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The cloned bphA gene of the polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) degrader Rhodococcus sp. strain RHA1 was expressed in Rhodococcus erythropolis IAM1399 cells, resulting in the transformation of di-, tri-, and tetrachlorobiphenyls. Disruption of the bphA1 gene in RHA1 resulted in a lack of growth on biphenyl and a loss of PCB transformation activity. However, the bphA1 insertion mutant of RHA1, designated RDA1, retained the ability to transform PCB congeners when grown on ethylbenzene as its carbon source. It also transformed 4-chlorobiphenyl to 4-chlorobenzoate, although it was suspected to be deficient in bphB and bphC gene activities as well as bphA. This suggested that an alternative PCB degradation system distinct from the one encoded by the cloned bph genes was present.  相似文献   

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AIMS: Isolation of the genes relative to PCB biodegradation and identification of the bph gene function in Rhodococcus sp. R04. METHODS AND RESULTS: A 8.7-kb fragment carrying the biphenyl catabolic genes bphABCD was isolated from the gene library in Rhodococcus sp. R04. Based on the deduced amino acid sequence homology, seven bph genes, bphA1A2A3A4, bphB, bphC and bphD, were thought to be responsible for the initial four steps of biphenyl degradation. In Escherichia coli, BphA exhibited poor activity for biphenyl transformation, and BphB, BphC and BphD were found to be catalytically active towards 2,3-dihydro-2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl, 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl and 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate, respectively (activities of 50, 8.1 and 2.4 micromol l(-1) min(-1) mg(-1)). SDS-PAGE analysis indicated that the sizes of bphA1A2A3A4, bphB, bphC and bphD gene products were 49, 19, 14, 47, 32, 30 and 31 kDa, respectively. After disruption of bph genes, the bphA1 mutants lost the ability to grow on biphenyl, the bphB and bphD mutants were able to transform a little of biphenyl, but hardly grew on biphenyl. CONCLUSION: The cloned bph genes indeed play an important role in the biphenyl catabolism in this strain. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This bph gene organization in Rhodococcus sp. R04 differs from that of other biphenyl degraders reported previously, indicating it is a novel type of bph gene cluster. Analysis of the phylogenetic tree suggested that BphA1 and BphA2 in Rhodococcus sp. R04 had a different evolutionary relationship with those in the other PCB degraders.  相似文献   

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Rhodococcus sp. RHA1 induces two biphenyl dioxygenases, the BphA and EtbA/EbdA dioxygenases, during growth on biphenyl. Their subunit genes were expressed in R. erythropolis IAM1399 to investigate the involvement of each subunit gene in their activity and their substrate preferences. The recombinant expressing ebdA1A2A3etbA4 and that expressing bphA1A2A3A4 exhibited 4-chlorobiphenyl (4-CB) transformation activity, suggesting that these gene sets are responsible for the EtbA/EbdA and BphA dioxygenases respectively. When bphA4 and etbA4 were swapped to construct the recombinants expressing ebdA1A2A3bphA4 and bphA1A2A3etbA4 respectively, compatibility between BphA4 and EtbA4 was suggested by their 4-CB transformation activities. When bphA3 and ebdA3 were swapped, incompatibility between BphA3 and EbdA3 was suggested. BphA and EtbA/EbdA dioxygenases exhibited the highest transformation activity toward biphenyl and naphthalene respectively, and also attacked dibenzofuran and dibenzo-p-dioxin. The wide substrate preference of EtbA/EbdA dioxygenase suggested that it plays a more important role in polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) degradation than does BphA dioxygenase.  相似文献   

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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   

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Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) tolerant derivatives of a strong PCB degrader, Rhodococcus strain RHA1, were selected after growth in the presence of 100 g/ml PCBs. Some of the derivatives did not grow on biphenyl but accumulated a yellow coloured metabolite suggesting a defect in the meta-ring-cleavage compound hydrolase step encoded by the bphD gene. Other derivatives failed to grow on biphenyl and exhibited little PCB transformation activity suggesting a defect in the initial ring-hydroxylation dioxygenase step encoded by the bphA gene. These organisms had a structural alteration in the linear plasmids coding for the bph genes in RHA1, which included the bph gene deletion. When a bphD containing plasmid was introduced into a tolerant derivative, RCD1, which was shown to have a bphD deletion, the defect in the growth on biphenyl of RCD1 was overcome. The bph gene deletion seems to play a key role in these tolerant derivatives thereby suggesting that the toxic metabolic intermediate would be a main cause of the growth inhibition of RHA1 in the presence of high concentration PCBs.  相似文献   

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Four kinds of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-degrading Rhodococcus sp. (TA421, TA431, HA99, and K37) have been isolated from termite ecosystem and under alkaline condition. The bph gene cluster involved in the degradation of PCB/biphenyl has been analyzed in strain TA421. This gene cluster was highly homologous to bph gene clusters in R. globerulus P6 and Rhodococcus sp. RHA1. In this study, we cloned and analyzed the bph gene cluster essential to PCB/biphenyl degradation from R. rhodochrous K37. The order of the genes and the sequence were different in K37 than in P6, RHA1, and TA421. The bphC8(K37) gene was more homologous to the meta-cleavage enzyme involved in phenanthrene metabolism than bphC genes involved in biphenyl metabolism. Two other Rhodococcus strains (HA99 and TA431) had PCB/biphenyl degradation gene clusters similar to that in K37. These findings suggest that these bph gene clusters evolved separately from the well-known bph gene clusters of PCB/biphenyl degraders.  相似文献   

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Benzoate catabolism is thought to play a key role in aerobic bacterial degradation of biphenyl and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Benzoate catabolic genes were cloned from a PCB degrader, Rhodococcus sp. strain RHA1, by using PCR amplification and temporal temperature gradient electrophoresis separation. A nucleotide sequence determination revealed that the deduced amino acid sequences encoded by the RHA1 benzoate catabolic genes, benABCDK, exhibit 33 to 65% identity with those of Acinetobacter sp. strain ADP1. The gene organization of the RHA1 benABCDK genes differs from that of ADP1. The RHA1 benABCDK region was localized on the chromosome, in contrast to the biphenyl catabolic genes, which are located on linear plasmids. Escherichia coli cells containing RHA1 benABCD transformed benzoate to catechol via 2-hydro-1,2-dihydroxybenzoate. They transformed neither 2- nor 4-chlorobenzoates but did transform 3-chlorobenzoate. The RHA1 benA gene was inactivated by insertion of a thiostrepton resistance gene. The resultant mutant strain, RBD169, neither grew on benzoate nor transformed benzoate, and it did not transform 3-chlorobenzoate. It did, however, exhibit diminished growth on biphenyl and growth repression in the presence of a high concentration of biphenyl (13 mM). These results indicate that the cloned benABCD genes could play an essential role not only in benzoate catabolism but also in biphenyl catabolism in RHA1. Six rhodococcal benzoate degraders were found to have homologs of RHA1 benABC. In contrast, two rhodococcal strains that cannot transform benzoate were found not to have RHA1 benABC homologs, suggesting that many Rhodococcus strains contain benzoate catabolic genes similar to RHA1 benABC.  相似文献   

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Genes of Pseudomonas putida strains that are capable of degrading polychlorinated biphenyls were cloned in the plasmid vector pUC19. The resultant hybrid plasmid, pAW6194, contained cbpABCD genes on a 9.0-kb DNA fragment that was necessary for the catabolism of polychlorinated biphenyls. These genes were further subcloned on an 8.0-kb HindIII fragment of pAW540. Degradation of 3-chlorobiphenyl, 2,4-dichlorobiphenyl, and 2,4,5-trichlorobiphenyl into a chloro derivative of benzoic acid was found in Escherichia coli harboring chimeric plasmid pAW540. Expression of cbpA (biphenyl dioxygenase, 6.2 U/mg of protein) and cbpC (3-phenylcatechol dioxygenase, 611.00 U/mg of protein) genes was also found in E. coli containing the hybrid plasmid pAW540. These enzyme activities were up to 10-fold higher than those found in P. putida OU83. These results led us to conclude that cbpABCD genes of P. putida OU83 were encoded on cloned DNA and expressed in E. coli. Whether the expression of cbpABCD genes of P. putida OU83 was driven by its own promoters located on the cloned DNA or by the lacZ promoter of pUC19 was examined by subcloning a 8.0-kb DNA fragment encoding the cbpABCD genes, in both orientations, in the HindIII site of the promoter probe vector pKK232-8. The resulting recombinant plasmids, pAW560 and pAW561, expressed cbpABCD genes and conferred chloramphenicol resistance only in E. coli harboring pAW560, indicating that the expression of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase is independent of cbpABCD gene expression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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Genes of Pseudomonas putida strains that are capable of degrading polychlorinated biphenyls were cloned in the plasmid vector pUC19. The resultant hybrid plasmid, pAW6194, contained cbpABCD genes on a 9.0-kb DNA fragment that was necessary for the catabolism of polychlorinated biphenyls. These genes were further subcloned on an 8.0-kb HindIII fragment of pAW540. Degradation of 3-chlorobiphenyl, 2,4-dichlorobiphenyl, and 2,4,5-trichlorobiphenyl into a chloro derivative of benzoic acid was found in Escherichia coli harboring chimeric plasmid pAW540. Expression of cbpA (biphenyl dioxygenase, 6.2 U/mg of protein) and cbpC (3-phenylcatechol dioxygenase, 611.00 U/mg of protein) genes was also found in E. coli containing the hybrid plasmid pAW540. These enzyme activities were up to 10-fold higher than those found in P. putida OU83. These results led us to conclude that cbpABCD genes of P. putida OU83 were encoded on cloned DNA and expressed in E. coli. Whether the expression of cbpABCD genes of P. putida OU83 was driven by its own promoters located on the cloned DNA or by the lacZ promoter of pUC19 was examined by subcloning a 8.0-kb DNA fragment encoding the cbpABCD genes, in both orientations, in the HindIII site of the promoter probe vector pKK232-8. The resulting recombinant plasmids, pAW560 and pAW561, expressed cbpABCD genes and conferred chloramphenicol resistance only in E. coli harboring pAW560, indicating that the expression of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase is independent of cbpABCD gene expression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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To address the multiplicity of aromatic ring hydroxylation dioxygenases, we used PCR amplification and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). The amplified DNA fragments separated into five bands, A to E. Southern hybridization analysis of RHA1 total DNA using the probes for each band showed that band C originated from a couple of homologous genes. The nucleotide sequences of the bands showed that bands A, C, and E would be parts of new dioxygenase genes in RHA1. That of band B agreed with the bphA1 gene, which was characterized previously. That of band D did not correspond to any known gene sequences. The regions including the entire open reading frames (ORFs) were cloned and sequenced. The nucleotide sequences of ORFs suggested that the genes of bands A, C, and E may respectively encode benzoate, biphenyl, and polyhydrocarbon dioxygenases. Northern hybridization indicated the induction of the gene of band A by benzoate and biphenyl, and that of the gene of band C by biphenyl and ethylbenzene, supporting the above notions. The gene of band E was not induced by any of these substrates. Thus the combination of DGGE and Southern hybridization enable us to address the multiplicity of the ring hydroxylation dioxygenase genes and to isolate some of them.  相似文献   

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To address the multiplicity of aromatic ring hydroxylation dioxygenases, we used PCR amplification and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). The amplified DNA fragments separated into five bands, A to E. Southern hybridization analysis of RHA1 total DNA using the probes for each band showed that band C originated from a couple of homologous genes. The nucleotide sequences of the bands showed that bands A, C, and E would be parts of new dioxygenase genes in RHA1. That of band B agreed with the bphA1 gene, which was characterized previously. That of band D did not correspond to any known gene sequences. The regions including the entire open reading frames (ORFs) were cloned and sequenced. The nucleotide sequences of ORFs suggested that the genes of bands A,C, and E may respectively encode benzoate, biphenyl, and polyhydrocarbon dioxygenases. Northern hybridization indicated the induction of the gene of band A by benzoate and biphenyl, and that of the gene of band C by biphenyl and ethylbenzene, supporting the above notions. The gene of band E was not induced by any of these substrates. Thus the combination of DGGE and Southern hybridization enable us to address the multiplicity of the ring hydroxylation dioxygenase genes and to isolate some of them.  相似文献   

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Rhodococcus jostii RHA1 is a polychlorinated biphenyl degrader. Multi-component biphenyl 2,3-dioxygenase (BphA) genes of RHA1 encode large and small subunits of oxygenase component and ferredoxin and reductase components. They did not express enzyme activity in Escherichia coli. To obtain BphA activity in E. coli, hybrid BphA gene derivatives were constructed by replacing ferredoxin and/or reductase component genes of RHA1 with those of Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes KF707. The results obtained indicate a lack of catalytic activity of the RHA1 ferredoxin component gene, bphAc in E. coli. To determine the cause of inability of RHA1 bphAc to express in E. coli, the bphAc gene was introduced into Rosetta (DE3) pLacI, which has extra tRNA genes for rare codons in E. coli. The resulting strain abundantly produced the bphAc product, and showed activity. These results suggest that codon usage bias is involved in inability of RHA1 bphAc to express its catalytic activity in E. coli.  相似文献   

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