in dephospho-H4MPT biosynthesis have not been identified in bacteria. In archaea, the final step in the proposed pathway of H4MPT biosynthesis is the reduction of dihydromethanopterin (H2MPT) to H4MPT, a reaction analogous to the reaction of the bacterial dihydrofolate reductase. A gene encoding a dihydrofolate reductase homolog has previously been reported for M. extorquens and assigned as the putative H2MPT reductase gene (dmrA). In the present work, we describe the biochemical characterization of H2MPT reductase (DmrA), which is encoded by dmrA. The gene was expressed with a six-histidine tag in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein was purified by nickel affinity chromatography and gel filtration. Purified DmrA catalyzed the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of H2MPT with a specific activity of 2.8 micromol of NADPH oxidized per min per mg of protein at 30 degrees C and pH 5.3. Dihydrofolate was not a substrate for DmrA at the physiological pH of 6.8. While the existence of an H2MPT reductase has been proposed previously, this is the first biochemical evidence for such an enzyme in any organism, including archaea. Curiously, no DmrA homologs have been identified in the genomes of known methanogenic archaea, suggesting that bacteria and archaea produce two evolutionarily distinct forms of dihydromethanopterin reductase. This may be a consequence of different electron donors, NAD(P)H versus reduced F420, used, respectively, in bacteria and methanogenic archaea.  相似文献   

9.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, a serine cycle facultative methylotroph, accumulates poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) as a carbon and energy reserve material during growth on both multicarbon- and single-carbon substrates. Recently, the identification and mutation of the genes involved in the biosynthesis and degradation of PHB have been described for this bacterium, demonstrating that two of the genes of the PHB cycle (phaA and phaB) are also involved in C(1) and C(2) metabolism, as part of a novel pathway for glyoxylate regeneration in the serine cycle (N. Korotkova and M. E. Lidstrom, J. Bacteriol. 183:1038-1046, 2001; N. Korotkova, L. Chistoserdova, V. Kuksa, and M. E. Lidstrom, J. Bacteriol. 184:1750-1758, 2002). In this work, three new genes involved in PHB biosynthesis in this bacterium have been investigated via mutation and phenotypic analysis: gap11, gap20, and phaR. We demonstrate that gap11 and gap20 encode two major granule-associated proteins (phasins) and that mutants with mutations in these genes are defective in PHB production and also in growth on C(2) compounds, while they show wild-type growth characteristics on C(1) or multicarbon compounds. The phaR mutant shows defects in both PHB accumulation and growth characteristics when grown on C(1) compounds and has defects in PHB accumulation but grows normally on C(3) and C(4) compounds, while both PHB accumulation and growth rate are at wild-type levels during growth on C(2) compounds. Our results suggest that this phenotype is due to altered fluxes of acetyl coenzyme A (CoA), a major intermediate in C(1), C(2), and heterotrophic metabolism in M. extorquens AM1, as well as the entry metabolite for the PHB cycle. Therefore, it seems likely that PhaR acts to control acetyl-CoA flux to PHB in this methylotrophic bacterium.  相似文献   

10.
Formaldehyde is toxic for all organisms from bacteria to humans due to its reactivity with biological macromolecules. Organisms that grow aerobically on single-carbon compounds such as methanol and methane face a special challenge in this regard because formaldehyde is a central metabolic intermediate during methylotrophic growth. In the alpha-proteobacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, we found a previously unknown enzyme that efficiently catalyzes the removal of formaldehyde: it catalyzes the condensation of formaldehyde and tetrahydromethanopterin to methylene tetrahydromethanopterin, a reaction which also proceeds spontaneously, but at a lower rate than that of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Formaldehyde-activating enzyme (Fae) was purified from M. extorquens AM1 and found to be one of the major proteins in the cytoplasm. The encoding gene is located within a cluster of genes for enzymes involved in the further oxidation of methylene tetrahydromethanopterin to CO(2). Mutants of M. extorquens AM1 defective in Fae were able to grow on succinate but not on methanol and were much more sensitive toward methanol and formaldehyde. Uncharacterized orthologs to this enzyme are predicted to be encoded by uncharacterized genes from archaea, indicating that this type of enzyme occurs outside the methylotrophic bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
In order to validate a gel free quantitative proteomics assay for the model methylotrophic bacterium Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, we examined the M. extorquens AM1 proteome under single carbon (methanol) and multicarbon (succinate) growth, conditions that have been studied for decades and for which extensive corroborative data have been compiled. In total, 4447 proteins from a database containing 7556 putative ORFs from M. extorquens AM1 could be identified with two or more peptide sequences, corresponding to a qualitative proteome coverage of 58%. Statistically significant nonzero (log(2) scale) differential abundance ratios of methanol/succinate could be detected for 317 proteins using summed ion intensity measurements and 585 proteins using spectral counting, at a q-value cut-off of 0.01, a measure of false discovery rate. The results were compared to recent microarray studies performed under equivalent chemostat conditions. The M. extorquens AM1 studies demonstrated the feasibility of scaling up the multidimensional capillary HPLC MS/MS approach to a prokaryotic organism with a proteome more than three times the size of microbes we have investigated previously, while maintaining a high degree of proteome coverage and reliable quantitative abundance ratios.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Cell extracts of Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 were recently found to catalyze the dehydrogenation of methylene tetrahydromethanopterin (methylene H4MPT) with NAD+ and NADP+. The purification of a 32-kDa NADP-specific methylene H4MPT dehydrogenase (MtdA) was described already. Here we report on the characterization of a second methylene H4MPT dehydrogenase (MtdB) from this aerobic alpha-proteobacterium. Purified MtdB with an apparent molecular mass of 32 kDa was shown to catalyze the oxidation of methylene H4MPT to methenyl H4MPT with NAD+ and NADP+ via a ternary complex catalytic mechanism. The Km for methylene H4MPT was 50 microM with NAD+ (Vmax = 1100 U x mg(-1) and 100 microM with NADP+ (Vmax = 950 U x mg(-1). The Km value for NAD+ was 200 microM and for NADP+ 20 microM. In contrast to MtdA, MtdB could not catalyze the dehydrogenation of methylene tetrahydrofolate. Via the N-terminal amino-acid sequence, the MtdB encoding gene was identified to be orfX located in a cluster of genes whose translated products show high sequence identities to enzymes previously found only in methanogenic and sulfate reducing archaea. Despite its location, MtdB did not show sequence similarity to archaeal enzymes. The highest similarity was to MtdA, whose encoding gene is located outside of the archaeal island. Mutants defective in MtdB were unable to grow on methanol and showed a pronounced sensitivity towards formaldehyde. On the basis of the mutant phenotype and of the kinetic properties, possible functions of MtdB and MtdA are discussed. We also report that both MtdB and MtdA can be heterologously overproduced in Escherichia coli making these two enzymes readily available for structural analysis.  相似文献   

14.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 is a facultative methylotrophic bacterium that uses the serine pathway for formaldehyde incorporation as its assimilation pathway during growth on one-carbon compounds. A DNA region from M. extorquens AM1 previously shown to contain genes for the serine pathway enzymes malyl coenzyme A (CoA) lyase and hydroxypyruvate reductase has been characterized in more detail. Insertion mutagenesis revealed an additional region required for growth on one-carbon compounds, and all of the insertion mutants in this region lacked activity for another serine pathway enzyme, the acetyl-CoA-independent phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase. Expression analysis with Escherichia coli of DNA fragments that included the malyl-CoA lyase and PEP carboxylase regions identified five polypeptides, all transcribed in the same direction. Three of these polypeptides were expressed from the region necessary for the acetyl-CoA-independent PEP carboxylase, one was expressed from the region containing the malyl-CoA lyase gene, and the fifth was expressed from a region immediately downstream from the gene encoding hydroxypyruvate reductase. All six genes are transcribed in the same direction, but the transposon insertion data suggest that they are not all cotranscribed.  相似文献   

15.
Facultative methylotrophic bacteria of the genus Methylobacterium are commonly found in association with plants. Inoculation experiments were performed to study the importance of methylotrophic metabolism for colonization of the model legume Medicago truncatula. Competition experiments with Methylobacterium extorquens wild-type strain AM1 and methylotrophy mutants revealed that the ability to use methanol as a carbon and energy source provides a selective advantage during colonization of M. truncatula. Differences in the fitness of mutants defective in different stages of methylotrophic metabolism were found; whereas approximately 25% of the mutant incapable of oxidizing methanol to formaldehyde (deficient in methanol dehydrogenase) was recovered, 10% or less of the mutants incapable of oxidizing formaldehyde to CO2 (defective in biosynthesis of the cofactor tetrahydromethanopterin) was recovered. Interestingly, impaired fitness of the mutant strains compared with the wild type was found on leaves and roots. Single-inoculation experiments showed, however, that mutants with defects in methylotrophy were capable of plant colonization at the wild-type level, indicating that methanol is not the only carbon source that is accessible to Methylobacterium while it is associated with plants. Fluorescence microscopy with a green fluorescent protein-labeled derivative of M. extorquens AM1 revealed that the majority of the bacterial cells on leaves were on the surface and that the cells were most abundant on the lower, abaxial side. However, bacterial cells were also found in the intercellular spaces inside the leaves, especially in the epidermal cell layer and immediately underneath this layer.  相似文献   

16.
Tetrahydromethanopterin (H4 MPT) is a tetrahydrofolate analogue involved as a C1 carrier in the metabolism of various groups of microorganisms. How H4MPT is bound to the respective C1 unit converting enzymes remained elusive. We describe here the structure of the homopentameric formaldehyde-activating enzyme (Fae) from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 established at 2.0 angstrom without and at 1.9 angstrom with methylene-H4MPT bound. Methylene-H4MPT is bound in an "S"-shaped conformation into the cleft formed between two adjacent subunits. Coenzyme binding is accompanied by side chain rearrangements up to 5 angstrom and leads to a rigidification of the C-terminal arm, a formation of a new hydrophobic cluster, and an inversion of the amide side chain of Gln88. Methylene-H4MPT in Fae shows a characteristic kink between the tetrahydropyrazine and the imidazolidine rings of 70 degrees that is more pronounced than that reported for free methylene-H4MPT in solution (50 degrees). Fae is an essential enzyme for energy metabolism and formaldehyde detoxification of this bacterium and catalyzes the formation of methylene-H4MPT from H4MPT and formaldehyde. The molecular mechanism ofthis reaction involving His22 as acid catalyst is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Recently, it has been shown that heterotrophic methylotrophic Proteobacteria contain tetrahydrofolate (H(4)F)- and tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT)-dependent enzymes. Here we report on the purification of two methylene tetrahydropterin dehydrogenases from the methylotroph Hyphomicrobium zavarzinii ZV580. Both dehydrogenases are composed of one type of subunit of 31 kDa. One of the dehydrogenases is NAD(P)-dependent and specific for methylene H(4)MPT (specific activity: 680 U/mg). Its N-terminal amino acid sequence showed sequence identity to NAD(P)-dependent methylene H(4)MPT dehydrogenase MtdB from Methylobacterium extorquens AM1. The second dehydrogenase is specific for NADP and methylene H(4)F (specific activity: 180 U/mg) and also exhibits methenyl H(4)F cyclohydrolase activity. Via N-terminal amino acid sequencing this dehydrogenase was identified as belonging to the classical bifunctional methylene H(4)F dehydrogenases/cyclohydrolases (FolD) found in many bacteria and eukarya. Apparently, the occurrence of methylene tetrahydrofolate and methylene tetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenases is not uniform among different methylotrophic alpha-Proteobacteria. For example, FolD was not found in M. extorquens AM1, and the NADP-dependent methylene H(4)MPT dehydrogenase MtdA was present in the bacterium that also shows H(4)F activity.  相似文献   

18.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 possesses a formaldehyde-oxidation pathway that involves enzymes with high sequence identity with enzymes from methanogenic and sulfate-reducing archaea. Here we describe the purification and characterization of formylmethanofuran-tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase (Ftr), which catalyzes the reversible formation of formylmethanofuran (formylMFR) and tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) from N5-formylH4MPT and methanofuran (MFR). Formyltransferase from M. extorquens AM1 showed activity with MFR and H4MPT isolated from the methanogenic archaeon Methanothermobacter marburgensis (apparent Km for formylMFR = 50 microM; apparent Km for H4MPT = 30 microM). The enzyme is encoded by the ffsA gene and exhibits a sequence identity of approximately 40% with Ftr from methanogenic and sulfate-reducing archaea. The 32-kDa Ftr protein from M. extorquens AM1 copurified in a complex with three other polypeptides of 60 kDa, 37 kDa and 29 kDa. Interestingly, these are encoded by the genes orf1, orf2 and orf3 which show sequence identity with the formylMFR dehydrogenase subunits FmdA, FmdB and FmdC, respectively. The clustering of the genes orf2, orf1, ffsA, and orf3 in the chromosome of M. extorquens AM1 indicates that, in the bacterium, the respective polypeptides form a functional unit. Expression studies in Escherichia coli indicate that Ftr requires the other subunits of the complex for stability. Despite the fact that three of the polypeptides of the complex showed sequence similarity to subunits of Fmd from methanogens, the complex was not found to catalyze the oxidation of formylMFR. Detailed comparison of the primary structure revealed that Orf2, the homolog of the active site harboring subunit FmdB, lacks the binding motifs for the active-site cofactors molybdenum, molybdopterin and a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Cytochrome c was found to be spontaneously reduced by H4MPT. On the basis of this property, a novel assay for Ftr activity and MFR is described.  相似文献   

19.
A series of Methanosarcina barkeri mutants lacking the genes encoding the enzymes involved in the C1 oxidation/reduction pathway were constructed. Mutants lacking the methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT):coenzyme M (CoM) methyltransferase-encoding operon (Δmtr), the methylene-H4MPT reductase-encoding gene (Δmer), the methylene-H4MPT dehydrogenase-encoding gene (Δmtd), and the formyl-methanofuran:H4MPT formyl-transferase-encoding gene (Δftr) all failed to grow using either methanol or H2/CO2 as a growth substrate, indicating that there is an absolute requirement for the C1 oxidation/reduction pathway for hydrogenotrophic and methylotrophic methanogenesis. The mutants also failed to grow on acetate, and we suggest that this was due to an inability to generate the reducing equivalents needed for biosynthetic reactions. Despite their lack of growth on methanol, the Δmtr and Δmer mutants were capable of producing methane from this substrate, whereas the Δmtd and Δftr mutants were not. Thus, there is an Mtr/Mer bypass pathway that allows oxidation of methanol to the level of methylene-H4MPT in M. barkeri. The data further suggested that formaldehyde may be an intermediate in this bypass; however, no methanol dehydrogenase activity was found in Δmtr cell extracts, nor was there an obligate role for the formaldehyde-activating enzyme (Fae), which has been shown to catalyze the condensation of formaldehyde and H4MPT in vitro. Both the Δmer and Δmtr mutants were able to grow on a combination of methanol plus acetate, but they did so by metabolic pathways that are clearly distinct from each other and from previously characterized methanogenic pathways.  相似文献   

20.
Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 was used to explore the genetics of dephosphotetrahydromethanopterin (dH(4)MPT) biosynthesis. Strains with mutations in eight "archaeal-type" genes linked on the chromosome of M. extorquens AM1 were analyzed for the ability to synthesize dH(4)MPT, and six were found to be dH(4)MPT negative. Putative functions of these genes in dH(4)MPT biosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

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