Affiliation:
1. Microbiology Group, Department of Botany, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne NE3 7RU, U.K.
Abstract
1. Several species of micro-organisms that were capable of utilizing pyridine compounds as carbon and energy source were isolated from soil and sewage. Compounds degraded included pyridine and the three isomeric hydroxypyridines. 2. Suitable modifications of the cultural conditions led to the accumulation of pyridinediols (dihydroxypyridines), which were isolated and characterized. 3. Three species of Achromobacter produced pyridine-2,5-diol from 2- or 3-hydroxypyridine whereas an uncommon Agrobacterium sp. (N.C.I.B. 10413) produced pyridine-3,4-diol from 4-hydroxypyridine. 4. On the basis of chemical isolation, induction of the necessary enzymes in washed suspensions and the substrate specificity exhibited by the isolated bacteria, the initial transformations proposed are: 2-hydroxypyridine → pyridine-2,5-diol; 3-hydroxypyridine → pyridine-2,5-diol and 4-hydroxypyridine → pyridine-3,4-diol. 5. A selected pyridine-utilizer, Nocardia Z1, did not produce any detectable hydroxy derivative from pyridine, but carried out a slow oxidation of 3-hydroxypyridine to pyridine-2,3-diol and pyridine-3,4-diol. These diols were not further metabolized. 6. Addition of the isomeric hydroxypyridines to a model hydroxylating system resulted in the formation of those diols predicted by theory.
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66 articles.
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