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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Mar 1996, 1004-1007, Vol 62, No. 3
K Yagi, I Miyawaki, A Kayashita, M Kondo, Y Kitano, Y Murakami, I Maeda, F Umeda, Y Miura, M Kawase and T Mizoguchi
Pseudomonas acidophila is a bacterial strain producing a
poly(3-hydroxyalkanoic acid) (PHA) copolymer from low-molecular-weight
organic compounds such as formate and acetate. The genes responsible for
PHA production were cloned in cosmid pIK7 containing a 14.8-kb HindIII
fragment of P. acidophila DNA. With the aim of developing a means of
producing a PHA copolymer from CO(inf2), cosmid pIK7 was introduced into a
polymer-negative mutant of the chemolithoautotrophic bacterium Alcaligenes
eutrophus PHB(sup-)4. However, the recombinant strain produced a
homopolymer of 3-hydroxybutyric acid (polyhydroxybutyric acid) from
CO(inf2). Since it was thought that the composition of the accumulated
polymer might depend not on the PHA biosynthetic genes but on the
metabolism of the host strain, a recombinant plasmid, pFUS, containing the
genes for chemolithoautotrophic growth of the hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium
A. hydrogenophilus was introduced into P. acidophila by conjugation. The
recombinant plasmid pFUS was stably maintained in P. acidophila in the
absence of chemolithoautotrophic or antibiotic selection. This
pFUS-harboring strain possessed the ability to grow under a gas mixture of
H(inf2), O(inf2), and CO(inf2) in a mineral salts medium, and PHA copolymer
accumulation was confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectral analysis.
A gas chromatogram obtained by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry showed
the composition of the polymer to be 52.8% 3-hydroxybutyrate, 41.1%
3-hydroxyoctanoate, and 6.1% 3-hydroxydecanoate. This is the first report
of the production of a PHA copolymer from CO(inf2) as sole carbon source.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Biosynthesis of Poly(3-Hydroxyalkanoic Acid) Copolymer from CO(inf2) in Pseudomonas acidophila through Introduction of the DNA Fragment Responsible for Chemolithoautotrophic Growth of Alcaligenes hydrogenophilus
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Osaka University, 1-6 Yamada-oka, Suita, Osaka 565, and Faculty of Education, Kagawa University, 1-1 Saiwai-cho, Takamatsu, Kagawa 760, Japan
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