首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
The apparent Km and maximum velocity values of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus were determined for a range of alcohols and aldehydes and the corresponding turnover numbers and specificity constants were calculated. Benzyl alcohol was the most effective alcohol substrate for benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase. Perillyl alcohol was the second most effective substrate, and was the only non-aromatic alcohol oxidized. The other substrates of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase were all aromatic in nature, with para-substituted derivatives of benzyl alcohol being better substrates than other derivatives. Coniferyl alcohol and cinnamyl alcohol were also substrates. Benzaldehyde was much the most effective substrate for benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II. Benzaldehydes with a single small substituent group in the meta or para position were better substrates than any other benzaldehyde derivatives. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II could also oxidize the aliphatic aldehydes hexan-1-al and octan-1-al, although poorly. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was substrate-inhibited by benzaldehyde when the assay concentration exceeded approx. 10 microM. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II, but not benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, exhibited esterase activity with 4-nitrophenyl acetate as substrate. Both benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II were inhibited by the thiol-blocking reagents iodoacetate, iodoacetamide, 4-chloromercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide. Benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde respectively protected against these inhibitions. NAD+ also gave some protection. Neither benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase nor benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was inhibited by the metal-ion-chelating agents EDTA, 2,2'-bipyridyl, pyrazole or 2-phenanthroline. Neither enzyme was inhibited by a range of plausible metabolic inhibitors such as mandelate, phenylglyoxylate, benzoate, succinate, acetyl-CoA, ATP or ADP. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was sensitive to inhibition by several aromatic aldehydes; in particular, ortho-substituted benzaldehydes such as 2-bromo-, 2-chloro- and 2-fluoro-benzaldehydes were potent inhibitors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Pseudomonas putida (arvilla) mt-2 carries genes for the catabolism of toluene, m-xylene, and p-xylene on a transmissible plasmid, TOL. These compounds are degraded by oxidation of one of the methyl substituents via the corresponding alcohols and aldehydes to benzoate and m- and p-toluates, respectively, which are then further metabolised by the meta pathway, also coded for by the TOL plasmid. The specificities of the benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and the benzaldehyde dehydrogenase for their three respective substrates are independent of the carbon source used for growth, suggesting that a single set of nonspecific enzymes is responsible for the dissimilation of the breakdown products of toluene and m- and p-xylene. Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase are coincidently and possible coordinately induced by toluene and the xylenes, and by the corresponding alcohols and aldehydes. They are not induced in cells grown on m-toluate but catechol 2,3-oxygenase can be induced by m-xylene.  相似文献   

3.
Toluene and related aromatic compounds can be mineralized to CO2 under anoxic conditions. Oxidation requires new dehydrogenase-type enzymes and water as oxygen source, as opposed to the aerobic enzymatic attack by oxygenases, which depends on molecular oxygen. We studied the anaerobic process in the denitrifying bacterium Thauera sp. strain K172. Toluene and a number of its fluoro-, chloro- and methyl-analogues were transformed to benzoate and the respective analogues by whole cells and by cell extracts. The transformation of xylene isomers to methylbenzoate isomers suggests that xylene degradation is similarly initiated by oxidation of one of the methyl groups. Toluene oxidation was strongly, but reversibly inhibited by benzyl alcohol. The in vitro oxidation of the methyl group was coupled to the reduction of nitrate, required glycerol for activity, and was inhibited by oxygen. Cells also contained benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase (NAD+), benzaldehyde dehydrogenase (NADP+), benzoate-CoA ligase (AMP-forming), and benzoyl-CoA reductase (dearomatizing). The toluene-oxidizing activity was induced when cells were grown anaerobically with toluene and also with benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde, suggesting that benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde acts as inducer. The other enzymes were similarly active in cells grown with toluene, benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, or benzoate. This is the first in vitro study of anaerobic oxidation of an aromatic hydrocarbon and of the whole-cell regulation of the toluene-oxidizing enzyme.Dedicated to Prof. Achim Trebst  相似文献   

4.
TOL plasmid pWW0 specifies enzymes for the oxidative catabolism of toluene and xylenes. The upper pathway converts the aromatic hydrocarbons to aromatic carboxylic acids via corresponding alcohols and aldehydes and involves three enzymes: xylene oxygenase, benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase. The synthesis of these enzymes is positively regulated by the product of xylR. Determination of upper pathway enzyme levels in bacteria carrying Tn5 insertion mutant derivatives of plasmid pWW0-161 has shown that the genes for upper pathway enzymes are organized in an operon with the following order: promoter-xylC (benzaldehyde dehydrogenase gene[s])-xylA (xylene oxygenase gene[s])-xylB (benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase gene). Subcloning of the upper pathway genes in a lambda pL promoter-containing vector and analysis of their expression in Escherichia coli K-12 confirmed this order. Two distinct enzymes were found to attack benzyl alcohol, namely, xylene oxygenase and benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase; and their catalytic activities were additive in the conversion of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde. The fact that benzyl alcohol is both a product and a substrate of xylene oxygenase indicates that this enzyme has a relaxed substrate specificity.  相似文献   

5.
A quick, reliable, purification procedure was developed for purifying both benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II from a single batch of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus N.C.I.B. 8250. The procedure involved disruption of the bacteria in the French pressure cell and preparation of a high-speed supernatant, followed by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, affinity chromatography on Blue Sepharose CL-6B and Matrex Gel Red A, and finally gel filtration through a Superose 12 fast-protein-liquid-chromatography column. The enzymes co-purified as far as the Blue Sepharose CL-6B step were separated on the Matrex Gel Red A column. The final preparations of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II gave single bands on electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions or on SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The enzymes are tetramers, as judged by comparison of their subunit (benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, 39,700; benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II, 55,000) and native (benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, 155,000; benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II, 222,500) Mr values, estimated by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and gel filtration respectively. The optimum pH values for the oxidation reactions were 9.2 for benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and 9.5 for benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II. The pH optimum for the reduction reaction for benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase was 8.9. The equilibrium constant for oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde by benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase was determined to be 3.08 x 10(-11) M; the ready reversibility of the reaction catalysed by benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase necessitated the development of an assay procedure in which hydrazine was used to trap the benzaldehyde formed by the NAD+-dependent oxidation of benzyl alcohol. The oxidation reaction catalysed by benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II was essentially irreversible. The maximum velocities for the oxidation reactions catalysed by benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II were 231 and 76 mumol/min per mg of protein respectively; the maximum velocity of the reduction reaction of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase was 366 mumol/min per mg of protein. The pI values were 5.0 for benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and 4.6 for benzaldehyde dehydrogenase II. Neither enzyme activity was affected when assayed in the presence of a range of salts. Absorption spectra of the two enzymes showed no evidence that they contain any cofactors such as cytochrome, flavin, or pyrroloquinoline quinone. The kinetic coefficients of the purified enzymes with benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, NAD+ and NADH are also presented.  相似文献   

6.
Evidence is presented for the existence in Pseudomonas putida of two NAD-linked dehydrogenases that function sequentially to oxidize benzyl alcohol. Induction of muconate lactonizing enzyme, a 3-oxoadipate pathway enzyme, indicated that P. putida oxidized benzyl alcohol to benzoate. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with activity staining and enzymatic assays for an NAD-dependent dehydrogenase both showed that cells contained a single, constitutive alcohol dehydrogenase capable of oxidizing benzyl alcohol. This enzyme was shown to have the same specificity in extracts of glucose-grown as in benzy alcoholgrown cells. An NAD-aldehyde dehydrogenase oxidized benzaldehyde but was most active with normal alkyl aldehydes. This aldehyde dehydrogenase was shown to be induced, by enzymatic assays and by activity staining of polyacrylamide gel electropherograms, not only in cells grown on benzyl alcohol, but also in cells grown on ethanol. These experiments suggested that the aldehyde dehydrogenase was induced by the alcohol being oxidized rather than the substrate aldehyde.In sum, the evidence from enzyme assays and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of extracts indicates that Pseudomonas putida catabolizes benzyl alcohol slowly when it is the sole carbon and energy source, by the action of a constitutive, nonspecific, alcohol dehydrogenase and an alcohol-induced, nonspecific aldehyde dehydrogenase to yield benzoate, which is further metabolized via the 3-oxoadipate (beta-ketoadipate) pathway.In memory of R. Y. Stanier  相似文献   

7.
Enzymes of the mandelate pathway in bacterium N.C.I.B. 8250   总被引:33,自引:17,他引:16       下载免费PDF全文
1. Bacterium N.C.I.B. 8250 was grown on dl-mandelate, benzyl alcohol, benzoyl-formate, benzaldehyde and benzoate and also on 2-hydroxy, 4-hydroxy, 3,4-dihydroxy and 4-hydroxy-3-methoxy analogues of these compounds. The enzymic complements of the cells were determined and the specificities of some of the enzymes examined. 2. Growth on mandelate or benzoylformate induces l-mandelate dehydrogenase, benzoylformate decarboxylase, benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and a heat-stable as well as a heat-labile benzaldehyde dehydrogenase. Growth on benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde induces benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and the heat-labile benzaldehyde dehydrogenase. 3. The enzymes of the mandelate-to-benzoate pathway are non-specifically active on, and induced by, all the substituted analogues that support growth. 4. Benzoate oxidase is induced by growth on benzoate or on 2-hydroxybenzoate. 2-Hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, 4-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase and 4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoate O-demethylase are induced only by growth on homologous substrates. 5. The results of the investigation are discussed with regard to the possible regulation of the enzyme systems.  相似文献   

8.
Mutant derivatives of the TOL plasmid pWW0-161, containing Tn5 insertions in the xylS and xylR regulatory genes of the catabolic pathway, have been identified and characterized. The two genes are located together on a 1.5- to 3.0-kilobase segment of TOL, just downstream of genes of the enzymes of the meta-cleavage pathway. As predicted by a current model for regulation of the TOL catabolic pathway, benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, a representative enzyme of the upper (hydrocarbon leads to carboxylic acid) pathway, was induced by m-methylbenzyl alcohol in xylS mutant bacteria but not in a xylR mutant, whereas catechol 2,3-oxygenase, a representative enzyme of the lower (meta-cleavage) pathway, was induced by m-toluate in a xylR mutant but not in the xylS mutants. Unexpectedly, however, catechol 2,3-oxygenase was not induced by m-methylbenzyl alcohol in xylS mutants but was induced by benzyl alcohol and benzoate. These results indicate that expression of the TOL plasmid-encoded catabolic pathway is regulated by at least three control elements, two of which (the products of the xylS and xylR genes) interact in the induction of the lower pathway by methylated hydrocarbons and alcohols and one of which responds only to nonmethylated substrates.  相似文献   

9.
Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, two enzymes of the xylene degradative pathway encoded by the plasmid TOL of a Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas putida, were purified and characterized. Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase catalyses the oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde with the concomitant reduction of NAD+; the reaction is reversible. Benzaldehyde dehydrogenase catalyses the oxidation of benzaldehyde to benzoic acid with the concomitant reduction of NAD+; the reaction is irreversible. Benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase also catalyse the oxidation of many substituted benzyl alcohols and benzaldehydes, respectively, though they were not capable of oxidizing aliphatic alcohols and aldehydes. The apparent Km value of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase for benzyl alcohol was 220 microM, while that of benzaldehyde dehydrogenase for benzaldehyde was 460 microM. Neither enzyme contained a prosthetic group such as FAD or FMN, and both enzymes were inactivated by SH-blocking agents such as N-ethylmaleimide. Both enzymes were dimers of identical subunits; the monomer of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase has a mass of 42 kDa whereas that of the monomer of benzaldehyde dehydrogenase was 57 kDa. Both enzymes transfer hydride to the pro-R side of the prochiral C4 of the pyridine ring of NAD+.  相似文献   

10.
A toluene-degrading sulfate-reducing bacterium, strain Tol2, was isolated from marine sediment under strictly anoxic conditions. Toluene was toxic if applied directly to the medium at concentrations higher than 0.5 mM. To provide toluene continuously at a nontoxic concentration, it was supplied in an inert hydrophobic carrier phase. The isolate had oval, sometimes motile cells (1.2 to 1.4 by 1.2 to 2.0 microns). The doubling time was 27 h. Toluene was completely oxidized to CO2, as demonstrated by measurement of the degradation balance. The presence of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase indicated a terminal oxidation of acetyl coenzyme A via the CO dehydrogenase pathway. The use of hypothetical intermediates of toluene degradation was tested in growth experiments and adaptation studies with dense cell suspensions. Results do not support a degradation of toluene via one of the cresols or methylbenzoates, benzyl alcohol, or phenylacetate as free intermediate. Benzyl alcohol did not serve as growth substrate; moreover, it was a strong, specific inhibitor of toluene degradation, whereas benzoate utilization was not affected by benzyl alcohol. Sequencing of 16S rRNA revealed a relationship to the metabolically dissimilar genus Desulfobacter and on a deeper level to the genus Desulfobacterium. The new genus and species Desulfobacula toluolica is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Specific activity of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase in carbon-limited continuous cultures was at a maximum at a specific growth rate of 0.2 h-1, but fell off at lower and higher growth rates. The specific activity in nitrogen-limited cultures was always lower and was inversely proportional to growth rate. There was severe repression of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase during metabolism of L(+)-mandelate or phenylglyoxylate in batch cultures. Synthesis of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase was followed in experiments where various compounds, including a gratuitous inducer and an anti-inducer of the mandelate enzymes, were added to uninduced or pre-induced cultures and to constitutive and blocked mutants. The results led to the conclusion that there were at least two types of repression. One was caused by phenylglyoxylate carbon-lyase (or a compound synthesized co-ordinately with it), but not by the other mandelate enzymes or by L(+)-mandelate, phenylglyoxylate, benzaldehyde or benzoate. A second type of repression was observed during rapid growth or after the addition of compound such as succinate which are rapidly and completely metabolized.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation of the mandelate pathway in Pseudomonas aeruginosa   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The pathway of mandelate metabolism in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is composed of the following steps: l(+)-mandelate --> benzoylformate --> benzaldehyde --> benzoate. These three steps are unique to mandelate oxidation; the benzoate formed is further metabolized via the beta-ketoadipate pathway. The first enzyme, l(+)-mandelate dehydrogenase, is induced by its substrate. The second and third enzymes, benzoylformate decarboxylase and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, are both induced by benzoylformate. The same benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, or one very similar to it, is also induced by beta-ketoadipate, an intermediate in the subsequent metabolism of benzoate. This dehydrogenase may also be induced by adipate or a metabolite of adipate. These conclusions have been drawn from the physiological and genetic properties of wild-type P. aeruginosa strains and from the study of mutants lacking the second and third enzyme activities.  相似文献   

13.
Pseudomonas putida CSV86 metabolizes 1- and 2-methylnaphthalene through distinct catabolic and detoxification pathways. In spite of the similarity in the steps involved in the methylnaphthalene detoxification and the toluene side-chain hydroxylation pathways, the strain failed to utilize toluene or xylenes. However, it could grow on benzyl alcohol, 2- and 4-hydroxybenzyl alcohol. Metabolic studies suggest that the benzyl alcohol metabolism proceeds via the benzaldehyde, benzoate, and catechol ortho-cleavage pathway, in contrast to the well established catechol meta-cleavage pathway. Carbon source-dependent enzyme activity studies suggest that the degradation of aromatic alcohol involves two regulons. Aromatic alcohol induces the upper regulon, which codes for aromatic alcohol- and aromatic aldehyde-dehydrogenase and converts alcohol into acid. The aromatic acid so generated induces the specific lower regulon and is metabolized via either the ortho- or the meta-cleavage pathway. CSV86 cells transform 1- and 2-methylnaphthalene to 1- and 2-hydroxymethyl naphthalene, which are further converted to the respective naphthoic acids due to the basal level expression and broad substrate specificity of the upper regulon enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Pseudomonas putida CSV86 utilizes benzyl alcohol via catechol and methylnaphthalenes through detoxification pathway via hydroxymethylnaphthalenes and naphthaldehydes. Based on metabolic studies, benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase (BADH) and benzaldehyde dehydrogenase (BZDH) were hypothesized to be involved in the detoxification pathway. BADH and BZDH were purified to apparent homogeneity and were (1) homodimers with subunit molecular mass of 38 and 57 kDa, respectively, (2) NAD+ dependent, (3) broad substrate specific accepting mono- and di-aromatic alcohols and aldehydes but not aliphatic compounds, and (4) BADH contained iron and magnesium, while BZDH contained magnesium. BADH in the forward reaction converted alcohol to aldehyde and required NAD+, while in the reverse reaction it reduced aldehyde to alcohol in NADH-dependent manner. BZDH showed low K m value for benzaldehyde as compared to BADH reverse reaction. Chemical cross-linking studies revealed that BADH and BZDH do not form multi-enzyme complex. Thus, the conversion of aromatic alcohol to acid is due to low K m and high catalytic efficiency of BZDH. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that BADH is a novel enzyme and diverged during the evolution to gain the ability to utilize mono- and di-aromatic compounds. The wide substrate specificity of these enzymes enables strain to detoxify methylnaphthalenes to naphthoic acids efficiently.  相似文献   

15.
16.
A biofiltration system inoculated with the mold Paecilomyces variotii CBS115145 showed a toluene elimination capacity (EC) of around 250 g/m3 of biofilter/h, which was higher than the values usually reported for bacteria. P. variotii assimilated m- and p-cresols but not the o isomer. Initial toluene hydroxylation occurred both on the methyl group and through the p-cresol pathway. These results were corroborated by detecting benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, and p-cresol as volatile intermediates. In liquid cultures with toluene as a substrate, the activity of toluene oxygenase (TO) was 5.6 nmol of O2/min/mg of biomass, and that of benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase was 16.2 nmol of NADH/min/mg of protein. Toluene biodegradation determined from the TO activity in the biofilter depended on the biomass distribution and the substrate concentration. The specific enzymatic activity decreased from 6.3 to 1.9 nmol of O2/min/mg of biomass along the reactor. Good agreement was found between the EC calculated from the TO activity and the EC measured on the biofilter. The results were confirmed by short-time biofiltration experiments. Average EC measured in different biofiltration experiments and EC calculated from the TO activity showed a linear relation, suggesting that in the biofilters, EC was limited by biological reaction. As the enzymatic activities of P. variotii were similar to those reported for bacteria, the high performance of the fungal biofilters can possibly be explained by the increased transfer of the hydrophobic compounds, including oxygen, from the gas phase to the mycelia, overcoming the transfer problems associated with the flat bacterial biofilms.  相似文献   

17.
In the present study, the metabolic pathways involved in the degradation of benzyl alcohol and 1-butanol, the hydrolyzed products of butyl benzyl phthalate, were investigated by the Gordonia sp. strain MTCC 4818. The strain can utilize both benzyl alcohol and 1-butanol individually as sole carbon sources, where benzyl alcohol was found to be metabolized via benzaldehyde, benzoic acid and catechol, which was further degraded by ortho-cleavage dioxygenase to cis,cis-muconic acid and subsequently to muconolactone leading to tricarboxylic acid cycle. On the other hand, 1-butanol was metabolized via butyraldehyde and butyric acid, which was channeled into the tricarboxylic acid cycle via the beta-oxidation pathway. Numbers of dehydrogenases, both NAD+-dependent and NAD+-independent, were found to be involved in the degradation of benzyl alcohol and 1-butanol, where several dehydrogenases exhibited relaxed substrate specificity. Both 2,3- and 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acids were utilized by the test organism for growth and metabolized by the ortho-cleavage pathway by the cell-free extract of benzoate-grown cells, similar to catechol, suggesting possible broad substrate specificity of the ring cleavage dioxygenase. Moreover, the test organism can utilize various primary and secondary alcohols, aliphatic aldehydes and acids in the C2-C5 range besides n-hexadecane, 1,4-butanediol and cyclohexanol individually as the sole carbon sources indicating metabolic diversity in the Gordonia sp. strain MTCC 4818.  相似文献   

18.
Pseudomonas putida 54g grew on mineral salts with toluene and exhibited catechol-2,3-dioxygenase (C23O) activity, indicating a meta pathway. After 10 to 15 days on toluene, nondegrading (Tol-) variants approached nearly 10% of total CFU. Auxotrophs were not detected among variants, suggesting selective loss of catabolic function(s). Variant formation was substrate dependent, since Tol- cells were observed on neither ethylbenzene, glucose, nor peptone-based media nor when toluene catabolism was suppressed by glucose. Unlike wild-type cells, variants did not grow on gasoline, toluene, benzene, ethylbenzene, benzoate, or catechol, suggesting loss of meta pathway function. Catabolic and C23O activities were restored to variants via transfer of a 78-mDa TOL-like plasmid from a wild-type Tol+ donor. Tests for reversion of variants to Tol+ were uniformly negative, suggesting possible delection or excision of catabolic genes. Deletions were confirmed in some variants by failure to hybridize with a DNA probe specific for the xylE gene encoding C23O. Cells grown on benzoate remained Tol+ but were C23O- and contained a plasmid of reduced size or were plasmid free, suggesting an alternate chromosomal catabolic pathway, also defective in variants. Cells exposed to benzyl alcohol, the initial oxidation product of toluene, accumulated > 13% variants in 5 days, even when cell division was repressed by nitrogen deprivation to abrogate selection processes. No variants formed in identical ethylbenzene-exposed controls. The results suggest that benzyl alcohol mediates irreversible defects in both a plasmid-associated meta pathway and an alternate chromosomal pathway.  相似文献   

19.
The anaerobic degradation of toluene has been studied with whole cells and by measuring enzyme activities. Cultures of Pseudomonas strain K 172 were grown in mineral medium up to a cell density of 0.5 g of dry cells per liter in fed-batch culture with toluene and nitrate as the sole carbon and energy sources. A molar growth yield of 57 g of cell dry matter formed per mol toluene totally consumed was determined. The mean generation time was 24 h. The redox balance between toluene consumed (oxidation and cell material synthesis) and nitrate consumed (reduction to nitrogen gas and assimilation as NH3) was 77% of expectation if toluene was completely oxidized; this indicated that the major amount of toluene was mineralized to CO2. It was tested whether the initial reaction in anaerobic toluene degradation was a carboxylation or a dehydrogenation (anaerobic hydroxylation); the hypothetical carboxylated or hydroxylated intermediates were tested with whole cells applying the method of simultanous adaptation: cells pregrown on toluene degraded benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, and benzoic acid without lag, 4-hydroxybenzoate and p-cresol with a 90 min lag phase and phenylacetate after a 200 min lag phase. The cells were not at all adapted to degrade 2-methylbenzoate, 4-methylbenzoate, o-cresol, and m-cresol, nor did these compounds support growth within a few days after inoculation with cells grown on toluene. In extracts of cells anaerobically grown on toluene, benzyl alcohol dehydrogenase, benzaldehyde dehydrogenase, and benzoyl-CoA synthetase (AMP forming) activities were present. The data (1) conclusively show anaerobic growth of a pure culture on tolucne; (2) suggest that toluene is anaerobically degraded via benzoyl-CoA; (3) imply that water functions as the source of the hydroxyl group in a toluene methylhydroxylase reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, benzoate, and anthranilate are metabolized via catechol, cis,cis-muconate, and the beta-ketoadipate pathway in Acinetobacter calcoaceticus ADP1 (BD413). Mutant strain ISA25 with a deletion spanning catBCIJF and unable to metabolize muconate further will not grow in the presence of an aromatic precursor of muconate. Growth on fumarate as the sole carbon source with added benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde selected spontaneous mutants of ISA25. After repair of the cat deletion by natural transformation with linearized plasmid pPAN4 (catBCIJF) 10 mutants were unable to grow on benzoate of cis,cis-muconate but could still grow on anthranilate. Transformation with wild-type chromosomal DNA demonstrated the presence of two unlinked mutations in each strain, one in the benABCD region, encoding the conversion of benzoate to catechol, and the other in a gene determining the ability to grow on exogenous cis,cis-muconate. The wild-type gene, named mucK, was cloned into pUC18, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. It encodes a 413-residue protein of M(r) = 45,252 which is a member of a superfamily of membrane transport proteins and which is within a subgroup involved in the uptake of organic acids. Five of the mutant alleles were cloned, and the mutations were determined by nucleotide sequencing. All the mutations were in the mucK coding region and consisted of three deletions, one duplication, and a substitution. Insertional inactivation of mucK resulted in the loss of the ability to utilize exogenous muconate. The location of mucK on the chromosome appeared to be unique for genes associated with the benzoate branch of the beta-ketoadipate pathway in being close to the pca-qui-pob gene cluster (for p-hydroxybenzoate utilization) and distant from the functionally related ben-cat cluster. Downstream of mucK and transcribed in the same direction is an open reading frame encoding a protein of 570 residues (M(r) = 63,002) which shows considerable homology with a mammalian electron transport protein; its insertional inactivation had no detectable phenotypic effect.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号