Affiliation:
1. Molecular Microbiology & Bioenergetics, Institute of Molecular Biosciences, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Max-von-Laue-Str. 9, 60438 Frankfurt, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The anaerobic acetogenic bacterium
Acetobacterium woodii
couples the reduction of caffeate with electrons derived from hydrogen to the synthesis of ATP by a chemiosmotic mechanism using sodium ions as coupling ions, but the enzymes involved remain to be established. Previously, the electron transfer flavoproteins EtfA and EtfB were found to be involved in caffeate respiration. By inverse PCR, we identified three genes upstream of
etfA
and
etfB
:
carA
,
carB
, and
carC. carA
encodes a potential coenzyme A (CoA) transferase,
carB
an acyl-CoA synthetase, and
carC
an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase.
carA
, -
B
, and -
C
are located together with
etfA/carE
and
etfB/carD
on one polycistronic message, indicating that CarA, CarB, and CarC are also part of the caffeate respiration pathway. The genetic data suggest an initial ATP-dependent activation of caffeate by CarB. To prove the proposed function of CarB, the protein was overproduced in
Escherichia coli
, and the recombinant protein was purified. Purified CarB activates caffeate to caffeyl-CoA in an ATP- and CoA-dependent reaction. The enzyme has broad pH and temperature optima and requires K
+
for activity. In addition to caffeate, it can use ρ-coumarate, ferulate, and cinnamate as substrates, with 50, 15, and 9%, respectively, of the activity obtained with caffeate. Expression of the
car
operon is induced not only by caffeate, ρ-coumarate, ferulate, and cinnamate but also by sinapate. There is no induction by ρ-hydroxybenzoate or syringate.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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