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1.
We identified trace metabolites produced during the anaerobic biodegradation of H(26)- and D(26)-n-dodecane by an enrichment culture that mineralizes these compounds in a sulfate-dependent fashion. The metabolites are dodecylsuccinic acids that, in the case of the perdeuterated substrate, retain all of the deuterium atoms. The deuterium retention and the gas chromatography-mass spectrometry fragmentation patterns of the derivatized metabolites suggest that they are formed by C---H or C---D addition across the double bond of fumarate. As trimethylsilyl esters, two nearly coeluting metabolites of equal abundance with nearly identical mass spectra were detected from each of H(26)- and D(26)-dodecane, but as methyl esters, only a single metabolite peak was detected for each parent substrate. An authentic standard of protonated n-dodecylsuccinic acid that was synthesized and derivatized by the two methods had the same fragmentation patterns as the metabolites of H(26)-dodecane. However, the standard gave only a single peak for each ester type and gas chromatographic retention times different from those of the derivatized metabolites. This suggests that the succinyl moiety in the dodecylsuccinic acid metabolites is attached not at the terminal methyl group of the alkane but at a subterminal position. The detection of two equally abundant trimethylsilyl-esterified metabolites in culture extracts suggests that the analysis is resolving diastereomers which have the succinyl moiety located at the same subterminal carbon in two different absolute configurations. Alternatively, there may be more than one methylene group in the alkane that undergoes the proposed fumarate addition reaction, giving at least two structural isomers in equal amounts.  相似文献   

2.
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were used to study the metabolism of deuterated n-alkanes (C6 to C12) and 1-13C-labeled n-hexane by a highly enriched sulfate-reducing bacterial culture. All substrates were activated via fumarate addition to form the corresponding alkylsuccinic acid derivatives as transient metabolites. Formation of d14-hexylsuccinic acid in cell extracts from exogenously added, fully deuterated n-hexane confirmed that this reaction was the initial step in anaerobic alkane metabolism. Analysis of resting cell suspensions amended with 1-13C-labeled n-hexane confirmed that addition of the fumarate occurred at the C-2 carbon of the parent substrate. Subsequent metabolism of hexylsuccinic acid resulted in the formation of 4-methyloctanoic acid, and 3-hydroxy-4-methyloctanoic acid was tentatively identified. We also found that 13C nuclei from 1-13C-labeled n-hexane became incorporated into the succinyl portion of the initial metabolite in a manner that indicated that 13C-labeled fumarate was formed and recycled during alkane metabolism. Collectively, the findings obtained with a sulfate-reducing culture using isotopically labeled alkanes augment and support the previously proposed pathway (H. Wilkes, R. Rabus, T. Fischer, A. Armstroff, A. Behrends, and F. Widdel, Arch. Microbiol. 177:235-243, 2002) for metabolism of deuterated n-hexane by a denitrifying bacterium.  相似文献   

3.
Recent studies have demonstrated that fumarate addition and carboxylation are two possible mechanisms of anaerobic alkane degradation. In the present study, we surveyed metabolites formed during growth on hexadecane by the sulfate-reducing isolates AK-01 and Hxd3 and by a mixed sulfate-reducing consortium. The cultures were incubated with either protonated or fully deuterated hexadecane; the sulfate-reducing consortium was also incubated with [1,2-13C2]hexadecane. All cultures were extracted, silylated, and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We detected a suite of metabolites that support a fumarate addition mechanism for hexadecane degradation by AK-01, including methylpentadecylsuccinic acid, 4-methyloctadecanoic acid, 4-methyloctadec-2,3-enoic acid, 2-methylhexadecanoic acid, and tetradecanoic acid. By using d34-hexadecane, mass spectral evidence strongly supporting a carbon skeleton rearrangement of the first intermediate, methylpentadecylsuccinic acid, was demonstrated for AK-01. Evidence indicating hexadecane carboxylation was not found in AK-01 extracts but was observed in Hxd3 extracts. In the mixed sulfate-reducing culture, however, metabolites consistent with both fumarate addition and carboxylation mechanisms of hexadecane degradation were detected, which demonstrates that multiple alkane degradation pathways can occur simultaneously within distinct anaerobic communities. Collectively, these findings underscore that fumarate addition and carboxylation are important alkane degradation mechanisms that may be widespread among phylogenetically and/or physiologically distinct microorganisms.  相似文献   

4.
The vacuum residue fraction of heavy crudes contributes to the viscosity of these oils. Specific microbial cleavage of C—S bonds in alkylsulfide bridges that form linkages in this fraction may result in dramatic viscosity reduction. To date, no bacterial strains have been shown conclusively to cleave C—S bonds within alkyl chains. Screening for microbes that can perform this activity was greatly facilitated by the use of a newly synthesized compound, bis-(3-pentafluorophenylpropyl)-sulfide (PFPS), as a novel sulfur source. The terminal pentafluorinated aromatic rings of PFPS preclude growth of aromatic ring-degrading bacteria but allow for selective enrichment of strains capable of cleaving C—S bonds. A unique bacterial strain, Rhodococcus sp. strain JVH1, that used PFPS as a sole sulfur source was isolated from an oil-contaminated environment. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis revealed that JVH1 oxidized PFPS to a sulfoxide and then a sulfone prior to cleaving the C—S bond to form an alcohol and, presumably, a sulfinate from which sulfur could be extracted for growth. Four known dibenzothiophene-desulfurizing strains, including Rhodococcus sp. strain IGTS8, were all unable to cleave the C—S bond in PFPS but could oxidize PFPS to the sulfone via the sulfoxide. Conversely, JVH1 was unable to oxidize dibenzothiophene but was able to use a variety of alkyl sulfides, in addition to PFPS, as sole sulfur sources. Overall, PFPS is an excellent tool for isolating bacteria capable of cleaving subterminal C—S bonds within alkyl chains. The type of desulfurization displayed by JVH1 differs significantly from previously described reaction results.  相似文献   

5.
Strain Hxd3, an alkane-degrading sulfate reducer previously isolated and described by Aeckersberg et al. (F. Aeckersberg, F. Bak, and F. Widdel, Arch. Microbiol. 156:5-14, 1991), was studied for its alkane degradation mechanism by using deuterium and 13C-labeled compounds. Deuterated fatty acids with even numbers of C atoms (C-even) and 13C-labeled fatty acids with odd numbers of C atoms (C-odd) were recovered from cultures of Hxd3 grown on perdeuterated pentadecane and [1,2-13C2]hexadecane, respectively, underscoring evidence that C-odd alkanes are transformed to C-even fatty acids and vice versa. When Hxd3 was grown on unlabeled hexadecane in the presence of [13C]bicarbonate, the resulting 15:0 fatty acid, which was one carbon shorter than the alkane, incorporated a 13C label to form its carboxyl group. The same results were observed when tetradecane, pentadecane, and perdeuterated pentadecane were used as the substrates. These observations indicate that the initial attack of alkanes includes both carboxylation with inorganic bicarbonate and the removal of two carbon atoms from the alkane chain terminus, resulting in a fatty acid one carbon shorter than the original alkane. The removal of two terminal carbon atoms is further evidenced by the observation that the [1,2-13C2]hexadecane-derived fatty acids contained either two 13C labels located exclusively at their acyl chain termini or none at all. Furthermore, when perdeuterated pentadecane was used as the substrate, the 14:0 and 16:0 fatty acids formed both carried the same numbers of deuterium labels, while the latter was not deuterated at its carboxyl end. These observations provide further evidence that the 14:0 fatty acid was initially formed from perdeuterated pentadecane, while the 16:0 fatty acid was produced after chain elongation of the former fatty acid with nondeuterated carbon atoms. We propose that strain Hxd3 anaerobically transforms an alkane to a fatty acid through a mechanism which includes subterminal carboxylation at the C-3 position of the alkane and elimination of the two adjacent terminal carbon atoms.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Nitrate-reducing enrichments, amended with n-hexadecane, were established with petroleum-contaminated sediment from Onondaga Lake. Cultures were serially diluted to yield a sediment-free consortium. Clone libraries and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of 16S rRNA gene community PCR products indicated the presence of uncultured alpha- and betaproteobacteria similar to those detected in contaminated, denitrifying environments. Cultures were incubated with H34-hexadecane, fully deuterated hexadecane (d34-hexadecane), or H34-hexadecane and NaH13CO3. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of silylated metabolites resulted in the identification of [H29]pentadecanoic acid, [H25]tridecanoic acid, [1-13C]pentadecanoic acid, [3-13C]heptadecanoic acid, [3-13C]10-methylheptadecanoic acid, and d27-pentadecanoic, d25-, and d24-tridecanoic acids. The identification of these metabolites suggests a carbon addition at the C-3 position of hexadecane, with subsequent β-oxidation and transformation reactions (chain elongation and C-10 methylation) that predominantly produce fatty acids with odd numbers of carbons. Mineralization of [1-14C]hexadecane was demonstrated based on the recovery of 14CO2 in active cultures.Linear alkanes account for a large component of crude and refined petroleum products and, therefore, are of environmental significance with respect to their fate and transport (38). The aerobic activation of alkanes is well documented and involves monooxygenase and dioxygenase enzymes in which not only is oxygen required as an electron acceptor but it also serves as a reactant in hydroxylation (2, 16, 17, 32, 34). Alkanes are also degraded under anoxic conditions via novel degradation strategies (34). To date, there are two known pathways of anaerobic n-alkane degradation: (i) alkane addition to fumarate, commonly referred to as fumarate addition, and (ii) a putative pathway, proposed by So et al. (25), involving carboxylation of the alkane. Fumarate addition proceeds via terminal or subterminal addition (C-2 position) of the alkane to the double bond of fumarate, resulting in the formation of an alkylsuccinate. The alkylsuccinate is further degraded via carbon skeleton rearrangement and β-oxidation (4, 6, 8, 12, 13, 21, 37). Alkane addition to fumarate has been documented for a denitrifying isolate (21, 37), sulfate-reducing consortia (4, 8, 12, 13), and five sulfate-reducing isolates (4, 6-8, 12). In addition to being demonstrated in these studies, fumarate addition in a sulfate-reducing enrichment growing on the alicyclic alkane 2-ethylcyclopentane has also been demonstrated (23). In contrast to fumarate addition, which has been shown for both sulfate-reducers and denitrifiers, the putative carboxylation of n-alkanes has been proposed only for the sulfate-reducing isolate strain Hxd3 (25) and for a sulfate-reducing consortium (4). Experiments using NaH13CO3 demonstrated that bicarbonate serves as the source of inorganic carbon for the putative carboxylation reaction (25). Subterminal carboxylation of the alkane at the C-3 position is followed by elimination of the two terminal carbons, to yield a fatty acid that is one carbon shorter than the parent alkane (4, 25). The fatty acids are subject to β-oxidation, chain elongation, and/or C-10 methylation (25).In this study, we characterized an alkane-degrading, nitrate-reducing consortium and surveyed the metabolites of the consortium incubated with either unlabeled or labeled hexadecane in order to elucidate the pathway of n-alkane degradation. We present evidence of a pathway analogous to the proposed carboxylation pathway under nitrate-reducing conditions.  相似文献   

8.
An analytical method of improved sensitivity has enabled measurements to be made of N-oxide as well as pyrrolic metabolites formed from a range of unsaturated pyrrolizidine alkaloids in hepatic microsome preparations. Using microsomes from livers of phenobarbitone-pretreated male Fischer rats, all 13 alkaloids tested were metabolised to both N-oxides and pyrroles. The most lipophilic alkaloids gave enhanced rates of metabolism. No consistent relationship existed between rates of N-oxide and of pyrrole formation. The two pathways appeared to be independent. The ratio of N-oxide to pyrrolic metabolites varied, depending on the type of ester: it was highest for ‘open’ diester alkaloids, lowest for 12 membered macrocyclic diesters and for monoesters. Steric hindrance by the acid moiety could account for these differences, by affecting the balance between microsomal oxidation of the amino alcohol moiety at the nitrogen and C8 positions respectively and could explain the high pyrrole yields given by some macrocyclic diesters. The levels of pyrrolic metabolites bound to liver tissues and responsible for hepatotoxicity in rats given pyrrolizidine alkaloids, did not necessarily reflect the rates of formation of such metabolites measured in vitro. In the animal additional factors could influence the formation and tissue binding of pyrrolic metabolites, including the detoxication of alkaloids by hydrolysis and the chemical reactivity and stability of the toxic metabolites. A comparison of heliotridine esters with retronecine esters showed that the 7-hydroxyl or -ester configuration had a relatively small influence on the balance between formation of pyrrolic metabolites and detoxication by N-oxidation. The results did not support any hypothesis that heliotridine esters should generally be more hepatotoxic than analogous retronecine esters. The structure of the acid moiety was likely to have at least as much influence on toxicity as the base configuration.  相似文献   

9.
Sodium [1-14C]acetate and [1-14C]stearic acid were readily incorporated into hydrocarbons, secondary alcohols, wax esters, aldehydes, primary alcohols, and fatty acids in young pea leaves (Pisum sativum). Dithioerythritol, dithiothreitol, and mercaptoethanol (but not glutathione and cysteine) severely inhibited the incorporation of labeled acetate into alkanes and secondary alcohols with accumulation of label in wax ester and aldehyde fractions. Detailed radio gas-chromatographic analyses of the fatty acids of both the surface lipid components and internal lipids showed that dithioerythritol and mercaptoethanol specifically inhibited n-hentriacontane (C31) synthesis and caused accumulation of C32 aldehyde, suggesting that the inhibition was at or near the terminal step in alkane biosynthesis, presumably decarboxylation. Trichloroacetate, at a concentration that inhibited C31 alkane synthesis but not the synthesis of alcohols (C26 and C28) specifically inhibited the formation of C32 aldehyde but not that of the C26 or C28 aldehyde. From these results, it is concluded that the C32 aldehyde is derived from the C32 acyl derivative which is the precursor of C31 alkane.  相似文献   

10.
Hydrogenase activity and the H2-fumarate electron transport system in a carbohydrate-fermenting obligate anaerobe, Bacteroides fragilis, were investigated. In both whole cells and cell extracts, hydrogenase activity was demonstrated with methylene blue, benzyl viologen, flavin mononucleotide, or flavin adenine dinucleotide as the electron acceptor. A catalytic quantity of benzyl viologen or ferredoxin from Clostridium pasteurianum was required to reduce nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate with H2. Much of the hydrogenase activity appeared to be associated with the soluble fraction of the cell. Fumarate reduction to succinate by H2 was demonstrable in cell extracts only in the presence of a catalytic quantity of benzyl viologen, flavin mononucleotide, flavin adenine dinucleotide, or ferredoxin from C. pasteurianum. Sulfhydryl compounds were not required for fumarate reduction by H2, but mercaptoethanol and dithiothreitol appeared to stimulate this activity by 59 and 61%, respectively. Inhibition of fumarate reduction by acriflavin, rotenone, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, and antimycin A suggest the involvement of a flavoprotein, a quinone, and cytochrome b in the reduction of fumarate to succinate. The involvement of a quinone in fumarate reduction is also apparent from the inhibition of fumarate reduction by H2 when cell extracts were irradiated with ultraviolet light. Based on the evidence obtained, a possible scheme for the flow of electrons from H2 to fumarate in B. fragilis is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
The absolute stereochemistry of fatty acid (FA) desaturation in Bombyx mori and Manduca sexta female pheromone glands (PGs), catalysed by FA-CoA Δ11-(Z)-desaturases, was determined using chiral, specifically labelled palmitic acids {[2,2,3,4,5,5,6,6,7,8,9,9,11,12−2H14]–(11R,12S)−1 and [2,2,3,4,5,5,6,6,7,8,9,9,11,12−2H14]–(11S,12R)−1)} as metabolic probes. The (11R,12S)−1 acid was converted in PGs of treated virgin females to labelled methyl (11Z)-hexadecenoate ([2H14]−2, Mw=282 Da). In incubations with the opposite enantiomer two deuterium atoms from (11S,12R)−1 were removed, yielding [2H12]−2 of Mw=280 Da. These results were confirmed by methylthiolation of [2H14]−2 and [2H12]−2 with a dimethyl disulfide/iodine mixture. Mass spectra of the DMDS adducts directly showed the distribution of deuterium atoms in the labelled methyl esters of 2. The data consistently indicate, that the studied insects possess Δ11-(Z)-desaturases with pro-(R) C(11)-H and pro-(R) C(12)-H stereospecificity, catalysing a syn-elimination of two hydrogen atoms.  相似文献   

12.
The stereochemistry of the replacement of the SH-group of cysteine by CN catalyzed by β-cyanoalanine synthetase was studied using cysteine stereospecifically tritiated at C-3. Analysis of the resulting β-cyanoalanine by conversion into fumarate via aspartate and malate showed that the reaction had occurred with retention of configuration at C-3. Using cystine stereospecifically labeled at C-3 with tritium or with tritium and deuterium, it was found that the α,β-elimination reaction catalyzed by S-alkylcysteine lyase involves stereo-specific replacement of the β-substituent of the substrate by a hydrogen derived from the solvent, D2O or H2O, with retention of configuration to give pyruvate containing a chiral methyl group. The results are discussed, particularly in the light of mechanistic proposals by Braunstem and co-workers.  相似文献   

13.
For the first time, it is experimentally established that the dietary cholesterol and cholesterol sulfate are biosynthetic precursors of polyhydroxysteroids and related low molecular weight glycosides in starfishes. These deuterium labeled precursors were converted into partly deuterated 5α-cholestane-3β,6α,7α,8,15α,16β,26-heptaol, 5α-cholestane-3β,4β,6α,7α,8,15β,16β,26-octaol, and steroid monoside asterosaponin P1 in result of feeding experiments on the Far Eastern starfish Patiria (=Asterina) pectinifera. The incorporations of deuterium were established by MS and NMR spectroscopy. Scheme of the first stages of biosynthesis of polar steroids in these animals was suggested on the basis of inclusion of three from six deuterium atoms and determination of their positions in biosynthetic products, when [2,2,3,4,4,6-2H6]cholesterol 3-sulfate was used as precursor. It was also shown that labeled cholesterol is transformed into Δ7-cholesterol (lathosterol) in digestive organs and gonads of the starfish.  相似文献   

14.
The incubation of [5,6-3H]prostaglandin E1 ([3H]PGE1) with guinea pig kidney cortex microsomes in the presence of NADPH in an atmosphere of air, resulted in chromatographically polar metabolites. The incubation products were treated with base which converted PGE1 derivatives into PGB1 derivatives, with a λmax = 278 nm and the products were analyzed by TLC and high pressure-liquid chromatography (HPLC). Based on UV absorption, mobility on TLC and retention time in HPLC, as compared with authentic compounds, it was concluded that the two polar UV-absorbing peaks in HPLC represented 19-hydroxy-PGB1 (19-OH-PGB1) and 20-hydroxy-PGB1 (20-OH-PGB1). Further identification of the metabolites was obtained by derivatizing the incubation products as methyl esters and t-butyldimethylsilyl ethers, followed by co-injection with similarly derivatized authentic compounds in HPLC and gas chromatography. Finally, the derivatized metabolites were identified by comparing their mass fragmentation with that of similarly derivatized authentic compounds. There was an absolute requirement for NADPH, and NADH did not significantly support the hydroxylation of PGE1. Inhibitors of microsomal monooxygenase (SKF 525A, metyrapone, and cytochrome c) inhibited the hydroxylation of PGE1 by kidney cortex microsomes. By contrast, carbon monoxide at a CO:O2 ratio of 5:1 did not inhibit the hydroxylation of PGE1, pointing to a low or lack of CO sensitivity of the hydroxylation of PGE1. The addition of PGE1 or laurate to guinea pig kidney cortex microsomes elicited Type I spectral changes. The spectral dissociation constant (Ks) for PGE1 was 2.4 × 10?4m. The kinetic constants for 19- and 20-hydroxylations of PGE1 were determined. The KM values for the 19- and 20-hydroxylation pathways were found to be identical, being 3.3 × 10?4m, suggesting that the same enzyme is involved in both hydroxylations; however, the Vmax values for 19-hydroxylation and 20-hydroxylation of PGE1 were 50 nmol/hr and 20.8 nmol/hr respectively. These results demonstrate that PGE1 is a substrate for the kidney cortex microsomal monooxygenase. The similarities and differences of the kidney monooxygenase in the guinea pig with that in the rat are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Escherichia coli uptake hydrogenase 2 (Hyd-2) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of H2 to protons and electrons. Hyd-2 synthesis is strongly upregulated during growth on glycerol or on glycerol-fumarate. Membrane-associated Hyd-2 is an unusual heterotetrameric [NiFe]-hydrogenase that lacks a typical cytochrome b membrane anchor subunit, which transfers electrons to the quinone pool. Instead, Hyd-2 has an additional electron transfer subunit, termed HybA, with four predicted iron-sulfur clusters. Here, we examined the physiological role of the HybA subunit. During respiratory growth with glycerol and fumarate, Hyd-2 used menaquinone/demethylmenaquinone (MQ/DMQ) to couple hydrogen oxidation to fumarate reduction. HybA was essential for electron transfer from Hyd-2 to MQ/DMQ. H2 evolution catalyzed by Hyd-2 during fermentation of glycerol in the presence of Casamino Acids or in a fumarate reductase-negative strain growing with glycerol-fumarate was also shown to be dependent on both HybA and MQ/DMQ. The uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) inhibited Hyd-2-dependent H2 evolution from glycerol, indicating the requirement for a proton gradient. In contrast, CCCP failed to inhibit H2-coupled fumarate reduction. Although a Hyd-2 enzyme lacking HybA could not catalyze Hyd-2-dependent H2 oxidation or H2 evolution in whole cells, reversible H2-dependent reduction of viologen dyes still occurred. Finally, hydrogen-dependent dye reduction by Hyd-2 was reversibly inhibited in extracts derived from cells grown in H2 evolution mode. Our findings suggest that Hyd-2 switches between H2-consuming and H2-producing modes in response to the redox status of the quinone pool. Hyd-2-dependent H2 evolution from glycerol requires reverse electron transport.  相似文献   

16.
The thermophilic sulfate-reducing archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus strain VC-16 (DSM 4304), which is known to oxidize fatty acids and n-alkenes, was shown to oxidize saturated hydrocarbons (n-alkanes in the range C10–C21) with thiosulfate or sulfate as a terminal electron acceptor. The amount of n-hexadecane degradation observed was in stoichiometric agreement with the theoretically expected amount of thiosulfate reduction. One of the pathways used by anaerobic microorganisms to activate alkanes is addition to fumarate that involves alkylsuccinate synthase as a key enzyme. A search for genes encoding homologous enzymes in A. fulgidus identified the pflD gene (locus-tag AF1449) that was previously annotated as a pyruvate formate lyase. A phylogenetic analysis revealed that this gene is of bacterial origin and was likely acquired by A. fulgidus from a bacterial donor through a horizontal gene transfer. Based on three-dimensional modeling of the corresponding protein and molecular dynamic simulations, we hypothesize an alkylsuccinate synthase activity for this gene product. The pflD gene expression was upregulated during the growth of A. fulgidus on an n-alkane (C16) compared with growth on a fatty acid. Our results suggest that anaerobic alkane degradation in A. fulgidus may involve the gene pflD in alkane activation through addition to fumarate. These findings highlight the possible importance of hydrocarbon oxidation at high temperatures by A. fulgidus in hydrothermal vents and the deep biosphere.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the metabolic route by which a lignin tetramer-degrading mixed bacterial culture degraded two tetrameric lignin model compounds containing β—O—4 and 5—5 biphenyl structures. The α-hydroxyl groups in the propane chain of both phenolic and nonphenolic tetramers were first oxidized symmetrically in two successive steps to give monoketones and diketones. These ketone metabolites were decomposed through Cα(=O)—Cβ cleavage, forming trimeric carboxyl acids which were further metabolized through another Cα(=O)—Cβ cleavage. Dehydrodiveratric acid, which resulted from the cleavage of the carbon bonds of the nonphenol tetramer, was demethylated twice. Four metabolites of the phenolic tetramer were purified and identified. All of these were stable compounds in sterile mineral medium, but were readily degraded by lignin tetramer-degrading bacteria along the same pathway as the phenol tetramer. No monoaromatic metabolites accumulated. All metabolites were identified by mass and proton magnetic resonance spectrometry. The metabolic route by which the mixed bacterial culture degraded tetrameric lignin model compounds was different from the route of the main ligninase-catalyzed Cα—Cβ cleavage by Phanerochaete chrysosporium.  相似文献   

18.
The metabolic pathways involved in hydrogen (H2) production, utilization and the activity of methanogens are the important factors that should be considered in controlling methane (CH4) emissions by ruminants. H2 as one of the major substrate for CH4 production is therefore should be controlled. One of the strategies on reducing CH4 is through the use of hydrogenotrophic microorganisms such as fumarate reducing bacteria. This study determined the effect of fumarate reducing bacteria, Mitsuokella jalaludinii, supplementation on in vitro rumen fermentation, CH4 production, diversity and quantity. M. jalaludinii significantly reduced CH4 at 48 and 72 h of incubation and significantly increased succinate at 24 h. Although not significantly different, propionate was found to be highest in treatment containing M. jalaludinii at 12 and 48 h of incubation. These results suggest that supplementation of fumarate reducing bacteria to ruminal fermentation reduces CH4 production and quantity, increases succinate and changes the rumen microbial diversity.  相似文献   

19.
Recent studies have demonstrated that fumarate addition and carboxylation are two possible mechanisms of anaerobic alkane degradation. In the present study, we surveyed metabolites formed during growth on hexadecane by the sulfate-reducing isolates AK-01 and Hxd3 and by a mixed sulfate-reducing consortium. The cultures were incubated with either protonated or fully deuterated hexadecane; the sulfate-reducing consortium was also incubated with [1,2-13C2]hexadecane. All cultures were extracted, silylated, and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We detected a suite of metabolites that support a fumarate addition mechanism for hexadecane degradation by AK-01, including methylpentadecylsuccinic acid, 4-methyloctadecanoic acid, 4-methyloctadec-2,3-enoic acid, 2-methylhexadecanoic acid, and tetradecanoic acid. By using d34-hexadecane, mass spectral evidence strongly supporting a carbon skeleton rearrangement of the first intermediate, methylpentadecylsuccinic acid, was demonstrated for AK-01. Evidence indicating hexadecane carboxylation was not found in AK-01 extracts but was observed in Hxd3 extracts. In the mixed sulfate-reducing culture, however, metabolites consistent with both fumarate addition and carboxylation mechanisms of hexadecane degradation were detected, which demonstrates that multiple alkane degradation pathways can occur simultaneously within distinct anaerobic communities. Collectively, these findings underscore that fumarate addition and carboxylation are important alkane degradation mechanisms that may be widespread among phylogenetically and/or physiologically distinct microorganisms.  相似文献   

20.
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were used to study the metabolism of deuterated n-alkanes (C6 to C12) and 1-13C-labeled n-hexane by a highly enriched sulfate-reducing bacterial culture. All substrates were activated via fumarate addition to form the corresponding alkylsuccinic acid derivatives as transient metabolites. Formation of d14-hexylsuccinic acid in cell extracts from exogenously added, fully deuterated n-hexane confirmed that this reaction was the initial step in anaerobic alkane metabolism. Analysis of resting cell suspensions amended with 1-13C-labeled n-hexane confirmed that addition of the fumarate occurred at the C-2 carbon of the parent substrate. Subsequent metabolism of hexylsuccinic acid resulted in the formation of 4-methyloctanoic acid, and 3-hydroxy-4-methyloctanoic acid was tentatively identified. We also found that 13C nuclei from 1-13C-labeled n-hexane became incorporated into the succinyl portion of the initial metabolite in a manner that indicated that 13C-labeled fumarate was formed and recycled during alkane metabolism. Collectively, the findings obtained with a sulfate-reducing culture using isotopically labeled alkanes augment and support the previously proposed pathway (H. Wilkes, R. Rabus, T. Fischer, A. Armstroff, A. Behrends, and F. Widdel, Arch. Microbiol. 177:235-243, 2002) for metabolism of deuterated n-hexane by a denitrifying bacterium.  相似文献   

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