Affiliation:
1. Division of Applied Life Science, EB-NCRC, PMBBRC
2. Department of Microbiology, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 660-701
3. Division of Environmental Science and Ecological Engineering, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Republic of Korea
4. Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-8101
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Prior research revealed that
Polaromonas naphthalenivorans
CJ2 carries and expresses genes encoding the gentisate metabolic pathway for naphthalene. These metabolic genes are split into two clusters, comprising
nagRAaGHAbAcAdBFCQEDJI
′-
orf1
-
tnpA
and
nagR2
-
orf2I
″
KL
(C. O. Jeon, M. Park, H. Ro, W. Park, and E. L. Madsen, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 72:1086-1095, 2006). BLAST homology searches of sequences in GenBank indicated that the
orf2
gene from the small cluster likely encoded a salicylate 5-hydroxylase, presumed to catalyze the conversion of salicylate into gentisate. Here, we report physiological and genetic evidence that
orf2
does not encode salicylate 5-hydroxylase. Instead, we have found that
orf2
encodes 3-hydroxybenzoate 6-hydroxylase, the enzyme which catalyzes the NADH-dependent conversion of 3-hydroxybenzoate into gentisate. Accordingly, we have renamed
orf2 nagX
. After expression in
Escherichia coli
, the NagX enzyme had an approximate molecular mass of 43 kDa, as estimated by gel filtration, and was probably a monomeric protein. The enzyme was able to convert 3-hydroxybenzoate into gentisate without salicylate 5-hydroxylase activity. Like other 3-hydroxybenzoate 6-hydroxylases, NagX utilized both NADH and NADPH as electron donors and exhibited a yellowish color, indicative of a bound flavin adenine dinucleotide. An engineered mutant of
P. naphthalenivorans
CJ2 defective in
nagX
failed to grow on 3-hydroxybenzoate but grew normally on naphthalene. These results indicate that the previously described small catabolic cluster in strain CJ2 may be multifunctional and is essential for the degradation of 3-hydroxybenzoate. Because
nagX
and an adjacent MarR-type regulatory gene are both closely related to homologues in
Azoarcus
species, this study raises questions about horizontal gene transfer events that contribute to operon evolution.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
25 articles.
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