Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microbiology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH-Zentrum, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Cysteine and methionine biosynthesis was studied in
Pseudomonas putida
S-313 and
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
PAO1. Both these organisms used direct sulfhydrylation of
O
-succinylhomoserine for the synthesis of methionine but also contained substantial levels of
O
-acetylserine sulfhydrylase (cysteine synthase) activity. The enzymes of the transsulfuration pathway (cystathionine γ-synthase and cystathionine β-lyase) were expressed at low levels in both pseudomonads but were strongly upregulated during growth with cysteine as the sole sulfur source. In
P. aeruginosa
, the reverse transsulfuration pathway between homocysteine and cysteine, with cystathionine as the intermediate, allows
P. aeruginosa
to grow rapidly with methionine as the sole sulfur source.
P. putida
S-313 also grew well with methionine as the sulfur source, but no cystathionine γ-lyase, the key enzyme of the reverse transsulfuration pathway, was found in this species. In the absence of the reverse transsulfuration pathway,
P. putida
desulfurized methionine by the conversion of methionine to methanethiol, catalyzed by methionine γ-lyase, which was upregulated under these conditions. A transposon mutant of
P. putida
that was defective in the alkanesulfonatase locus (
ssuD
) was unable to grow with either methanesulfonate or methionine as the sulfur source. We therefore propose that in
P. putida
methionine is converted to methanethiol and then oxidized to methanesulfonate. The sulfonate is then desulfonated by alkanesulfonatase to release sulfite for reassimilation into cysteine.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
82 articles.
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