Affiliation:
1. Bioprocess Engineering Division, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology (KRIBB), Yusong, Taejon 305-600, Korea
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The identification of a gene (
yiaE
) encoding 2-ketoaldonate reductase (2KR) in our previous work led to the hypothesis that
Escherichia coli
has other ketogluconate reductases including 2,5-diketo-
d
-gluconate reductase (25DKGR) and to study of the related ketogluconate metabolism. By using the deduced amino acid sequences of 5-diketo-
d
-gluconate reductase (5KDGR) of
Gluconobacter oxydans
and 25DKGR of
Corynebacterium
sp., protein databases were screened to detect homologous proteins. Among the proteins of
E. coli
, an oxidoreductase encoded by
yjgU
and having 56% similarity to 5KDGR of
G. oxydans
and two hypothetical oxidoreductases encoded by
yqhE
and
yafB
and having 49.8 and 42% similarity, respectively, to 25DKGR of
Corynebacterium
sp. were detected. Recently, the
yjgU
gene was identified as encoding 5KDGR and renamed
idnO
(C. Bausch, N. Peekhaus, C. Utz, T. Blais, E. Murray, T. Lowary, and T. Conway, J. Bacteriol. 180:3704–3710, 1998). The pathways involved in the metabolism of ketogluconate by
E. coli
have been predicted by biochemical analysis of purified enzymes and chemical analysis of the pathway intermediates. The gene products of
yqhE
and
yafB
were identified as 25DKGR-A, and 25DKGR-B, respectively, catalyzing the reduction of 25KDG to 2-keto-
l
-gulonate (2KLG). The native 25DKGR-A, 25DKGR-B, and 5KDGR had apparent molecular weights of about 30,000, 30,000, and 54,000, respectively. In sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gels, all three enzymes showed protein bands with a molecular weight of about 29,000, which indicated that 25DKGR-A, 25DKGR-B, and 5KDGR may exist as monomeric, monomeric, and dimeric proteins, respectively. The optimum pHs for reduction were 7.5, 7.0, and 8.0, respectively. The 5KDGR was active with NADH, whereas 25DKGR-A and 25DKGR-B were active with NADPH as a preferred electron donor. 25DKG can be converted to 5KDG by 2KR, which is then reduced to
d
-gluconate by 5KDGR. The pathways were compared with those of
Erwinia
sp. and
Corynebacterium
sp. A BLAST search of published and incomplete microbial genome sequences revealed that the ketogluconate reductases and their related metabolism may be widespread in many species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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