Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
Catechol occurs as an intermediate in the metabolism of both benzoate and phenol by strains of
Pseudomonas putida
. During growth at the expense of benzoate, catechol is cleaved
ortho
(1,2-oxygenase) and metabolized via the β-ketoadipate pathway; during growth at the expense of phenol or cresols, the catechol or substituted catechols formed are metabolized by a separate pathway following
meta
(2,3-oxygenase) cleavage of the aromatic ring of catechol. It is possible to explain the mutually exclusive occurrence of the
meta
and
ortho
pathway enzymes in phenol- and benzoate-grown cells of
P. putida
on the basis of differences in the mode of regulation of these two pathways. By use of both nonmetabolizable inducers and blocked mutants, gratuitous synthesis of some of the
meta
pathway enzymes was obtained. All four enzymes of the
meta
pathway are induced by the primary substrate, cresol or phenol, or its analogue. Three enzymes of the
ortho
pathway that catalyze the conversion of catechol to β-ketoadipate enol-lactone are induced by
cis,cis
-muconate, produced from catechol by 1,2-oxygenase-mediated cleavage. Observations on the differences in specificity of induction and function of the two pathways suggest that they are not really either tangential or redundant. The
meta
pathway serves as a general mechanism for catabolism of various alkyl derivatives of catechol derived from substituted phenolic compounds. The
ortho
pathway is more specific and serves primarily in the catabolism of precursors of catechol and catechol itself.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
256 articles.
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