Literature DB >> 17965160

Roles of ring-hydroxylating dioxygenases in styrene and benzene catabolism in Rhodococcus jostii RHA1.

Marianna A Patrauchan1, Christine Florizone, Shawn Eapen, Leticia Gómez-Gil, Bhanu Sethuraman, Masao Fukuda, Julian Davies, William W Mohn, Lindsay D Eltis.   

Abstract

Proteomics and targeted gene disruption were used to investigate the catabolism of benzene, styrene, biphenyl, and ethylbenzene in Rhodococcus jostii RHA1, a well-studied soil bacterium whose potent polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-transforming properties are partly due to the presence of the related Bph and Etb pathways. Of 151 identified proteins, 22 Bph/Etb proteins were among the most abundant in biphenyl-, ethylbenzene-, benzene-, and styrene-grown cells. Cells grown on biphenyl, ethylbenzene, or benzene contained both Bph and Etb enzymes and at least two sets of lower Bph pathway enzymes. By contrast, styrene-grown cells contained no Etb enzymes and only one set of lower Bph pathway enzymes. Gene disruption established that biphenyl dioxygenase (BPDO) was essential for growth of RHA1 on benzene or styrene but that ethylbenzene dioxygenase (EBDO) was not required for growth on any of the tested substrates. Moreover, whole-cell assays of the delta bphAa and etbAa1::cmrA etbAa2::aphII mutants demonstrated that while both dioxygenases preferentially transformed biphenyl, only BPDO transformed styrene. Deletion of pcaL of the beta-ketoadipate pathway disrupted growth on benzene but not other substrates. Thus, styrene and benzene are degraded via meta- and ortho-cleavage, respectively. Finally, catalases were more abundant during growth on nonpolar aromatic compounds than on aromatic acids. This suggests that the relaxed specificities of BPDO and EBDO that enable RHA1 to grow on a range of compounds come at the cost of increased uncoupling during the latter's initial transformation. The stress response may augment RHA1's ability to degrade PCBs and other pollutants that induce similar uncoupling.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17965160      PMCID: PMC2223760          DOI: 10.1128/JB.01122-07

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  50 in total

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  21 in total

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4.  Proteomic analysis of survival of Rhodococcus jostii RHA1 during carbon starvation.

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5.  On the Enigma of Glutathione-Dependent Styrene Degradation in Gordonia rubripertincta CWB2.

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6.  Genome and Phenotype Microarray Analyses of Rhodococcus sp. BCP1 and Rhodococcus opacus R7: Genetic Determinants and Metabolic Abilities with Environmental Relevance.

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8.  Molecular and biochemical characterization of the tetralin degradation pathway in Rhodococcus sp. strain TFB.

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Review 9.  A Review: The Styrene Metabolizing Cascade of Side-Chain Oxygenation as Biotechnological Basis to Gain Various Valuable Compounds.

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10.  Rhodococcus rhodochrous ATCC12674 becomes alkane-tolerant upon GroEL2 overexpression and survives in the n-octane phase in two phase culture.

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