Affiliation:
1. Laboratorio de Microbiología, Departamento de Genética Molecular y Microbiología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
2. Department of Environmental Biotechnology, GBF-German Research Center for Biotechnology, Braunschweig, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ralstonia eutropha
JMP134(pJP4) degrades 3-chlorobenzoate (3-CB) by using two not completely isofunctional, pJP4-encoded chlorocatechol degradation gene clusters,
tfdC
I
D
I
E
I
F
I
and
tfdD
II
C
II
E
II
F
II
. Introduction of several copies of each gene cluster into
R. eutropha
JMP222, which lacks pJP4 and thus accumulates chlorocatechols from 3-CB, allows the derivatives to grow in this substrate. However, JMP222 derivatives containing one chromosomal copy of each cluster did not grow in 3-CB. The failure to grow in 3-CB was the result of accumulation of chlorocatechols due to the limiting activity of chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase (TfdC), the first enzyme in the chlorocatechol degradation pathway. Micromolar concentrations of 3- and 4-chlorocatechol inhibited the growth of strains JMP134 and JMP222 in benzoate, and cells of strain JMP222 exposed to 3 mM 3-CB exhibited a 2-order-of-magnitude decrease in viability. This toxicity effect was not observed with strain JMP222 harboring multiple copies of the
tfdC
I
gene, and the derivative of strain JMP222 containing
tfdC
I
D
I
E
I
F
I
plus multiple copies of the
tfdC
I
gene could efficiently grow in 3-CB. In addition,
tfdC
I
and
tfdC
II
gene mutants of strain JMP134 exhibited no growth and impaired growth in 3-CB, respectively. The introduction into strain JMP134 of the
xylS
-
xylXYZL
genes, encoding a broad-substrate-range benzoate 1,2-dioxygenase system and thus increasing the transformation of 3-CB into chlorocatechols, resulted in derivatives that exhibited a sharp decrease in the ability to grow in 3-CB. These observations indicate that the dosage of chlorocatechol-transforming genes is critical for growth in 3-CB. This effect depends on a delicate balance between chlorocatechol-producing and chlorocatechol-consuming reactions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Reference41 articles.
1. Acevedo, C., R. Brezny, T. W. Joyce, and B. González. 1995. Metabolism of mono and dichlorinated guaiacols by Rhodococcus ruber CA16. Curr. Microbiol.30:63-67.
2. Alexeyev, M. F., I. N. Shokolenko, and T. P. Crighan. 1995. New mini-Tn5 derivatives for insertion mutagenesis and genetic engineering in Gram-negative bacteria. Can. J. Microbiol.41:1053-1055.
3. Ausubel F. R. Brent R. Kingston D. Moore J. Seidman J. Smith and K. Struhl (ed.). 1992. Short protocols in molecular biology 2nd ed. Greene Publishing Associates New York N.Y.
4. Bobadilla, R., C. Varela, R. Céspedes, and B. González. 2002. Engineering bacterial strains through the chromosomal insertion of the chlorocatechol catabolism tfdICDEF gene cluster, to improve degradation of typical bleached Kraft pulp mill effluent pollutants. Electronic J. Biotechnol.5:162-172.
5. Clément, P., D. H. Pieper, and B. González. 2001. Molecular characterization of a deletion/duplication rearrangement in tfd genes from Ralstonia eutropha JMP134(pJP4) that improves growth on 3-chlorobenzoic acid but abolishes growth on 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. Microbiology147:2141-2148.
Cited by
52 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献