| Literature DB >> 31910844 |
Long Zhang1,2, Ping Hang1, Xiyi Zhou1, Chen Dai1, Ziyi He1, Jiandong Jiang3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Swep is an excellent carbamate herbicide that kills weeds by interfering with metabolic processes and inhibiting cell division at the growth point. Due to the large amount of use, swep residues in soil and water not only cause environmental pollution but also accumulate through the food chain, ultimately pose a threat to human health. This herbicide is degraded in soil mainly by microbial activity, but no studies on the biotransformation of swep have been reported.Entities:
Keywords: 3,4-Dichloroaniline; Alicycliphilus sp. PH-34; Comamonas sp. SWP-3; Consortium; Degradation; Swep
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31910844 PMCID: PMC6945715 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-020-1276-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Strains and plasmids used in this study
| Strains and plasmids | Characteristics | Source or reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Strains | ||
| | F | Invitrogen |
| | F | Invitrogen |
| | Wild type, Strr, capable of degrading various herbicides | This study |
| | The | This study |
| | Mutant of strain SWP-3 with | This study |
| | Wild type, Ampr, capable of degrading various aniline derivatives | This study |
| Plasmids | ||
| pMD19-T | TA cloning vector; Ampr | TaKaRa |
| pEX18-Gm | Suicide vector; Gmr | TaKaRa |
| pBBR1MCS-2 | Broad host-range vector; kanamycinr (Kmr) | Lab store |
| pRK2013 | Conjugation helper plasmid | Lab store |
| pET-29a (+) | Expression vector; Kmr | Invitrogen |
| pMCS2-ppa | pBBR1MCS-2 containing the | This study |
| pET-ppa | pET-29a (+) containing the | This study |
| pEX18-ppa | pEX18-Gm containing the | This study |
| pMD19-ppa | pMD19-T containing the | This study |
| pMD19-ppa-T1 | pMD19-T containing the | This study |
| pMD19-ppa-T2 | pMD19-T containing the | This study |
Fig. 1a Degradation of swep by Comamonas sp. SWP-3; b degradation of 3,4-dichloroaniline by Alicycliphilus sp. PH-34; c degradation of swep by the consortium comprising of Comamonas sp. SWP-3 and Alicycliphilus sp. PH-34; d degradation of 3,4-dichloroaniline by the consortium comprising of Comamonas sp. SWP-3 and Alicycliphilus sp. PH-34
Fig. 2SDS-PAGE of the recombinant Ppa purified from E. coli BL21 (DE3) (pET-ppa) by Ni2+-NTA. Ppa-His6 the purified recombinant Ppa; M low molecular protein marker
Fig. 3LC–MS analyses of the metabolite produced during swep degradation by recombinant Ppa purified from E. coli BL21 (DE3) (pET-ppa). The HPLC profiles of swep [Rt (min) = 6.497] and the metabolite 3,4-DCA [Rt (min) = 5.563] are indicated. The mass spectra of swep {m/z = 217.9780 [M − H]−} (right) and 3,4-DCA {m/z = 159.9722 [M − H]−} (left) are also shown
Kinetic constants of Ppa for swep, propanil, chlorpropham and propham
| Formula | Catalytic efficiency | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 10.40 ± 1.20 | 14.58 ± 2.50 | 1.40 |
|
| 1.51 ± 0.30 | 219.90 ± 8.56 | 145.63 |
|
| 55.22 ± 5.23 | 0.99 ± 0.11 | 0.02 |
|
| 140.90 ± 11.32 | 0.73 ± 0.04 | 0.01 |
Values are the means ± standard deviations from three experiments
Fig. 4Alignment of amino acid sequences of Ppa and other 5 biochemically characterized amidases from GenBank. Identical amino acid residues are marked in black; similar residues are marked in pink. The amino acid residue sits of Ppa that were mutant by error-PCR are marked by red boxs
Fig. 5A neighbor-joining phylogenic tree constructed based on the amino acid sequences of Ppa (bold and red) and biochemically characterized amidases. The substrates and their Genbank accession numbers are in line with each amidase, respectively. The phylogenetic neighbor joining tree was constructed using MEGA (version 7.0) and was bootstrapped 1000 times (> 50% are shown at branching points). The bar represents 1.0 amino acid difference per site