Affiliation:
1. Institut für Mikrobiologie, Universität Stuttgart, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A flavin reductase, which is naturally part of the ribonucleotide reductase complex of
Escherichia coli
, acted in cell extracts of recombinant
E. coli
strains under aerobic and anaerobic conditions as an “azo reductase.” The transfer of the recombinant plasmid, which resulted in the constitutive expression of high levels of activity of the flavin reductase, increased the reduction rate for different industrially relevant sulfonated azo dyes in vitro almost 100-fold. The flavin reductase gene (
fre
) was transferred to
Sphingomonas
sp. strain BN6, a bacterial strain able to degrade naphthalenesulfonates under aerobic conditions. The flavin reductase was also synthesized in significant amounts in the
Sphingomonas
strain. The reduction rates for the sulfonated azo compound amaranth were compared for whole cells and cell extracts from both recombinant strains,
E. coli
, and wild-type
Sphingomonas
sp. strain BN6. The whole cells showed less than 2% of the specific activities found with cell extracts. These results suggested that the cytoplasmic anaerobic “azo reductases,” which have been described repeatedly in in vitro systems, are presumably flavin reductases and that in vivo they have insignificant importance in the reduction of sulfonated azo compounds.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
175 articles.
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