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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2001, p. 4805-4816, Vol. 67, No. 10
Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and the
Environment1 and Department of
Environmental Sciences,2 Rutgers University,
New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-8520
Received 7 August 2000/Accepted 1 July 2001
Burkholderia sp. strain JS150 is able to metabolize a
wide range of alkyl-and chloroaromatic hydrocarbons through multiple, apparently redundant catabolic pathways. Previous research has shown
that strain JS150 is able to synthesize enzymes for multiple upper
pathways as well as multiple lower pathways to accommodate variously
substituted catechols that result from degradation of complex mixtures
of monoaromatic compounds. We report here the genetic organization and
functional characterization of a gene cluster, designated
tbc (for toluene, benzene, and chlorobenzene utilization),
which has been cloned as a 14.3-kb DNA fragment from strain JS150 into
vector pRO1727. The cloned DNA fragment expressed in Pseudomonas
aeruginosa PAO1c allowed the recombinant to grow on toluene or
benzene and to transform chlorobenzene, trichloroethylene, phenol, and
cresols. The tbc genes are organized into two divergently
transcribed operons, tbc1 and tbc2, each comprised of six open reading frames. Similarity searches of databases revealed that the tbc1 and tbc2 genes showed
significant homology to multicomponent cresol and phenol
hydroxylases and to toluene and benzene monooxygenases, respectively.
Deletion mutagenesis and product analysis were used to demonstrate that
tbc2 plays a role in the initial catabolism of the
unactivated alkyl- or chloroaromatic substrate and that the
tbc1 gene products play a role in the catabolism of the
first metabolite that results from transformation of the initial
substrate. Phylogenetic analysis was used to compare individual
components of these tbc monooxygenases with similar
sequences in the databases. These results provide further evidence for
the existence of multiple, functionally redundant alkyl- and
chloroaromatic monooxygenases in strain JS150.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.10.4805-4816.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Genetic and Functional Analysis of the tbc Operons for
Catabolism of Alkyl- and Chloroaromatic Compounds in
Burkholderia sp. Strain JS150

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Biotechnology
Center for Agriculture and the Environment, Foran Hall, Cook College Campus, Rutgers University, 59 Dudley Rd., New Brunswick, NJ
08901-8520. Phone: (732) 932-8165, ext. 318. Fax: (732) 932-0312. E-mail: kukor{at}aesop.rutgers.edu.
Present address: Department of Biology and Research Institute for
Basic Sciences, Cheju National University, Jeju-do 690-756, Republic of Korea.
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