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1.
Desulfitobacterium strain PCE1 is able to use tetrachloroethene and chloroaromatics as terminal electron acceptors for growth. Cell extracts of Desulfitobacterium strain PCE1 grown with tetrachloroethene as electron acceptor showed no dehalogenase activity with 3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenylacetate (Cl-OH-phenylacetate) and other ortho-chlorophenolic compounds in an in vitro assay. Extracts of cells that were grown with Cl-OH-phenylacetate as electron acceptor dechlorinated tetrachloroethene at 10% of the dechlorination rate of Cl-OH-phenylacetate. In both cell extracts dechlorination was inhibited by the addition of 1-iodopropane and dinitrogen oxide, inhibitors of cobalamin-containing enzymes. The enzymes responsible for tetrachloroethene and Cl-OH-phenylacetate dechlorination were partially purified. A 100-fold enriched fraction of chlorophenol reductive dehalogenase was obtained that mainly contained a protein with a subunit size of 48 kDa. The characteristics of this enzyme are similar to that of the chlorophenol reductive dehalogenase of D. dehalogenans. After partial purification of the tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase, a fraction was obtained that also contained a 48-kDa protein, but the N-terminal sequence showed no similarity with that of the chlorophenol reductive dehalogenase sequence or with the N-terminal amino acid sequence of tetra- and trichloroethene reductive dehalogenase of Desulfitobacterium strain TCE1. These results provide strong evidence that two different enzymes are responsible for tetrachloroethene and chlorophenol dechlorination in Desulfitobacterium strain PCE1. Furthermore, the characterization of partially purified tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase indicated that this enzyme is a novel type of reductive dehalogenase.  相似文献   

2.
Two membrane-bound, reductive dehalogenases that constitute a novel pathway for complete dechlorination of tetrachloroethene (perchloroethylene [PCE]) to ethene were partially purified from an anaerobic microbial enrichment culture containing Dehalococcoides ethenogenes 195. When titanium(III) citrate and methyl viologen were used as reductants, PCE-reductive dehalogenase (PCE-RDase) (51 kDa) dechlorinated PCE to trichloroethene (TCE) at a rate of 20 μmol/min/mg of protein. TCE-reductive dehalogenase (TCE-RDase) (61 kDa) dechlorinated TCE to ethene. TCE, cis-1,2-dichloroethene, and 1,1-dichloroethene were dechlorinated at similar rates, 8 to 12 μmol/min/mg of protein. Vinyl chloride and trans-1,2-dichloroethene were degraded at rates which were approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower. The light-reversible inhibition of TCE-RDase by iodopropane and the light-reversible inhibition of PCE-RDase by iodoethane suggest that both of these dehalogenases contain Co(I) corrinoid cofactors. Isolation and characterization of these novel bacterial enzymes provided further insight into the catalytic mechanisms of biological reductive dehalogenation.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane-associated tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase from the tetrachloroethene-reducing anaerobe, strain PCE-S, was purified 165-fold to apparent homogeneity in the presence of the detergent Triton X-100. The purified dehalogenase catalyzed the reductive dechlorination of tetrachloroethene to trichloroethene and of trichloroethene to cis-1,2-dichloroethene with reduced methyl viologen as the electron donor, showing a specific activity of 650 nkat/mg protein. The apparent K m values of the enzyme for tetrachloroethene, trichloroethene, and methyl viologen were 10 μM, 4 μM, and 0.3 mM, respectively. SDS-PAGE revealed a single protein band with an apparent molecular mass of 65 kDa. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was 200 kDa as determined by gel filtration. Tetrachloroethene dehalogenase contained 0.7 ± 0.3 mol corrinoid, 1.0 ± 0.3 mol cobalt, 7.8 ± 0.5 mol iron, and 10.3 ± 2.0 mol acid-labile sulfur per mol subunit. The pH optimum was approximately 7.2, and the temperature optimum was approximately 50 °C. The dehalogenase was oxygen-sensitive with a half-life of approximately 50 min. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme was determined, and no significant similarity was found to any part of the amino acid sequence of the tetrachloroethene (PCE) reductive dehalogenase from Dehalospirillum multivorans. Received: 4 December 1997 / Accepted: 10 February 1998  相似文献   

4.
Haloalkane dehalogenases are microbial enzymes that catalyze cleavage of the carbon-halogen bond by a hydrolytic mechanism. Until recently, these enzymes have been isolated only from bacteria living in contaminated environments. In this report we describe cloning of the dehalogenase gene dhmA from Mycobacterium avium subsp. avium N85 isolated from swine mesenteric lymph nodes. The dhmA gene has a G+C content of 68.21% and codes for a polypeptide that is 301 amino acids long and has a calculated molecular mass of 34.7 kDa. The molecular masses of DhmA determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by gel permeation chromatography are 34.0 and 35.4 kDa, respectively. Many residues essential for the dehalogenation reaction are conserved in DhmA; the putative catalytic triad consists of Asp123, His279, and Asp250, and the putative oxyanion hole consists of Glu55 and Trp124. Trp124 should be involved in substrate binding and product (halide) stabilization, while the second halide-stabilizing residue cannot be identified from a comparison of the DhmA sequence with the sequences of three dehalogenases with known tertiary structures. The haloalkane dehalogenase DhmA shows broad substrate specificity and good activity with the priority pollutant 1,2-dichloroethane. DhmA is significantly less stable than other currently known haloalkane dehalogenases. This study confirms that a hydrolytic dehalogenase is present in the facultative pathogen M. avium. The presence of dehalogenase-like genes in the genomes of other mycobacteria, including the obligate pathogens Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis, as well as in other bacterial species, including Mesorhizobium loti, Xylella fastidiosa, Photobacterium profundum, and Caulobacter crescentus, led us to speculate that haloalkane dehalogenases have some other function besides catalysis of hydrolytic dehalogenation of halogenated substances.  相似文献   

5.
Haloalkane dehalogenases are known as bacterial enzymes cleaving a carbon–halogen bond in halogenated compounds. Here we report the first biochemically characterized non-microbial haloalkane dehalogenase DspA from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. The enzyme shows a preference for terminally brominated hydrocarbons and enantioselectivity towards β-brominated alkanes. Moreover, we identified other putative haloalkane dehalogenases of eukaryotic origin, representing targets for future experiments to discover dehalogenases with novel catalytic properties.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The anaerobic dehalogenation of organohalides is catalyzed by the reductive dehalogenase (RdhA) enzymes produced in phylogenetically diverse bacteria. These enzymes contain a cobamide cofactor at the active site and two iron-sulfur clusters. In this study, the tetrachloroethene (PCE) reductive dehalogenase (PceA) of the Gram-positive Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain Y51 was produced in a catalytically active form in the nondechlorinating, cobamide-producing bacterium Shimwellia blattae (ATCC 33430), a Gram-negative gammaproteobacterium. The formation of recombinant catalytically active PceA enzyme was significantly enhanced when its dedicated PceT chaperone was coproduced and when 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole and hydroxocobalamin were added to the S. blattae cultures. The experiments were extended to D. hafniense DCB-2, a reductively dehalogenating bacterium harboring multiple rdhA genes. To elucidate the substrate spectrum of the rdhA3 gene product of this organism, the recombinant enzyme was tested for the conversion of different dichlorophenols (DCP) in crude extracts of an RdhA3-producing S. blattae strain. 3,5-DCP, 2,3-DCP, and 2,4-DCP, but not 2,6-DCP and 3,4-DCP, were reductively dechlorinated by the recombinant RdhA3. In addition, this enzyme dechlorinated PCE to trichloroethene at low rates.  相似文献   

8.
Halohydrin dehalogenases are very rare enzymes that are naturally involved in the mineralization of halogenated xenobiotics. Due to their catalytic potential and promiscuity, many biocatalytic reactions have been described that have led to several interesting and industrially important applications. Nevertheless, only a few of these enzymes have been made available through recombinant techniques; hence, it is of general interest to expand the repertoire of these enzymes so as to enable novel biocatalytic applications. After the identification of specific sequence motifs, 37 novel enzyme sequences were readily identified in public sequence databases. All enzymes that could be heterologously expressed also catalyzed typical halohydrin dehalogenase reactions. Phylogenetic inference for enzymes of the halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme family confirmed that all enzymes form a distinct monophyletic clade within the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily. In addition, the majority of novel enzymes are substantially different from previously known phylogenetic subtypes. Consequently, four additional phylogenetic subtypes were defined, greatly expanding the halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme family. We show that the enormous wealth of environmental and genome sequences present in public databases can be tapped for in silico identification of very rare but biotechnologically important biocatalysts. Our findings help to readily identify halohydrin dehalogenases in ever-growing sequence databases and, as a consequence, make even more members of this interesting enzyme family available to the scientific and industrial community.  相似文献   

9.
Haloalcohol dehalogenases are bacterial enzymes that catalyze the cofactor-independent dehalogenation of vicinal haloalcohols such as the genotoxic environmental pollutant 1,3-dichloro-2-propanol, thereby producing an epoxide, a chloride ion and a proton. Here we present X-ray structures of the haloalcohol dehalogenase HheC from Agrobacterium radiobacter AD1, and complexes of the enzyme with an epoxide product and chloride ion, and with a bound haloalcohol substrate mimic. These structures support a catalytic mechanism in which Tyr145 of a Ser-Tyr-Arg catalytic triad deprotonates the haloalcohol hydroxyl function to generate an intramolecular nucleophile that substitutes the vicinal halogen. Haloalcohol dehalogenases are related to the widespread family of NAD(P)H-dependent short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDR family), which use a similar Ser-Tyr-Lys/Arg catalytic triad to catalyze reductive or oxidative conversions of various secondary alcohols and ketones. Our results reveal the first structural details of an SDR-related enzyme that catalyzes a substitutive dehalogenation reaction rather than a redox reaction, in which a halide-binding site is found at the location of the NAD(P)H binding site. Structure-based sequence analysis reveals that the various haloalcohol dehalogenases have likely originated from at least two different NAD-binding SDR precursors.  相似文献   

10.
A membrane-associated 3,5-dichlorophenol reductive dehalogenase was isolated from Desulfitobacterium frappieri PCP-1. The highest dehalogenase activity was observed with the biomass cultured at 22°C, compared to 30 and 37°C, where the cell suspensions were 2.2 and 9.6 times less active, respectively. The reductive dehalogenase was purified 12.7-fold to apparent homogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a single band with an apparent molecular mass of 57 kDa. Its dechlorinating activity was not inhibited by sulfate and nitrate but was completely inhibited by 2.5 mM sulfite and 10 mM KCN. A mixture of iodopropane and titanium citrate caused a light-reversible inhibition of the dechlorinating activities, suggesting the involvement of a corrinoid cofactor. Several polychlorophenols were dechlorinated at the meta and para positions. The apparent Km for 3,5-dicholorophenol was 49.3 ± 3.1 μM at a methyl viologen concentration of 2 mM. Six internal tryptic peptides were sequenced by mass spectrometry. One open reading frame (ORF) was found in the Desulfitobacterium hafniense genome containing these peptide sequences. This ORF corresponds to a gene coding for a CprA-type reductive dehalogenase. The corresponding ORF (named cprA5) in D. frappieri PCP-1 was cloned and sequenced. The cprA5 gene codes for a 548-amino-acid protein that contains a twin-arginine-type signal for secretion. The gene product has a cobalamin binding site motif and two iron-sulfur binding motifs and shows 66% identity (76 to 77% similarity) with some tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenases. This is the first CprA-type reductive dehalogenase that can dechlorinate chlorophenols at the meta and para positions.  相似文献   

11.
Two membrane-bound, reductive dehalogenases that constitute a novel pathway for complete dechlorination of tetrachloroethene (perchloroethylene [PCE]) to ethene were partially purified from an anaerobic microbial enrichment culture containing Dehalococcoides ethenogenes 195. When titanium (III) citrate and methyl viologen were used as reductants, PCE-reductive dehalogenase (PCE-RDase) (51 kDa) dechlorinated PCE to trichloroethene (TCE) at a rate of 20 micromol/min/mg of protein. TCE-reductive dehalogenase (TCE-RDase) (61 kDa) dechlorinated TCE to ethene. TCE, cis-1,2-dichloroethene, and 1,1-dichloroethene were dechlorinated at similar rates, 8 to 12 micromol/min/mg of protein. Vinyl chloride and trans-1,2-dichloroethene were degraded at rates which were approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower. The light-reversible inhibition of TCE-RDase by iodopropane and the light-reversible inhibition of PCE-RDase by iodoethane suggest that both of these dehalogenases contain Co(I) corrinoid cofactors. Isolation and characterization of these novel bacterial enzymes provided further insight into the catalytic mechanisms of biological reductive dehalogenation.  相似文献   

12.
2-haloacid dehalogenases are enzymes that are capable of degrading 2-haloacid compounds. These enzymes are produced by bacteria, but so far they have only been purified and characterized from terrestrial bacteria. The present study describes the purification and characterization of 2-haloacid dehalogenase from the marine bacterium Pseudomonas stutzeri DEH130. P. Stutzeri DEH130 contained two kinds of 2-haloacid dehalogenase (designated as Dehalogenase I and Dehalogenase II) as detected in the crude cell extract after ammonium sulfate fractionation. Both enzymes appeared to exhibit stereo-specificity with respect to substrate. Dehalogenase I was a 109.9-kDa enzyme that preferentially utilized D-2-chloropropropionate and had optimum activity at pH 7.5. Dehalogenase II, which preferentially utilized L-2-chloropropionate, was further purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Purified Dehalogenase II appeared to be a dimeric enzyme with a subunit of 26.0-kDa. It had maximum activity at pH 10.0 and a temperature of 40 °C. Its activity was not inhibited by DTT and EDTA, but strongly inhibited by Cu2+, Zn2+, and Co2+. The K m and V max for L-2-chloropropionate were 0.3 mM and 23.8 μmol/min/mg, respectively. Its substrate specificity was limited to short chain mono-substituted 2-halocarboxylic acids, with no activity detected toward fluoropropionate and monoiodoacetate. This is the first report on the purification and characterization of 2-haloacid dehalogenase from a marine bacterium.  相似文献   

13.
Corrinoids are essential cofactors of reductive dehalogenases in anaerobic bacteria. Microorganisms mediating reductive dechlorination as part of their energy metabolism are either capable of de novo corrinoid biosynthesis (e.g., Desulfitobacterium spp.) or dependent on exogenous vitamin B12 (e.g., Dehalococcoides spp.). In this study, the impact of exogenous vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) and of tetrachloroethene (PCE) on the synthesis and the subcellular localization of the reductive PCE dehalogenase was investigated in the Gram-positive Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain Y51, a bacterium able to synthesize corrinoids de novo. PCE-depleted cells grown for several subcultivation steps on fumarate as an alternative electron acceptor lost the tetrachloroethene-reductive dehalogenase (PceA) activity by the transposition of the pce gene cluster. In the absence of vitamin B12, a gradual decrease of the PceA activity and protein amount was observed; after 5 subcultivation steps with 10% inoculum, more than 90% of the enzyme activity and of the PceA protein was lost. In the presence of vitamin B12, a significant delay in the decrease of the PceA activity with an ∼90% loss after 20 subcultivation steps was observed. This corresponded to the decrease in the pceA gene level, indicating that exogenous vitamin B12 hampered the transposition of the pce gene cluster. In the absence or presence of exogenous vitamin B12, the intracellular corrinoid level decreased in fumarate-grown cells and the PceA precursor formed catalytically inactive, corrinoid-free multiprotein aggregates. The data indicate that exogenous vitamin B12 is not incorporated into the PceA precursor, even though it affects the transposition of the pce gene cluster.  相似文献   

14.
Dehalogenases are environmentally important enzymes that detoxify organohalogens by cleaving their carbon-halogen bonds. Many microbial genomes harbour enzyme families containing dehalogenases, but a sequence-based identification of genuine dehalogenases with high confidence is challenging because of the low sequence conservation among these enzymes. Furthermore, these protein families harbour a rich diversity of other enzymes including esterases and phosphatases. Reliable sequence determinants are necessary to harness genome sequencing-efforts for accelerating the discovery of novel dehalogenases with improved or modified activities. In an attempt to extract dehalogenase sequence fingerprints, 103 uncharacterized potential dehalogenase candidates belonging to the α/β hydrolase (ABH) and haloacid dehalogenase-like hydrolase (HAD) superfamilies were screened for dehalogenase, esterase and phosphatase activity. In this first biochemical screen, 1 haloalkane dehalogenase, 1 fluoroacetate dehalogenase and 5 l -2-haloacid dehalogenases were found (success rate 7%), as well as 19 esterases and 31 phosphatases. Using this functional data, we refined the sequence-based dehalogenase selection criteria and applied them to a second functional screen, which identified novel dehalogenase activity in 13 out of only 24 proteins (54%), increasing the success rate eightfold. Four new l -2-haloacid dehalogenases from the HAD superfamily were found to hydrolyse fluoroacetate, an activity never previously ascribed to enzymes in this superfamily.  相似文献   

15.
Tetrachloroethene reductive dechlorination was studied with cell extracts of a newly isolated, tetrachloroethene-utilizing bacterium, Desulfitobacterium sp. strain PCE-S. Tetrachloroethene dehalogenase mediated the reductive dechlorination of tetrachloroethene and trichloroethene to cis-1,2-dichloroethene with artificial electron donors such as methyl viologen. The chlorinated aromatic compounds tested so far were not reduced. A low-potential electron donor (E 0′ < –0.4 V) was required for tetrachloroethene reduction. The enzyme in its reduced state was inactivated by propyl iodide and reactivated by light, indicating the involvement of a corrinoid in reductive tetrachloroethene dechlorination. Received: 28 April 1997 / Accepted: 11 July 1997  相似文献   

16.
Degenerate primers were used to amplify large fragments of reductive-dehalogenase-homologous (RDH) genes from genomic DNA of two Dehalococcoides populations, the chlorobenzene- and dioxin-dechlorinating strain CBDB1 and the trichloroethene-dechlorinating strain FL2. The amplicons (1,350 to 1,495 bp) corresponded to nearly complete open reading frames of known reductive dehalogenase genes and short fragments (approximately 90 bp) of genes encoding putative membrane-anchoring proteins. Cloning and restriction analysis revealed the presence of at least 14 different RDH genes in each strain. All amplified RDH genes showed sequence similarity with known reductive dehalogenase genes over the whole length of the sequence and shared all characteristics described for reductive dehalogenases. Deduced amino acid sequences of seven RDH genes from strain CBDB1 were 98.5 to 100% identical to seven different RDH genes from strain FL2, suggesting that both strains have an overlapping substrate range. All RDH genes identified in strains CBDB1 and FL2 were related to the RDH genes present in the genomes of Dehalococcoides ethenogenes strain 195 and Dehalococcoides sp. strain BAV1; however, sequence identity did not exceed 94.4 and 93.1%, respectively. The presence of RDH genes in strains CBDB1, FL2, and BAV1 that have no orthologs in strain 195 suggests that these strains possess dechlorination activities not present in strain 195. Comparative sequence analysis identified consensus sequences for cobalamin binding in deduced amino acid sequences of seven RDH genes. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the presence of multiple nonidentical RDH genes is characteristic of Dehalococcoides strains.  相似文献   

17.
This review is a survey of bacterial dehalogenases that catalyze the cleavage of halogen substituents from haloaromatics, haloalkanes, haloalcohols, and haloalkanoic acids. Concerning the enzymatic cleavage of the carbon-halogen bond, seven mechanisms of dehalogenation are known, namely, reductive, oxygenolytic, hydrolytic, and thiolytic dehalogenation; intramolecular nucleophilic displacement; dehydrohalogenation; and hydration. Spontaneous dehalogenation reactions may occur as a result of chemical decomposition of unstable primary products of an unassociated enzyme reaction, and fortuitous dehalogenation can result from the action of broad-specificity enzymes converting halogenated analogs of their natural substrate. Reductive dehalogenation either is catalyzed by a specific dehalogenase or may be mediated by free or enzyme-bound transition metal cofactors (porphyrins, corrins). Desulfomonile tiedjei DCB-1 couples energy conservation to a reductive dechlorination reaction. The biochemistry and genetics of oxygenolytic and hydrolytic haloaromatic dehalogenases are discussed. Concerning the haloalkanes, oxygenases, glutathione S-transferases, halidohydrolases, and dehydrohalogenases are involved in the dehalogenation of different haloalkane compounds. The epoxide-forming halohydrin hydrogen halide lyases form a distinct class of dehalogenases. The dehalogenation of alpha-halosubstituted alkanoic acids is catalyzed by halidohydrolases, which, according to their substrate and inhibitor specificity and mode of product formation, are placed into distinct mechanistic groups. beta-Halosubstituted alkanoic acids are dehalogenated by halidohydrolases acting on the coenzyme A ester of the beta-haloalkanoic acid. Microbial systems offer a versatile potential for biotechnological applications. Because of their enantiomer selectivity, some dehalogenases are used as industrial biocatalysts for the synthesis of chiral compounds. The application of dehalogenases or bacterial strains in environmental protection technologies is discussed in detail.  相似文献   

18.
The membrane-bound tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase (PCE-RDase) (PceA; EC 1.97.1.8), the terminal component of the respiratory chain of Dehalobacter restrictus, was purified 25-fold to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a single band with an apparent molecular mass of 60 +/- 1 kDa, whereas the native molecular mass was 71 +/- 8 kDa according to size exclusion chromatography in the presence of the detergent octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside. The monomeric enzyme contained (per mol of the 60-kDa subunit) 1.0 +/- 0.1 mol of cobalamin, 0.6 +/- 0.02 mol of cobalt, 7.1 +/- 0.6 mol of iron, and 5.8 +/- 0.5 mol of acid-labile sulfur. Purified PceA catalyzed the reductive dechlorination of tetrachloroethene and trichloroethene to cis-1,2-dichloroethene with a specific activity of 250 +/- 12 nkat/mg of protein. In addition, several chloroethanes and tetrachloromethane caused methyl viologen oxidation in the presence of PceA. The K(m) values for tetrachloroethene, trichloroethene, and methyl viologen were 20.4 +/- 3.2, 23.7 +/- 5.2, and 47 +/- 10 micro M, respectively. The PceA exhibited the highest activity at pH 8.1 and was oxygen sensitive, with a half-life of activity of 280 min upon exposure to air. Based on the almost identical N-terminal amino acid sequences of PceA of Dehalobacter restrictus, Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain TCE1 (formerly Desulfitobacterium frappieri strain TCE1), and Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain PCE-S (formerly Desulfitobacterium frappieri strain PCE-S), the pceA genes of the first two organisms were cloned and sequenced. Together with the pceA genes of Desulfitobacterium hafniense strains PCE-S and Y51, the pceA genes of Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain TCE1 and Dehalobacter restrictus form a coherent group of reductive dehalogenases with almost 100% sequence identity. Also, the pceB genes, which may code for a membrane anchor protein of PceA, and the intergenic regions of Dehalobacter restrictus and the three desulfitobacteria had identical sequences. Whereas the cprB (chlorophenol reductive dehalogenase) genes of chlorophenol-dehalorespiring bacteria are always located upstream of cprA, all pceB genes known so far are located downstream of pceA. The possible consequences of this feature for the annotation of putative reductive dehalogenase genes are discussed, as are the sequence around the iron-sulfur cluster binding motifs and the type of iron-sulfur clusters of the reductive dehalogenases of Dehalobacter restrictus and Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans identified by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy.  相似文献   

19.
Organohalide respiration is used by a limited set of anaerobic bacteria to derive energy from the reduction of halogenated organic compounds. The enzymes that catalyze the reductive dehalogenation reaction, the reductive dehalogenases, represent a novel and distinct class of cobalamin and Fe-S cluster dependent enzymes. Until now, biochemical studies on reductive dehalogenases have been hampered by the lack of a reliable protein source. Here we present an efficient and robust heterologous production system for the reductive dehalogenase PceA from Dehalobacter restrictus. Large quantities of Strep-tagged PceA fused to a cold-shock induced trigger factor could be obtained from Escherichia coli. The recombinant enzyme was conveniently purified in milligram quantities under anaerobic conditions by StrepTactin affinity chromatography, and the trigger factor could be removed through limited proteolysis. Characterization of the purified PceA by UV-Vis and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveal that the recombinant protein binds methylcobalamin in the base-on form after proteolytic cleavage of the trigger factor, and that 4Fe-4S clusters can be chemically reconstituted under anoxic conditions. This study demonstrates a novel PceA production platform that allows further study of this new enzyme class.  相似文献   

20.
The substrate specificity of the tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase of Dehalospirillum multivoransand its corrinoid cofactor were studied. Besides reduced methyl viologen, titanium(III) citrate could serve as electron donor for reductive dehalogenation of tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene to cis-1,2-dichloroethene. In addition to chlorinated ethenes, chlorinated propenes were reductively dechlorinated solely by the native enzyme. trans-1,3-Dichloropropene, 1,1,3-trichloropropene and 2,3-dichloropropene were reduced to a mixture of mono-chloropropenes, 1,1-dichloropropene, and 2-chloropropene, respectively. Other halogenated compounds that were rapidly reduced by the enzyme were also dehalogenated abiotically by the heat-inactivated enzyme and by commercially available cyanocobalamin. The rate of this abiotic reaction was dependent on the number and type of halogen substituents and on the type of catalyst. The corrinoid cofactor purified from the tetrachloroethene dehalogenase of D. multivorans exhibited an activity about 50-fold higher than that of cyanocobalamin (vitamin B(12)) with trichloroacetate as electron acceptor, indicating that the corrinoid cofactor of the PCE dehalogenase is not cyanocobalamin. Corrinoids catalyzed the rapid dehalogenation of trichloroacetic acid. The rate was proportional to the amount of, e.g. cyanocobalamin; therefore, the reductive dehalogenation assay can be used for the sensitive and rapid quantification of this cofactor.  相似文献   

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