Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Phenolyl cobamides are unique members of a class of cobalt-containing cofactors that includes vitamin B
12
(cobalamin). Cobamide cofactors facilitate diverse reactions in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Phenolyl cobamides are structurally and chemically distinct from the more commonly used benzimidazolyl cobamides such as cobalamin, as the lower axial ligand is a phenolic group rather than a benzimidazole. The functional significance of this difference is not well understood. Here we show that in the bacterium
Sporomusa ovata
, the only organism known to synthesize phenolyl cobamides, several cobamide-dependent acetogenic metabolisms have a requirement or preference for phenolyl cobamides. The addition of benzimidazoles to
S. ovata
cultures results in a decrease in growth rate when grown on methanol, 3,4-dimethoxybenzoate, H
2
plus CO
2
, or betaine. Suppression of native
p
-cresolyl cobamide synthesis and production of benzimidazolyl cobamides occur upon the addition of benzimidazoles, indicating that benzimidazolyl cobamides are not functionally equivalent to the phenolyl cobamide cofactors produced by
S. ovata
. We further show that
S. ovata
is capable of incorporating other phenolic compounds into cobamides that function in methanol metabolism. These results demonstrate that
S. ovata
can incorporate a wide range of compounds as cobamide lower ligands, despite its preference for phenolyl cobamides in the metabolism of certain energy substrates. To our knowledge,
S. ovata
is unique among cobamide-dependent organisms in its preferential utilization of phenolyl cobamides.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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