Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry
2. Department of Biology and The Center for Biotechnology and Drug Design, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia 30303-3038
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Choline dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.99.1) catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine-betaine via a betaine-aldehyde intermediate. Such a reaction is of considerable interest for biotechnological applications in that transgenic plants engineered with bacterial glycine-betaine-synthesizing enzymes have been shown to have enhanced tolerance towards various environmental stresses, such as hypersalinity, freezing, and high temperatures. To date, choline dehydrogenase has been poorly characterized in its biochemical and kinetic properties, mainly because its purification has been hampered by instability of the enzyme in vitro. In the present report, we cloned and expressed in
Escherichia coli
the
betA
gene from the moderate halophile
Halomonas elongata
which codes for a hypothetical choline dehydrogenase. The recombinant enzyme was purified to more than 70% homogeneity as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by treatment with 30 to 50% saturation of ammonium sulfate followed by column chromatography using DEAE-Sepharose. The purified enzyme showed similar substrate specificities with either choline or betaine-aldehyde as the substrate, as indicated by the apparent
V
/
K
values (where
V
is the maximal velocity and
K
is the Michaelis constant) of 0.9 and 0.6 μmol of O
2
min
−1
mg
−1
mM
−1
at pH 7 and 25°C, respectively. With 1 mM phenazine methosulfate as the primary electron acceptor, the apparent
V
max
values for choline and betaine-aldehyde were 10.9 and 5.7 μmol of O
2
min
−1
mg
−1
, respectively. These
V
max
values decreased four- to sevenfold when molecular oxygen was used as the electron acceptor. Altogether, the kinetic data are consistent with the conclusion that
H. elongata betA
codes for a choline dehydrogenase that can also act as an oxidase when electron acceptors other than molecular oxygen are not available.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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