Affiliation:
1. Environmental Engineering and Science, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-4020
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Anaerobic mineralization of ethylbenzene by the denitrifying bacterium
Azoarcus
sp. strain EB1 was recently shown to be initiated by dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene to 1-phenylethanol. 1-Phenylethanol is converted to benzoate (benzoyl coenzyme A) via acetophenone as transient intermediate. We developed in vitro assays to examine ethylbenzene dehydrogenase and 1-phenylethanol dehydrogenase activities in cell extracts of this strain. With
p
-benzoquinone as the electron acceptor, cell extracts of
Azoarcus
sp. strain EB1 catalyzed ethylbenzene oxidation at a specific rate of 10 nmol min
−1
[mg of protein]
−1
and an apparent
K
m
for ethylbenzene of approximately 60 μM. The membrane-associated ethylbenzene dehydrogenase activity was found to oxidize 4-fluoroethylbenzene and propylbenzene but was unable to transform 4-chloro-ethylbenzene, the ethyltoluenes, and styrene. Enzymatic ethylbenzene oxidation was stereospecific, with (
S
)-(−)-1-phenylethanol being the only enantiomer detected by chiral high-pressure liquid chromatography analysis. Moreover, cell extracts catalyzed the oxidation of (
S
)-(−)-1-phenylethanol but not of (
R
)-(+)-1-phenylethanol to acetophenone. When cell extracts were dialyzed, (
S
)-(−)-1-phenylethanol oxidation occurred only in the presence of NAD
+
, suggesting that NAD
+
is the physiological electron acceptor of 1-phenylethanol dehydrogenase. Both ethylbenzene dehydrogenase and 1-phenylethanol dehydrogenase activities were present in
Azoarcus
sp. strain EB1 cells that were grown anaerobically on ethylbenzene, 1-phenylethanol, and acetophenone, but these activities were absent in benzoate-grown cells.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
41 articles.
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