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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2002, p. 6237-6245, Vol. 68, No. 12
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0     DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.12.6237-6245.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Gene Cloning and Molecular Characterization of a Two-Enzyme System Catalyzing the Oxidative Detoxification of ß-Endosulfan

Tara D. Sutherland,* Irene Horne, Robyn J. Russell, and John G. Oakeshott

CSIRO Entomology, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia

Received 16 May 2002/ Accepted 29 August 2002

The gram-positive bacterium Mycobacterium sp. strain ESD is able to use the cyclodiene insecticide endosulfan as a source of sulfur for growth. This activity is dependent on the absence of sulfite or sulfate in the growth medium. A cosmid library of strain ESD DNA was constructed in a Mycobacterium-Escherichia coli shuttle vector and screened for endosulfan-degrading activity in Mycobacterium smegmatis, a species that does not degrade endosulfan. Using this method, we identified a single cosmid that conferred sulfur-dependent endosulfan-degrading activity on the host strain. An open reading frame (esd) was identified within this cosmid that, when expressed behind a constitutive promoter in a mycobacterial expression vector, conferred sulfite- and sulfate-independent ß-endosulfan degradation activity on the recombinant strain. The translation product of this gene (Esd) had up to 50% sequence identity with an unusual family of monooxygenase enzymes that use reduced flavins, provided by a separate flavin reductase enzyme, as cosubstrates. An additional partial open reading frame was located upstream of the Esd gene that had sequence homology to the same monooxygenase family. A flavin reductase gene, identified in the M. smegmatis genome, was cloned, expressed, and used to provide reduced flavin mononucleotide for Esd in enzyme assays. Thin-layer chromatography and gas chromatography analyses of the enzyme assay mixtures revealed the disappearance of ß-endosulfan and the appearance of the endosulfan metabolites, endosulfan monoaldehyde and endosulfan hydroxyether. This suggests that Esd catalyzes the oxygenation of ß-endosulfan to endosulfan monoaldehyde and endosulfan hydroxyether. Esd did not degrade either {alpha}-endosulfan or the metabolite of endosulfan, endosulfan sulfate.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: CSIRO Entomology, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia. Phone: 61 2 6246 4157. Fax: 61 2 6246 4173. E-mail: Tara.Sutherland{at}csiro.au.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2002, p. 6237-6245, Vol. 68, No. 12
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0     DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.12.6237-6245.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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