Affiliation:
1. Forest Products Laboratory, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Madison, Wisconsin 53705, and Gray Freshwater Biological Institute and Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, Navarre, Minnesota 553922
Abstract
POL-88, a mutant of the white-rot fungus
Phanerochaete chrysosporium
, was selected for diminished phenol-oxidizing enzyme activity. A wide variety of phenolic compounds were degraded by ligninolytic cultures of this mutant. With several
o
-diphenolic substrates, degradation intermediates were produced that had UV spectra consistent with muconic acids. Extensive spectrophotometric and polarographic assays failed to detect classical ring-cleaving dioxygenases in cell homogenates or in extracts from ligninolytic cultures. Even so, a sensitive carrier-trapping assay showed that intact cultures degraded [
U
-
14
C]catechol to [
14
C]muconic acid, establishing the presence of a system capable of 1,2-intradiol fission. Significant accumulation of [
14
C]muconic acid into carrier occurred only when evolution of
14
CO
2
from [
14
C]catechol was inhibited by treating cultures with excess nutrient nitrogen (e.g.,
l
-glutamic acid) or with cycloheximide.
l
-Glutamic acid is known from past work to repress the ligninolytic system in
P. chrysosporium
and to mimic the effect of cycloheximide. The results here indicate, therefore, that the enzyme system responsible for degrading ring-cleavage products to CO
2
turns over faster than does the system responsible for ring cleavage.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
39 articles.
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