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1.
The cmuA and cmuB genes are required for growth of Methylobacterium chloromethanicum strain CM4 with chloromethane as the sole carbon source. While CmuB was previously shown to possess methylcobalamin:tetrahydrofolate methyltransferase activity, sequence analysis indicated that CmuA represented a novel and so far unique two-domain methyltransferase/corrinoid-binding protein involved in methyl transfer from chloromethane to a corrin moiety. CmuA was purified from wild-type M. chloromethanicum strain CM4 and characterized as a monomeric, cobalt-containing and zinc-containing enzyme of molecular mass 67 kDa with a bound vitamin B12 cofactor. In combination, CmuA and CmuB proteins catalyze the in vitro transfer of the methyl group of chloromethane to tetrahydrofolate, thus affording a direct link between chloromethane dehalogenation and core C1 metabolism of Methylobacterium. Chloromethane dehalogenase activity in vitro is limited by CmuB, as formation of methyltetrahydrofolate from chloromethane displays apparent Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to methylated CmuA, with an apparent Km of 0.27 microM and a Vmax of 0.45 U x mg(-1). This contrasts with sequence-related systems for methyl transfer from methanogens, which involve methyltransferase and corrinoid protein components in well-defined stoichiometric ratios.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Hyphomicrobium chloromethanicum CM2(T), an aerobic methylotrophic member of the alpha subclass of the class proteobacteria, can grow with chloromethane as the sole carbon and energy source. H. chloromethanicum possesses an inducible enzyme system for utilization of chloromethane, in which two polypeptides (67-kDa CmuA and 35-kDa CmuB) are expressed. Previously, four genes, cmuA, cmuB, cmuC, and purU, were shown to be essential for growth of Methylobacterium chloromethanicum on chloromethane. The cmuA and cmuB genes were used as probes to identify homologs in H. chloromethanicum. A cmu gene cluster (9.5 kb) in H. chloromethanicum contained 10 open reading frames: folD (partial), pduX, orf153, orf207, orf225, cmuB, cmuC, cmuA, fmdB, and paaE (partial). CmuA from H. chloromethanicum (67 kDa) showed high identity to CmuA from M. chloromethanicum and contains an N-terminal methyltransferase domain and a C-terminal corrinoid-binding domain. CmuB from H. chloromethanicum is related to a family of methyl transfer proteins and to the CmuB methyltransferase from M. chloromethanicum. CmuC from H. chloromethanicum shows identity to CmuC from M. chloromethanicum and is a putative methyltransferase. folD codes for a methylene-tetrahydrofolate cyclohydrolase, which may be involved in the C(1) transfer pathway for carbon assimilation and CO(2) production, and paaE codes for a putative redox active protein. Molecular analyses and some preliminary biochemical data indicated that the chloromethane utilization pathway in H. chloromethanicum is similar to the corrinoid-dependent methyl transfer system in M. chloromethanicum. PCR primers were developed for successful amplification of cmuA genes from newly isolated chloromethane utilizers and enrichment cultures.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract Eight strains of non-methane-utilizing aerobic methylotrophic bacteria able to grow on chloromethane as the carbon and energy source have been isolated. Based on their phenotypic and genomic characteristics the new isolates were classified as Hyphomicrobium spp. (strains CM1, CM2, CM9, CM29, CM35) and Methylobacterium spp. (strains CM4, CM30, CM34). All the strains possessed an inducible yet unknown enzyme that catalyzed conversion of chloromethane to HCl and formaldehyde. The latter was oxidized via formate to CO2 or assimilated through icl+ or icl variants of the serine pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Activity staining of extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gels revealed an additional methylcobalamin:coenzyme M (methylcobalamin:CoM) methyltransferase present in cells grown on acetate but not in those grown on trimethylamine. This methyltransferase is the 480-kDa corrinoid protein previously identified by its methylation following inhibition of methyl-CoM reductase in otherwise methanogenic cell extracts. The methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase activity of the purified 480-kDa protein increased from 0.4 to 3.8 micromol/min/mg after incubation with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Following SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of unheated protein samples, a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 48 kDa which possessed methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase activity was detected. This polypeptide migrated with an apparent mass of 41 kDa when the 480-kDa protein was heated before electrophoresis, indicating that the alpha subunit is responsible for the activity. The N-terminal sequence of this subunit was 47% similar to the N termini of the A and M isozymes of methylcobalamin:CoM methyltransferase (methyltransferase II). The endogenous methylated corrinoid bound to the beta subunit of the 480-kDa protein could be demethylated by CoM, but not by homocysteine or dithiothreitol, resulting in a Co(I) corrinoid. The Co(I) corrinoid could be remethylated by methyl iodide, and the protein catalyzed a methyl iodide:CoM transmethylation reaction at a rate of 2.3 micromol/min/mg. Methyl-CoM was stoichiometrically produced from CoM, as demonstrated by high-pressure liquid chromatography with indirect photometric detection. Two thiols, 2-mercaptoethanol and mercapto-2-propanol, were poorer substrates than CoM, while several others tested (including 3-mercaptopropanesulfonate) did not serve as methyl acceptors. These data indicate that the 480-kDa corrinoid protein is composed of a novel isozyme of methyltransferase II which remains firmly bound to a corrinoid cofactor binding subunit during isolation.  相似文献   

6.
Methanogenesis from dimethylsulfide requires the intermediate methylation of coenzyme M. This reaction is catalyzed by a methylthiol:coenzyme M methyltransferase composed of two polypeptides, MtsA (a methylcobalamin:coenzyme M methyltransferase) and MtsB (homologous to a class of corrinoid proteins involved in methanogenesis). Recombinant MtsA was purified and found to be a homodimer that bound one zinc atom per polypeptide, but no corrinoid cofactor. MtsA is an active methylcobalamin:coenzyme M methyltransferase, but also methylates cob(I)alamin with dimethylsulfide, yielding equimolar methylcobalamin and methanethiol in an endergonic reaction with a K(eq) of 5 x 10(-)(4). MtsA and cob(I)alamin mediate dimethylsulfide:coenzyme M methyl transfer in the complete absence of MtsB. Dimethylsulfide inhibited methylcobalamin:coenzyme methyl transfer by MtsA. Inhibition by dimethylsulfide was mixed with respect to methylcobalamin, but competitive with coenzyme M. MtbA, a MtsA homolog participating in coenzyme M methylation with methylamines, was not inhibited by dimethylsulfide and did not catalyze detectable dimethylsulfide:cob(I)alamin methyl transfer. These results are most consistent with a model for the native methylthiol:coenzyme M methyltransferase in which MtsA mediates the methylation of corrinoid bound to MtsB with dimethylsulfide and subsequently demethylates MtsB-bound corrinoid with coenzyme M, possibly employing elements of the same methyltransferase active site for both reactions.  相似文献   

7.
Methyl halides are volatile one-carbon compounds responsible for substantial depletion of stratospheric ozone. Among them, chloromethane (CH3Cl) is the most abundant halogenated hydrocarbon in the atmosphere. Global budgets of methyl halides in the environment are still poorly understood due to uncertainties in their natural sources, mainly from vegetation, and their sinks, which include chloromethane-degrading bacteria. A bacterial bioreporter for the detection of methyl halides was developed on the basis of detailed knowledge of the physiology and genetics of Methylobacterium extorquens CM4, an aerobic alphaproteobacterium which utilizes chloromethane as the sole source of carbon and energy. A plasmid construct with the promoter region of the chloromethane dehalogenase gene cmuA fused to a promotorless yellow fluorescent protein gene cassette resulted in specific methyl halide-dependent fluorescence when introduced into M. extorquens CM4. The bacterial whole-cell bioreporter allowed detection of methyl halides at femtomolar levels and quantification at concentrations above 10 pM (approximately 240 ppt). As shown for the model chloromethane-producing plant Arabidopsis thaliana in particular, the bioreporter may provide an attractive alternative to analytical chemical methods to screen for natural sources of methyl halide emissions.  相似文献   

8.
Methylobacterium sp. strain CM4 metabolized chloromethane quantitatively with a molar yield of 2.8 g of whole-cell protein/mol of C. This value was similar to that observed after growth with methanol (2.9 g of protein/mol of C) and about three times larger than the yield with formate (0.94 g of protein/mol of C). Chloromethane dehalogenation activity was inducible. MiniTn5 transposon insertion mutants with altered growth characteristics with chloromethane and other C1 compounds were isolated and characterized. Nine of these were unable to grow with chloromethane but were able to grow with methanol, methylamine, or formate. Seventy-three transposon mutants that were defective in the utilization of either methanol, methylamine, methanol plus methylamine, or formate could still grow with chloromethane. Based on the protein yield data and the properties of the transposon mutants, we propose a pathway for chloromethane metabolism that depends on methyltransferase and dehydrogenase activities.  相似文献   

9.
The role of the type I and type II protein kinase A isozymes in the regulation of human T lymphocyte immune effector functions has not been ascertained. To approach this question, we first characterized the distribution and enzyme activities of the type I and type II protein kinase A (PKA) isozymes in normal, human T lymphocytes. T cells possess both type I and type II isozymes with an activity ratio of 5.0:1 +/- 0.71 (mean +/- SD). The type I isozyme associates predominately with the plasma membrane whereas the type II isozyme localizes primarily to the cytosol. Analyses of isozyme activities demonstrated that T cells from approximately one-third of 16 healthy donors exhibited significantly higher type II isozyme activities (higher type II, type IIH) than the remaining donors (lower type II, type IIL) (mean = 605 +/- 75 pmol.min-1.mg protein-1, P less than 0.001). Scatchard analyses of [3H]cAMP binding in the cytosolic fraction demonstrated similar Kd values (type IIH, 1.1 x 10(-7) M; type IIL, 9.0 x 10(-8) M); however, the Bmax (maximal binding) of the type IIH was 400 fmol/mg protein compared to the Bmax of the type IIL of 126 fmol/mg protein. Scatchard analysis of [3H]cAMP binding to the type I isozyme associated with membrane fragments had a Kd of 5.6 x 10(-8) M and a Bmax of 283 fmol/mg protein. Eadie-Hofstee plots of type IIH and type IIL gave a Km and Vmax of 2.3 mg/ml and 1.5 nmol.mg-1.min-1, and 2.1 mg/ml and 1.6 nmol.mg-1.min-1, respectively. The 3.2-fold higher maximal binding of the type II isozyme in one-third of healthy donors may reflect a greater amount of isozyme protein. The compartmentalization of type I PKA isozyme to the plasma membrane and type II PKA isozyme to the cytosol may serve to localize the isozymes to their respective substrates in T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.13) has been isolated from Escherichia coli B in homogeneous form. The enzyme is isolated in an inactive form with the visible absorbance properties of cob(II)alamin. The inactive enzyme exhibits an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum at 38 K that is characteristic of cob(II)alamin at acid pH, where the protonated dimethylbenzimidazole substituent is not coordinated with the cobalt nucleus (base-off cobalamin). An additional, variable component of the EPR spectrum of the inactive enzyme has the characteristics of a cob(III)alamin-superoxide complex. Previous work by others [Taylor, R.T., & Weissbach, H. (1969) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 129, 745-766. Fujii, K., & Huennekens, F.M. (1979) in Biochemical Aspects of Nutrition (Yagi, K., Ed.) pp 173-183, Japan Scientific Societies, Tokyo] has demonstrated that the enzyme can be activated by reductive methylation using adenosylmethionine as the methyl donor. We present data indicating that the conversion of inactive to methylated enzyme is correlated with the disappearance of the EPR spectrum as expected for the conversion of paramagnetic cob(II)alamin to diamagnetic methylcobalamin. When the methyl group is transferred from the methylated enzyme to homocysteine under aerobic conditions, cob(II)alamin/cob(III)alamin-superoxide enzyme is regenerated as indicated by the return of the visible absorbance properties of the initially isolated enzyme and partial return of the EPR spectrum. Our enzyme preparations contain copper in approximately 1:1 stoichiometry with cobalt as determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Dorweiler JS  Finke RG  Matthews RG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(49):14653-14662
Cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (MetH) catalyzes the transfer of methyl groups between methyltetrahydrofolate (CH(3)-H(4)folate) and homocysteine, with the enzyme-bound cobalamin serving as an intermediary in the methyl transfers. An MetH fragment comprising residues 2-649 contains modules that bind and activate CH(3)-H(4)folate and homocysteine and catalyze methyl transfers to and from exogenous cobalamin. Comparison of the rates of reaction of cobalamin, which contains a dimethylbenzimidazole nucleotide coordinated to the cobalt in the lower axial position, and cobinamide, which lacks the dimethylbenzimidazole nucleotide, allows assessment of the degree of stabilization the dimethylbenzimidazole base provides for methyl transfer between CH(3)-H(4)folate bound to MetH(2-649) and exogenous cob(I)alamin. When the reactions of cob(I)alamin or cob(I)inamide with CH(3)-H(4)folate are compared, the observed second-order rate constants are 2.7-fold faster for cob(I)alamin; in the reverse direction, methylcobinamide reacts 35-fold faster than methylcobalamin with enzyme-bound tetrahydrofolate. These measurements can be used to estimate the influence of the dimethylbenzimidazole ligand on both the thermodynamics and kinetics of methyl transfer between methyltetrahydrofolate and cob(I)alamin or cob(I)inamide. The free energy change for methyl transfer from CH(3)-H(4)folate to cob(I)alamin is 2.8 kcal more favorable than that for methyl transfer to cob(I)inamide. Dimethylbenzimidazole contributes approximately 0.6 kcal/mol of stabilization for the forward reaction and approximately 2.2 kcal/mol of destabilization for the reverse reaction. Binding of methylcobalamin to full-length methionine synthase is accompanied by ligand substitution, and switching between "base-on" and "base-off" states of the cofactor has been demonstrated [Bandarian, V., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 8156-8163]. The present results disfavor a major role for such switching in catalysis of methyl transfer, and are consistent with the hypothesis that the primary role of the ligand triad in methionine synthase is controlling the distribution of enzyme conformations during catalysis.  相似文献   

12.
The ability of three distinct types of human cytosolic glutathione transferase to catalyze the formation of leukotriene C4 from glutathione and leukotriene A4 has been demonstrated. The near-neutral transferase (mu) was the most efficient enzyme with Vmax= 180 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 and Km= 160 microM. The Vmax and Km values for the basic (alpha-epsilon) and the acidic (pi) transferases were 66 and 24 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 and 130 and 190 microM, respectively. The synthetic methyl ester derivative of leukotriene A4 was somewhat more active as a substrate for all the three forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism of reductive methylation of cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (5-methyltetrahydrofolate:homocysteine methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.13) has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroelectrochemistry. The enzyme as isolated is inactive, and its UV/visible absorbance and EPR spectra are characteristic of cob(II)alamin. There is an absolute requirement for catalytic amounts of AdoMet and a reducing system for the formation and maintenance of active enzyme during in vitro turnover. The midpoint potentials of the enzyme-bound cob(II)alamin/cob(I)alamin and cob(III)alamin/cob(II)alamin couples have been determined to be -526 +/- 5 and +273 +/- 4 mV (versus the standard hydrogen electrode), respectively. The presence of either CH3-H4folate or AdoMet shifts the equilibrium distribution of cobalamin species observed during reduction by converting cob(I)alamin to methylcobalamin. The magnitude of these shifts is however vastly different, with AdoMet lowering the concentration of cob(II)alamin at equilibrium by a factor of at least 3 X 10(7), while CH3-H4folate lowers it by a factor of 19. These studies of coupled reduction/methylation reactions elucidate the absolute requirement for AdoMet in the in vitro assay system, in which the ambient potential is approximately -350 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode. At this potential, the equilibrium distribution of cobalamin in the presence of CH3-H4folate would be greatly in favor of the cob(II)alamin species, whereas in the presence of AdoMet the equilibrium favors methylated enzyme. In these studies, a base-on form of cob(II)alamin in which the dimethylbenzimidazole substituent of the corrin ring is the lower axial ligand for the cobalt has been observed for the first time on methionine synthase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Chloromethane (CH3Cl) is the most abundant volatile halocarbon in the atmosphere and contributes to the destruction of stratospheric ozone. The only known pathway for bacterial chloromethane utilization (cmu) was characterized in Methylobacterium extorquens CM4, a methylotrophic bacterium able to utilize compounds without carbon-carbon bonds such as methanol and chloromethane as the sole carbon source for growth. Previous work demonstrated that tetrahydrofolate and vitamin B12 are essential cofactors of cmuA- and cmuB-encoded methyltransferases of chloromethane dehalogenase, and that the pathway for chloromethane utilization is distinct from that for methanol. This work reports genomic and proteomic data demonstrating that cognate cmu genes are located on the 380 kb pCMU01 plasmid, which drives the previously defined pathway for tetrahydrofolate-mediated chloromethane dehalogenation. Comparison of complete genome sequences of strain CM4 and that of four other M. extorquens strains unable to grow with chloromethane showed that plasmid pCMU01 harbors unique genes without homologs in the compared genomes (bluB2, btuB, cobA, cbiD), as well as 13 duplicated genes with homologs of chromosome-borne genes involved in vitamin B12-associated biosynthesis and transport, or in tetrahydrofolate-dependent metabolism (folC2). In addition, the presence of both chromosomal and plasmid-borne genes for corrinoid salvaging pathways may ensure corrinoid coenzyme supply in challenging environments. Proteomes of M. extorquens CM4 grown with one-carbon substrates chloromethane and methanol were compared. Of the 49 proteins with differential abundance identified, only five (CmuA, CmuB, PurU, CobH2 and a PaaE-like uncharacterized putative oxidoreductase) are encoded by the pCMU01 plasmid. The mainly chromosome-encoded response to chloromethane involves gene clusters associated with oxidative stress, production of reducing equivalents (PntAA, Nuo complex), conversion of tetrahydrofolate-bound one-carbon units, and central metabolism. The mosaic organization of plasmid pCMU01 and the clustering of genes coding for dehalogenase enzymes and for biosynthesis of associated cofactors suggests a history of gene acquisition related to chloromethane utilization.  相似文献   

15.
Chloromethane gas is produced naturally in the phyllosphere, the compartment defined as the aboveground parts of vegetation, which hosts a rich bacterial flora. Chloromethane may serve as a growth substrate for specialized aerobic methylotrophic bacteria, which have been isolated from soil and water environments, and use cmu genes for chloromethane utilization. Evidence for the presence of chloromethane-degrading bacteria on the leaf surfaces of Arabidopsis thaliana was obtained by specific quantitative PCR of the cmuA gene encoding the two-domain methyltransferase corrinoid protein of chloromethane dehalogenase. Bacterial strains were isolated on a solid mineral medium with chloromethane as the sole carbon source from liquid mineral medium enrichment cultures inoculated with leaves of A. thaliana. Restriction analysis-based genotyping of cmuA PCR products was used to evaluate the diversity of chloromethane-degrading bacteria during enrichment and after strain isolation. The isolates obtained, affiliated to the genus Hyphomicrobium based on their 16S rRNA gene sequence and the presence of characteristic hyphae, dehalogenate chloromethane, and grow in a liquid culture with chloromethane as the sole carbon and energy source. The cmu genes of these isolates were analysed using new PCR primers, and their sequences were compared with those of previously reported aerobic chloromethane-degrading strains. The three isolates featured a colinear cmuBCA gene arrangement similar to that of all previously characterized strains, except Methylobacterium extorquens CM4 of known genome sequence.  相似文献   

16.
A novel dehalogenating/transhalogenating enzyme, halomethane:bisulfide/halide ion methyltransferase, has been isolated from the facultatively methylotrophic bacterium strain CC495, which uses chloromethane (CH(3)Cl) as the sole carbon source. Purification of the enzyme to homogeneity was achieved in high yield by anion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The methyltransferase was composed of a 67-kDa protein with a corrinoid-bound cobalt atom. The purified enzyme was inactive but was activated by preincubation with 5 mM dithiothreitol and 0.5 mM CH(3)Cl; then it catalyzed methyl transfer from CH(3)Cl, CH(3)Br, or CH(3)I to the following acceptor ions (in order of decreasing efficacy): I(-), HS(-), Cl(-), Br(-), NO(2)(-), CN(-), and SCN(-). Spectral analysis indicated that cobalt in the native enzyme existed as cob(II)alamin, which upon activation was reduced to the cob(I)alamin state and then was oxidized to methyl cob(III)alamin. During catalysis, the enzyme shuttles between the methyl cob(III)alamin and cob(I)alamin states, being alternately demethylated by the acceptor ion and remethylated by halomethane. Mechanistically the methyltransferase shows features in common with cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase from Escherichia coli. However, the failure of specific inhibitors of methionine synthase such as propyl iodide, N(2)O, and Hg(2+) to affect the methyltransferase suggests significant differences. During CH(3)Cl degradation by strain CC495, the physiological acceptor ion for the enzyme is probably HS(-), a hypothesis supported by the detection in cell extracts of methanethiol oxidase and formaldehyde dehydrogenase activities which provide a metabolic route to formate. 16S rRNA sequence analysis indicated that strain CC495 clusters with Rhizobium spp. in the alpha subdivision of the Proteobacteria and is closely related to strain IMB-1, a recently isolated CH(3)Br-degrading bacterium (T. L. Connell Hancock, A. M. Costello, M. E. Lidstrom, and R. S. Oremland, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:2899-2905, 1998). The presence of this methyltransferase in bacterial populations in soil and sediments, if widespread, has important environmental implications.  相似文献   

17.
Besides acetogenic bacteria, only Desulfitobacterium has been described to utilize and cleave phenyl methyl ethers under anoxic conditions; however, no ether-cleaving O-demethylases from the latter organisms have been identified and investigated so far. In this study, genes of an operon encoding O-demethylase components of Desulfitobacterium hafniense strain DCB-2 were cloned and heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. Methyltransferases I and II were characterized. Methyltransferase I mediated the ether cleavage and the transfer of the methyl group to the superreduced corrinoid of a corrinoid protein. Desulfitobacterium methyltransferase I had 66% identity (80% similarity) to that of the vanillate-demethylating methyltransferase I (OdmB) of Acetobacterium dehalogenans. The substrate spectrum was also similar to that of the latter enzyme; however, Desulfitobacterium methyltransferase I showed a higher level of activity for guaiacol and used methyl chloride as a substrate. Methyltransferase II catalyzed the transfer of the methyl group from the methylated corrinoid protein to tetrahydrofolate. It also showed a high identity (~70%) to methyltransferases II of A. dehalogenans. The corrinoid protein was produced in E. coli as cofactor-free apoprotein that could be reconstituted with hydroxocobalamin or methylcobalamin to function in the methyltransferase I and II assays. Six COG3894 proteins, which were assumed to function as activating enzymes mediating the reduction of the corrinoid protein after an inadvertent oxidation of the corrinoid cofactor, were studied with respect to their abilities to reduce the recombinant reconstituted corrinoid protein. Of these six proteins, only one was found to catalyze the reduction of the corrinoid protein.  相似文献   

18.
Six major basic cytosolic glutathione transferases from rat liver catalyzed the conversion of leukotriene A4 methyl ester to the corresponding leukotriene C4 monomethyl ester. Glutathione transferase 4-4, the most active among these enzymes, had a Vmax of 615 nmol X min-1 X mg protein-1 at 30 degrees C in the presence of 5 mM glutathione. It was followed in efficiency by transferase 3-4 which had a Vmax of 160 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 under the same conditions. Transferases 1-1, 1-2, 2-2 and 3-3 had at least 30 times lower Vmax values than transferase 4-4.  相似文献   

19.
Methyl halide-degrading bacteria are a diverse group of organisms that are found in both terrestrial and marine environments. They potentially play an important role in mitigating ozone depletion resulting from methyl chloride and methyl bromide emissions. The first step in the pathway(s) of methyl halide degradation involves a methyltransferase and, recently, the presence of this pathway has been studied in a number of bacteria. This paper reviews the biochemistry and genetics of methyl halide utilization in the aerobic bacteria Methylobacterium chloromethanicum CM4T, Hyphomicrobium chloromethanicum CM2T, Aminobacter strain IMB-1 and Aminobacter strain CC495. These bacteria are able to use methyl halides as a sole source of carbon and energy, are all members of the alpha-Proteobacteria and were isolated from a variety of polluted and pristine terrestrial environments. An understanding of the genetics of these bacteria identified a unique gene (cmuA) involved in the degradation of methyl halides, which codes for a protein (CmuA) with unique methyltransferase and corrinoid functions. This unique functional gene, cmuA, is being used to develop molecular ecology techniques to examine the diversity and distribution of methyl halide-utilizing bacteria in the environment and hopefully to understand their role in methyl halide degradation in different environments. These techniques will also enable the detection of potentially novel methyl halide-degrading bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum is a methane-forming archaeon that grows on H2 and CO2 as sole carbon and energy source. Cell extracts of the methanogen were found to contain methylcobalamin: homocysteine methyltransferase activity which was purified 3000-fold to a specific activity of approximately 500 U.mg-1 protein. SDS/PAGE revealed the presence of a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 34 kDa. Via its N-terminal amino acid sequence, the 34-kDa polypeptide was identified as the metE gene product. The metE gene was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. The overproduced protein was recovered in the inclusion body fraction and was found to be inactive. The protein could be partially solubilized by unfolding in 8 M urea and then refolding. The solubilized protein had a specific activity of 450 U.mg-1. It exhibited first-order kinetics with respect to methylcobalamin concentration and Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to L-homocysteine concentration (apparent Km 0.1 mM). The enzyme was specific for L-homocysteine as methyl acceptor. Methylcobalamin could be substituted with methylcobinamide as methyl donor.  相似文献   

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