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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1984 August; 48(2): 260-264
Copyright © 1984, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

New Type of Oxygenase Involved in the Metabolism of Propane and Isobutane

Jegdish P. Babu{dagger} and Lewis R. Brown*

Department of Biological Sciences, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762

ABSTRACT

Nocardia paraffinicum (Rhodococcus rhodochrous), a hydrocarbon-degrading microorganism, was used in a study of propane and isobutane metabolism. The bacterium was able to utilize propane or isobutane as a sole source of carbon, and oxygen was found to be essential for its metabolism. Gas chromatographic analysis showed that n-propanol was the major compound recovered from the metabolism of propane by resting cells, although trace amounts of isopropanol and acetone were detected. When a mixture of propane and isobutane was used, drastic inhibition (72 to 88%) of hydrocarbon utilization by resting cells occurred. The ratio of hydrocarbon to oxygen consumed was found to be approximately 2:1 during the metabolism of propane or isobutane by resting cells when these substrates were provided individually to the organism. Gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric analysis of products formed from 18O2 confirmed that the initial oxidative step in the metabolism of these substrates involved molecular oxygen. The proportion of the alcohol containing 18O was the same as that of 18O2 in the gas mixture. Only a negligible amount of 18O was detected in the alcohol when H218O was incorporated into the system. The observed 2:1 ratio of hydrocarbon to oxygen consumption suggests that the oxygenase in N. paraffinicum, unlike the conventional mono- or dioxygenases, requires two hydrocarbon-binding sites for each of the oxygen-binding sites and is therefore an intermolecular dioxygenase. The newly described oxygenase, which catalyzes the reaction of two molecules of propane with one molecule of oxygen to yield two molecules of a C3 alcohol, is proposed as the initial oxidation step of the hydrocarbon substrate.


FOOTNOTES

* Corresponding author.

{dagger} Present address: Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN 38104.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1984 August; 48(2): 260-264
Copyright © 1984, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.