| Literature DB >> 23658554 |
Verónica Hernández-Sánchez1, Elke Lang, Regina-Michaela Wittich.
Abstract
Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, Cupriavidus necator H850, and Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes KF707 are bacterial strains able to mineralize biphenyl and to co-oxidize many of its halogenated derivatives (PCBs). Only strain LB400 also mineralizes a few mono- and dichlorobiphenyls, due to the presence of a functioning chlorocatechol pathway. Here, we used a Tn5-based minitransposon shuttle system to chromosomically introduce genes tcbRCDEF, encoding the chlorocatechol pathway into KF707, and genes cbdABC encoding a 2-chlorobenzoate 1,2-dioxygenase into KF707 and LB400, as well as transposon Tn4653 from the TOL plasmid, providing genes xylXYZL, encoding a broad-range toluate (methylbenzoate) dioxygenase and its dihydrodiol dehydrogenase, to extend the range for the mineralization of halogenated benzoates in LB400 and in KF707 through co-oxidation of halobenzoates into chlorocatechols. The engineered derivatives of LB400 and KF707 thus gained the ability for the mineralization of all isomeric monochloro- and bromobenzoates of the so-called lower pathway which, consequently, also allowed the mineralization of all monochlorobiphenyls and a number of di- and trichlorobiphenyls, thus preventing the accumulation of halobenzoates and of catabolites thereof. LB400 and KF707 also grow with the two commercial PCB formulations, Aroclor 1221 and Aroclor 1232, as the sole carbon and energy sources, but not with higher halogenated PCB mixtures, similar to the already published strain RW112. Repeated exposition of the modified LB400 to short pulses of UV light, over a prolonged period of time, allowed the isolation of a derivative of LB400, termed RW118, capable of growth with Aroclor 1016 still containing only traces of biphenyl, and in co-culture with modified KF707 termed RW120, and modified H850 (RW112) with Aroclor 1242, the commercial mixture already void of biphenyl and monochlorobiphenyls.Entities:
Keywords: Aroclor 1242; Burkholderia xenovorans RW118; Cupriavidus necator RW112; Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes RW120; genetic engineering; polychlorinated biphenyls
Year: 2013 PMID: 23658554 PMCID: PMC3647243 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2013.00090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Strains used in this work, and new substrates mineralized (chlorobenzoates and chlorobiphenyls).
| Strains and their plasmids | Characteristics, and/or mineralization of | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Chlorocatechol pathway cassette | Klemba et al. ( | |
| 2-Halobenzoate 1,2-dioxygenase cassette | Lehning ( | |
| RK2-based Tra- and Mob-functions (helper strain) | Kessler et al. ( | |
| Benzoate, 3-chlorobenzoate, biphenyl, 3-chlorobiphenyl, 2,3′-dichlorobiphenyl | Bopp ( | |
| Benzoate, biphenyl | Furukawa and Miyazaki ( | |
| Methylbenzoates (broad-spectrum alkylbenzoate 1,2-dioxygenase) | Williams and Murray ( | |
| Benzoate, all monochlorobenzoates, 3,5-dichlorobenzoate, biphenyl, all monochlorobiphenyls, 3,5-dichloro-, 2,2′-dichloro-, 2,3′-dichloro, and 2,4′-dichlorobiphenyl | Wittich and Wolff ( | |
| Benzoate, all monochlorobenzoates, 3,5-dichlorobenzoate, biphenyl, all monochlorobiphenyls, 3,5-dichloro-, 2,2′-dichloro-, 2,3′-dichloro-, and 2,4′-dichlorobiphenyl | This study | |
| Benzoate, all monochlorobenzoates, 3,5-dichlorobenzoate, biphenyl, all monochlorobiphenyls, 3,5-dichloro-, 2,2′-dichloro-, 2,3′-dichloro-, and 2,4′-dichlorobiphenyl | This study |
Figure 1Agarose gel electrophoretogram of DNA fragments corresponding to catabolic genes of the autochthonous chlorocatechol pathway of LB400, and/or to those introduced via transposon structures, of genes encoding the 2-halobenzoate 1,2-dioxygenase, and a toluate dioxygenase of broad substrate range for the co-oxidation of halocatechols in its derivative RW118, as well as in RW112 and RW120: the latter two strains give an identical pattern (not shown), refer to Figure .
Figure 2Proposed catabolic pathways for the mineralization of halogenated biphenyls by the engineered bacterial strains. The metabolism of PCBs by all strains proceeds through a number of dehalogenating reactions.
Figure 3Growth of the genetically engineered three-species culture as indicated by the depletion of the sum of congeners over time and the increase in biomass, as determined by measuring Optical Density (OD.
Depletion of individual congeners of Aroclor 1242 by growing cells of .
| Peak no. | Congener(s) | Weight % | Depletion % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2,2′/2,6 | 2.7 | 100 |
| 2 | 2,4/2,5 | 0.9 | 100 |
| 3 | 2,3′ | 1.2 | 100 |
| 4 | 2,3/2,4′ | 5.8 | 100 |
| 5 | 2,6,2′ | 0.9 | 100 |
| 6 | 2,5,2′ | 8.7 | 100 |
| 7 | 2,4,2′/4,4′ | 4.3 | 100 |
| 8 | 2,3,6/2,6,3′ | 0.7 | 100 |
| 9 | 2,3,2′/2,6,4′ | 4.8 | 100 |
| 10 | 2,5,3′ | 1.1 | 100 |
| 11 | 2,4,3′ | 7.0 | 100 |
| 12 | 2,5,4′ | 7.0 | 100 |
| 13 | 2,4,4′ | 6.5 | 100 |
| 14 | 2′,3,4/2,5,2′,6′ | 3.3 | 100 |
| 15 | 2,3,4′/2,4,2′,6′ | 0.9 | 100 |
| 16 | 2,3,6,2′ | 0.5 | 100 |
| 17 | 2,3,2′′,6′ | 0.5 | 100 |
| 18 | 2,5,2′,5′ | 3.1 | 100 |
| 19 | 2,4,2′,5′/2,3,5,2′ | 2.6 | 100 |
| 20 | 2,4,2′,4′ | 1.1 | 086 |
| 21 | 2,4,5,2′ | 1.4 | 090 |
| 22 | 2,3,2′,5′ | 3.4 | 100 |
| 23 | 3,4,4′/2,3,2′,4′ | 3.7 | 081 |
| 24 | 2,3,4,2′/2,3,6,4′/2,6,3′4′ | 3.0 | 086 |
| 25 | 2,3,2′,3′ | 0.9 | 100 |
| 26 | 2,4,5,4′ | 1.9 | 068 |
| 27 | 2,5,3′,4′ | 3.9 | 100 |
| 28 | 2,4,3′,4′/2,3,6,2′,5′ | 4.8 | 091 |
| 29 | 2,3,6,2′,4′ | 1.3 | 078 |
| 30 | 2,3,3′,4′/2,3,4,4′ | 2.9 | 067 |
| 31 | 2,3,6,2′,3′/2,3,5,2′,5′ | 1.0 | 089 |
| 32 | 2,3,5,2′,4′/2,4,5,2′,5′ | 1.1 | 100 |
| 33 | 2,4,5,2′,4′ | 1.0 | 094 |
| 34 | 2,4,5,2′,3′/2,3,5,6,2′,6′ | 1.0 | 062 |
| 35 | 2,3,4,2′,5′ | 1.0 | 073 |
| 36 | 2,3,4,2′,4′ | 0.7 | 052 |
| 37 | 2,3,6,3′,4′/3,4,3′,4′ | 1.1 | 030 |
| 38 | 2,3,4,2′,3′ | 0.7 | 032 |
| 39 | 2,3,6,2′,4′,5′/2,4,5,3′,4′ | 0.7 | 029 |
| 40 | 1.0 | 0 |
Bold: used as internal standard.