Affiliation:
1. Center for Metalloenzyme Studies,1
2. Department of Chemistry,2 University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
3. Department of Microbiology,3 and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mutants of the bacterium
Acinetobacter
sp. strain ADP1 were selected to grow on benzoate without the BenM transcriptional activator. In the wild type, BenM responds to benzoate and
cis
,
cis
-muconate to activate expression of the
benABCDE
operon, which is involved in benzoate catabolism. This operon encodes enzymes that convert benzoate to catechol, a compound subsequently degraded by
cat
gene-encoded enzymes. In this report, four spontaneous mutants were found to carry
catB
mutations that enabled BenM-independent growth on benzoate.
catB
encodes muconate cycloisomerase, an enzyme required for benzoate catabolism. Its substrate,
cis
,
cis
-muconate, is enzymatically produced from catechol by the
catA
-encoded catechol 1,2-dioxygenase. Muconate cycloisomerase was purified to homogeneity from the wild type and the
catB
mutants. Each purified enzyme was active, although there were differences in the catalytic properties of the wild type and variant muconate cycloisomerases. Strains with a chromosomal
benA
::
lacZ
transcriptional fusion were constructed and used to investigate how
catB
mutations affect growth on benzoate. All of the
catB
mutations increased
cis
,
cis
-muconate-activated
ben
gene expression in strains lacking BenM. A model is presented in which the
catB
mutations reduce muconate cycloisomerase activity during growth on benzoate, thereby increasing intracellular
cis
,
cis
-muconate concentrations. This, in turn, may allow CatM, an activator similar to BenM in sequence and function, to activate
ben
gene transcription. CatM normally responds to
cis
,
cis
-muconate to activate
cat
gene expression. Consistent with this model, muconate cylcoisomerase specific activities in cell extracts of benzoate-grown
catB
mutants were low relative to that of the wild type. Moreover, the catechol 1,2-dioxygenase activities of the mutants were elevated, which may result from CatM responding to the altered intracellular levels of
cis
,
cis
-muconate and increasing
catA
expression. Collectively, these results support the important role of metabolite concentrations in controlling benzoate degradation via a complex transcriptional regulatory circuit.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology