Literature DB >> 4342499

The bacterial oxidation of N-methylisonicotinate, a photolytic product of paraquat.

C G Orpin, M Knight, W C Evans.   

Abstract

Two bacteria have been isolated that are capable of oxidizing N-methylisonicotinate, a photodegradation product of Paraquat (1.1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridylium ion). N-Methylisonicotinate-grown cells of strain 4C1, a Gram-positive rod, oxidized 2-hydroxy-N-methylisonicotinate without lag. Cell-free extracts of these cells converted 2-hydroxyisonicotinate into 2,6-dihydroxyisonicotinate; the reaction did not require molecular oxygen. Maleamate was deamidated and maleate isomerized to fumarate by soluble enzyme systems. [(14)C]Formaldehyde was isolated as the dimedone derivative from the supernatant of a cell suspension oxidizing N-[(14)C]methylisonicotinate, and no [(14)C]-methylamine was detected. Whole cells incubated with N-methyl[carboxy-(14)C]isonicotinate released 95% of the radioactivity as (14)CO(2). The second bacterium, strain 4C2, a Gram-negative rod, did not oxidize any of the mono- or di-hydroxypyridines or their N-methyl derivatives that were available or could be synthesized; nor did cell-free extracts oxidize any of these compounds. Methylamine was oxidized by whole cells without lag; cell-free extracts converted methylamine into formaldehyde when a soluble enzyme system requiring an electron acceptor was used; formaldehyde was oxidized to formate and formate to CO(2) by enzyme systems requiring NAD(+).

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Year:  1972        PMID: 4342499      PMCID: PMC1178793          DOI: 10.1042/bj1270833

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem J        ISSN: 0264-6021            Impact factor:   3.857


  7 in total

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  7 in total
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  6 in total

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