Affiliation:
1. Departments of Marine Sciences1 and
2. Microbiology,2 University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Degradation of lignin-related aromatic compounds is an important ecological process in the highly productive salt marshes of the southeastern United States, yet little is known about the mediating organisms or their catabolic pathways. Here we report the diversity of a gene encoding a key ring-cleaving enzyme of the β-ketoadipate pathway,
pcaH
, amplified from bacterial communities associated with decaying
Spartina alterniflora
, the salt marsh grass that dominates these coastal systems, as well as from enrichment cultures with aromatic substrates (
p
-hydroxybenzoate, anthranilate, vanillate, and dehydroabietate). Sequence analysis of 149
pcaH
clones revealed 85 unique sequences. Thirteen of the 53 amino acid residues compared were invariant in the PcaH proteins, suggesting that these residues have a required catalytic or structural function. Fifty-eight percent of the clones matched sequences amplified from a collection of 36 bacterial isolates obtained from seawater, marine sediments, or senescent
Spartina
. Fifty-two percent of the
pcaH
clones could be assigned to the roseobacter group, a marine lineage of the class α-
Proteobacteria
abundant in coastal ecosystems. Another 6% of the clones matched genes retrieved from isolates belonging to the genera
Acinetobacter, Bacillus
, and
Stappia
, and 42% of the clones could not be assigned to a cultured bacterium based on sequence identity. These results suggest that the diversity of the genes encoding a single step in aromatic compound degradation in the coastal marsh examined is high.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
54 articles.
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