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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2000, p. 3680-3685, Vol. 66, No. 9
Institut für Organische Chemie,
Universität Göttingen, 37077 Göttingen,1 and Institut für
Mikrobiologie, Universität Stuttgart, 70550 Stuttgart,2 Germany
Received 22 February 2000/Accepted 21 June 2000
Streptomyces coelicolor 1A and Pseudomonas
citronellolis were able to degrade synthetic
high-molecular-weight poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) and vulcanized
natural rubber. Growth on the polymers was poor but significantly
greater than that of the nondegrading strain Streptomyces
lividans 1326 (control). Measurement of the molecular weight
distribution of the polymer before and after degradation showed a
time-dependent increase in low-molecular-weight polymer molecules for
S. coelicolor 1A and P. citronellolis, whereas
the molecular weight distribution for the control (S. lividans 1326) remained almost constant. Three degradation
products were isolated from the culture fluid of S. coelicolor 1A grown on vulcanized rubber and were identified as
(6Z)-2,6-dimethyl-10-oxo-undec-6-enoic acid,
(5Z)-6-methyl-undec-5-ene-2,9-dione, and
(5Z,9Z)-6,10-dimethyl-pentadec-5,9-diene-2,13-dione. An oxidative pathway from poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) to
methyl-branched diketones is proposed. It includes (i) oxidation of an
aldehyde intermediate to a carboxylic acid, (ii) one cycle of
Poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) is
a natural polymer that is synthesized by many plants and some fungi.
This polymer has been commercially produced at a level of several
million tons per year since the beginning of the last century by
cultivating and tapping the rubber tree (Hevea
brasiliensis). The natural polymer has a high molecular weight, about 106, and, after cross-linking of the linear
polymer chains by sulfur bridges (vulcanization), has superior physical
properties. Despite the development of chemosynthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene), natural rubber is still necessary as
a basic material for several items, such as tires, latex gloves,
condoms, seals and many other things.
As a naturally occurring compound, poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) is
subjected to biological mineralization cycles, and many reports on
biodegradation of rubbers have been published since the study by
Söhngen and Fol in 1914 (9). Even chemically
cross-linked (e.g., vulcanized) rubbers have been shown to be
biodegradable (2, 10). The most extensive investigation of
the molecular basis of biological rubber degradation was done by
Tsuchii and coworkers (for a summary see reference
12). They isolated a Nocardia strain
which is able to degrade natural and vulcanized rubber and identified
low-molecular-weight degradation products (Mw,
103 to 104) as intermediates. Degradation of
vulcanized rubber by this isolate is dependent on colonization of the
polymer surface, and no soluble rubber-degrading enzymes were detected
(10). Previously, a Xanthomonas sp. was the only
known gram-negative bacterium that has the ability to utilize
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) as a sole carbon and energy source
(11). It produces clearing zones on opaque latex-containing agar, which indicates the extracellular nature of the degrading enzyme(s). It is assumed that enzymatic degradation of
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) is initiated by oxidative cleavage of
the isoprene double bond. Low-molecular-weight
oligo(cis-1,4-isoprene) molecules with aldehyde and keto
groups at their ends, such as 12-oxo-4,8-dimethyltrideca-4,8-diene-1-al (compound 1) (acetonyl diprenyl acetoaldehyde), have been identified as
degradation products (12). Recently, another gram-negative bacterium, Pseudomonas aeruginosa AL98, has been isolated.
Strain AL98 is able to produce holes in polymer films if the polymer is
used as the sole source of carbon and energy on a solid mineral salts
medium (4a). Interestingly, this bacterium is not able to
produce clearing zones on latex agar.
In an earlier study we isolated and identified several dozen
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene)-degrading bacteria (3).
All isolates produced clearing zones on opaque rubber-containing solid
media. It turned out that the ability to utilize rubber latex is widely distributed among many genera of the Actinomycetes (e. g.,
Streptomyces, Nocardia,
Micromonospora, and Actinoplanes). In this study,
we used natural rubber latex, vulcanized natural rubber, and
nonvulcanized synthetic rubber as polymers. We were able to show by
high-resolution gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and by weight loss
measurement that the bacteria used in this study are able to cleave the
carbon backbone of synthetic poly(cis,1,4-isoprene) and to
utilize the low-molecular-weight degradation products for growth. These
bacteria include Pseudomonas citronellolis, which was
isolated on the basis of its ability to grow on linear terpenes
(8); however, its ability to degrade
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) has not been described previously. In
addition, we isolated three degradation products from a latex
glove-grown culture of Streptomyces coelicolor 1A and
identified them. A biochemical pathway explaining how the bacteria
could metabolize the methyl-branched carbon backbone of rubber is proposed.
Bacteria, media, and culture conditions.
The bacteria used
in this study are shown in Table 1. The bacteria were
grown in 100-ml Erlenmeyer flasks containing a solution (pentane)-cast
film of synthetic poly(cis-1,4-polyisoprene) (100 mg [dry
weight]) as a carbon source and 20 ml of a mineral salts solution as
described earlier (7), except that the medium contained 0.05% (wt/vol) yeast extract and was diluted twofold with water. The
media were inoculated with washed cells from Luria-Bertani medium seed
culture (gram-negative strains) or directly with material from a stock
spore suspension (in 0.9% [wt/vol] NaCl) and were incubated without
shaking at 30°C. Occasionally (at least three times a week), the
flasks were shaken gently. Evaporated water (
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Physiological and Chemical Investigations into
Microbial Degradation of Synthetic
Poly(cis-1,4-isoprene)
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-oxidation, (iii) oxidation of the conjugated double bond resulting
in a
-keto acid, and (iv) decarboxylation.
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
5 ml) was replaced
after 4 weeks. All experiments were performed in duplicate. For each
experiment two sets of five flasks were inoculated at the same time,
and 2 flasks were harvested at intervals of 2 weeks. The bacteria were
grown on purified latex agar as described recently (3). For
growth on vulcanized rubber, S. coelicolor 1A was incubated
in 1-liter Erlenmeyer flasks by using undiluted mineral salts medium
(200 ml) without yeast extract that contained 2 g of autoclaved
nonpowdered latex gloves as a carbon source with continuous shaking
(100 rpm) at 28°C. The cultures were inoculated with 10 ml of a
3-day-old glucose-grown seed culture.
TABLE 1.
Bacteria used in this study
Polymers. Three poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) polymers were used in this study: (i) purified natural latex of H. brasiliensis, which was a gift from the Rubber Research Institute of Malaysia; (ii) synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) (molecular weight, about 800,000), which was obtained from Aldrich (the polymer did not contain any low-molecular-weight impurities, as confirmed by GPC analysis and weight loss studies); and (iii) unpowdered vulcanized latex gloves (Romed) that were rinsed with water before use. The gloves were cut into pieces of the desired size, transferred to Erlenmeyer flasks, and autoclaved together with the growth medium. Extraction of vulcanized rubber with solvents (water, methanol, ethanol, or acetone) and subsequent weight loss analysis confirmed the absence of significant amounts of soluble low-molecular-weight impurities.
Harvesting of cultures grown on synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene). A complete culture was lyophilized, resuspended in distilled water, transferred to 10-ml vials, and lyophilized again. The dried samples were stored sealed at room temperature in the dark until they were used.
Isolation of metabolites from vulcanized latex gloves.
Fermentation broth was filtered through a Celite pad, and the filtrate
(~6 liters) was lyophilized. The brown residue was dissolved in 100 ml of water and extracted four times with ethyl acetate (200 ml each),
which yielded a yellow organic phase. The combined organic phases were
dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and concentrated in
vacuo, which yielded a brown gum. Column chromatography of the crude
material adsorbed on 2 g of silica gel (ICN SiliTech 32-63 [ICN
Biomedicals GmbH]; 25 by 3 cm; 500 ml of cyclohexane, 500 ml of
CH2Cl2, 500 ml of CH3OH) yielded a
mixture of compounds 3 and 4 (Fig. 1) in the most
lipophilic fraction and compound 2 in a polar fraction visible as
green-colored spots on high-performance thin-layer chromatography
(HPTLC) plates (Silica Gel KG 60 F254 [Merck];
CHCl3-methanol [MeOH], 9:1) after staining with
anisaldehyde-H2SO4. Further repeated
chromatography on silica gel (40 by 1 cm; ethyl acetate-petrol ether,
1:6) yielded 1 mg of compound 4 (90% pure) and 12 mg of pure compound
3. Compound 2 was purified to homogeneity by reversed-phase
medium-pressure liquid chromatography (Kronwald Sepapress HPP-100I 50;
RP-18; acetone-water, 4:1) and gel permeation chromatography on
Sephadex LH-20 (acetone), which yielded 10 mg of compound 2.
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Analysis and identification of the metabolites isolated.
Physical data for the compounds described here were recorded by using
the following equipment: an electron ionization (EI) mass spectrometer
(Varian 311 A, 70 eV, direct insert, high resolution with
fluorokerosine as the standard). 13C and 1H
nuclear magnetic resonance spectra were recorded at 295 K with a Bruker
AMX 300 (1H, 300 MHz; 13C, 75.5 MHz) and a
Varian Inova 500 (1H, 500 MHz; 13C, 125.7 MHz);
chemical shifts were expressed as
values (parts per million) by
using the solvent as an internal reference (CDCl3:
H = 7.24,
C = 77.0).
(i) (6Z)-2,6-Dimethyl-10-oxo-undec-6-enoic acid.
The data for (6Z)-2,6-dimethyl-10-oxo-undec-6-enoic acid
(C13H22O3; compound 2; molecular
weight, 226.32) are as follows: (CHCl3-MeOH, 9:1);
colorless oil; m/z (EI) 226 (M+, 1%), 208 ([M-H2O]+, 45), 95 (80), 43 (100);
m/z (HREI) found, M+ 226.1568. C13H22O3 requires M
226.1568;
H (300 MHz, CDCl3) 11.10 (br s,
-COOH), 5.02 (t, J = 7.0 Hz,
7-H), 2.40 (m, 2-H, 9-H2), 2.20 (m, 8-H2), 2.08 (s,
11-H3), 1.97 (m, 5-H2),
1.61 (m, 3-H2), 1.60 (s,
6-CH3), 1.35 (m, 4-H2),
1.13 (t, J = 6.5 Hz, 2-CH3);
C (75.5 MHz, CDCl3) 209.0 (C-10), 182.9 (C-1), 136.1 (C-6), 123.4 (C-7), 43.8 (C-9), 33.2 (C-3), 31.3 (C-5),
29.8 (C-11), 29.4 (C-2), 25.3 (C-4), 23.2 (6-CH3), 22.1 (C-8), 16.8 (2-CH3).
(ii) (5Z)-6-Methyl-undec-5-ene-2,9-dione.
The
data for (5Z)-6-methyl-undec-5-ene-2,9-dione
(C12H20O2; compound 3; molecular
weight, 196.29) are as follows: Rf 0.65 (CHCl3-MeOH, 9:1); colorless oil; m/z (EI) 196 (M+, 2%), 178 ([M-H2O]+, 10), 57 (60), 43 (100); m/z (high-resolution EI-mass spectroscopy [HREI-MS]) found, M+ 196.1463. C12H20O2 requires M
196.1463;
H (300 MHz, CDCl3) 5.07 (m,
5-H), 2.42 (m, 3-H2,
7-H2, 10-H2), 2.25 (m,
8-H2), 2.20 (m, 4-H2),
2.10 (s, 1-H3), 1.63 (m,
6-CH3), 1.04 (t, J = 7.0 Hz,
11-H3);
C (75.5 MHz,
CDCl3) 211.2 (C-8), 208.6 (C-2), 135.0 (C-6), 124.3 (C-5),
43.7 (C-3), 40.5 (C-7), 36.0 (C-10), 29.9 (C-1), 26.0 (C-8), 23.1 (6-CH3), 22.1 (C-4), 7.8 (C-11).
(iii)
(5Z,9Z)-6,10-Dimethyl-pentadec-5,9-diene-2,13-dione.
The data for
(5Z,9Z)-6,10-dimethyl-pentadec-5,9-diene-2,13-dione
(C17H28O2; compound 4; molecular
weight, 264.41) are as follows: Rf 0.87 (CHCl3-MeOH, 9:1); colorless oil; m/z (EI) 264 (M+, 6%), 246 ([M-H2O]+, 10), 57 (100); m/z (HREI) found, M+ 264.2089. C17H28O2 requires M
264.2089;
H (500 MHz, CDCl3) 5.16 (m,
9-H), 5.10 (m, 5-H), 2.48 (m,
3-H2, 14-H2), 2.45 (m,
12-H2), 2.30 (m, 11-H2),
2.27 (m, 4-H2), 2.16 (s,
1-H3), 2.07 (m, 7-H2, 8-H2), 1.69 (m, 6-CH3,
10-CH3), 1.08 (t, J = 7.0 Hz,
15-H3);
C (125.7 MHz,
CDCl3) 211.3 (C-13), 208.8 (C-2), 136.2 (C-10), 134.0 (C-6), 125.8 (C-9), 123.5 (C-5), 43.9 (C-3), 40.8 (C-12), 36.0 (C-14),
32.0 (C-8), 29.9 (C-1), 26.2 (C-7), 26.1 (C-11), 23.4 (10-CH3), 23.2 (6-CH3),
22.3 (C-4), 7.8 (C-15).
Molecular weight measurements. The polymers were dissolved in toluene at a concentration of 2 g/liter overnight and passed through a 0.45-µm-pore-size filter (Pall Gelman Laboratories, Dreieich, Germany). One hundred microliters of the solution was separated with a GPC system consisting of a PSS SDV 8- by 50-mm precolumn (5 µm; PSS, Mainz, Germany), three 8- by 300-mm PSS SDV columns (column 1, linear XL, 10 µm; column 2, 5 µm, 1,000 Å; column 3, 5 µm, 105 Å), and a refractive index detector (Shodex RI-71) at a flow rate of 1 ml/min. Calibration of the column was performed by using synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) standard mixtures with narrow molecular weight distributions (PSS). Molecular weight calculations were done with winGPC software obtained from PSS.
Protein determination. The lyophilized samples or bovine serum albumin standard protein was resuspended in vials in 5 ml of distilled water. After addition of 2 ml of 2 M NaOH, the vials were sealed, incubated in a boiling water bath for 30 min, and allowed to cool to room temperature. A 0.5-ml portion of each solution was used for protein determination by the Lowry procedure (6). If necessary, the solution was diluted with water. The residual polymer was washed extensively with warm water and subsequently dried at 80°C until the weight was constant. The dried polymer was used for GPC measurements after it was dissolved in toluene at a concentration of 2 g/liter.
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RESULTS |
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Growth on natural rubber latex. Streptomyces lividans 1326, S. coelicolor 1A, and P. citronellolis were grown on opaque latex agar at 30°C for 1 week. Only S. coelicolor 1A showed clearing zone formation which indicated utilization of the polymer. Growth of S. lividans 1326 and growth of P. citronellolis were poor, and the formation of clearing zones could not be observed even after prolonged incubation. Apparently, S. lividans 1326 and P. citronellolis are unable to utilize natural rubber latex as a carbon source.
Growth on synthetic rubber.
S. lividans 1326, S. coelicolor 1A, and P. citronellolis were grown in 20 ml
of growth medium supplemented with 100 mg of a solution-cast film of
synthetic rubber as described above. Flasks with polymer that were not
inoculated were used as controls. Two cultures of each strain were
harvested at 2-week intervals, and the total protein content was
determined. A constant low level, 200 to 250 µg of protein/ml, was
observed for the noninoculated sterile control throughout the
incubation. The protein contents of the S. lividans cultures
decreased from 250 µg/ml to less than 100 µg/ml within 4 weeks and
remained at constant low values,
80 µg/ml, until the end of the
experiment (Fig. 2) regardless of whether rubber was
present or absent in the culture fluid. The color of the culture did
not change significantly. Germination of the S. lividans
1326 spores was visible by microscopical examination. We assume that
the traces of yeast extract present induced germination of the spores
and were enough to support initiation of cell division, but did not
allow significant growth of the bacteria. The residual polymer after
cell harvest had the same optical appearance and mechanical properties
as the noninoculated control polymer. S. lividans 1326 apparently is not able to utilize synthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) or any soluble or volatile carbon
sources that might be present at low concentrations in the air of a
microbiology lab within 10 weeks.
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Separation efficiency of the GPC system.
Commercially
available GPC columns have a separation range for polymers that differ
in molecular weight of about 2 orders of magnitude. However, for
analysis of the molecular weight distribution of partially degraded
synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) it was necessary to
efficiently separate low-molecular-weight oligomers of isoprene
(Mw, <1,000) from high-molecular-weight
polymers (Mw, >500,000). Therefore, three GPC
columns with different separation ranges were combined. Figure
3 shows separation of poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) standard mixtures by the three columns. Efficient separation occurred in the molecular weight range from
500 to about 106.
Since poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) standard mixtures with narrow
molecular weight ranges were used instead of polystyrol standards, the
calibration curve could be used directly for determination of absolute
values.
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Molecular weight distribution of partially degraded synthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene).
In order to determine the
molecular weight distribution of synthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) before and after degradation, GPC
analysis of the residual polymer samples at zero time and after 2 and 6 weeks of incubation was performed (Fig. 4). The polymer
in the control (zero time) showed an almost Gauss-like distribution of
molecular weights between 104 and 107
(Mw, 8 × 105). No signal was
obtained for molecular weights below 10,000, confirming the absence of
significant amounts of low-molecular-weight impurities in synthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene). No significant differences in the
molecular weight distributions compared to the zero-time control were
found for the sterile control even after several weeks of incubation in
the culture fluid. We concluded that the polymer backbone of synthetic
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) is stable and is not cleaved by
sterile culture fluid. Similar results were obtained in the analysis of
the polymer remaining in the culture inoculated with S. lividans 1326. The polymer recovered had the same optical
appearance and indistinguishable mechanical properties. GPC analysis
confirmed that no or only very little degradation had taken place
(Mw, 5 × 105 to 9 × 105). None of the samples contained material with a
molecular weight below
10,000. In contrast, the color of the
residual polymers in the S. coelicolor 1A and P. citronellolis cultures was brown, and GPC analyses of the
recovered polymer revealed a significant shift in the molecular weight
distribution to lower values. This shift was moderate after 2 weeks
(Mw, 4 × 105 to 5 × 105) and was more evident after 6 weeks
(Mw, 1 × 105 to 2 × 105) (Fig. 4). The percentages of residual polymer with
Mw less than 10,000 were 0, 0.4, and 7.7% (2 weeks) and 0, 9, and 32% (6 weeks) for S. lividans 1326, S. coelicolor 1A, and P. citronellolis, respectively. Analysis of the relative frequencies of the molecular weight distribution (relative Mw/M) indicated
that there was a sharp cutoff in the number of molecules with molecular
weights less than
5,000 in the polymer recovered (data not shown).
These results clearly show that S. coelicolor 1A and
P. citronellolis are able to cleave the carbon backbone of
synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene).
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Isolation and identification of metabolites from vulcanized rubber degraded by S. coelicolor 1A. In order to test whether rubber-degrading bacteria might also be able to degrade vulcanized rubber, in which the polymer chains have been cross-linked by sulfur bridges, we performed weight loss experiments with 100-mg pieces of vulcanized latex gloves. In contrast to a noninoculated control culture or a culture containing S. lividans 1326 (weight losses, <3%), weight losses of 10 to 18% were obtained in the presence of degrading bacteria within 6 weeks of inoculation. We were particularly interested in the isolation and identification of degradation products: 34 1-liter Erlenmeyer flasks, each containing 200 ml of mineral salts medium and a 2-g piece of autoclaved powder-free latex glove, were inoculated with a glucose-grown seed culture and were incubated with shaking at 28°C for 10 weeks. The original colorless culture turned yellow-brown, and the rubber pieces visibly disintegrated. S. coelicolor 1A cell growth was observed on the surface of the polymer and in the liquid. A noninoculated control culture showed no growth, and the glove piece remained intact. The S. coelicolor culture was harvested on day 70, and metabolites were extracted as described above. Using the chemical screening approach (1), several metabolites were detected in the crude extract by their intense green colorization reactions with anisaldehyde-H2SO4 on HPTLC plates. Green spots with the same relative mobility on HPTLC plates also occurred after growth of S. coelicolor 1A in liquid culture with films of natural (nonvulcanized) rubber but not when the strain was grown with glucose as the carbon source. Three of the green spots were isolated from the plates (Fig. 1, compounds 2 to 4). Subsequent column chromatography and GPC yielded 10 mg of pure compound 2, 12 mg of compound 3 and 1 mg of compound 4 (90% pure).
The structures of compounds 2 to 4 were elucidated unambiguously by using one-dimensional and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-1H-correlation spectroscopy [COSY], heteronuclear multiple quantum coherence [HMQC], heteronuclear multiple bond correlation [HMBC]) and HREI-MS. The double bonds revealed the same configuration as poly(cis-1,4-isoprene).| |
DISCUSSION |
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In this study degradation of synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) was unambiguously shown for a gram-positive bacterium (S. coelicolor 1A) and a gram-negative bacterium (P. citronellolis) by increases in the protein concentration and decreases in the molecular weight of the residual polymer. The ability of P. citronellolis to degrade synthetic rubber was astonishing because this bacterium, in contrast to S. coelicolor 1A, did not produce clearing zones on opaque latex agar. Apparently, bacteria differ in the mechanisms by which the non-water-soluble polymer is degraded. This is in agreement with observations of Tsuchii and coworkers (10-12), who found that degradation of vulcanized rubber by a Nocardia isolate required colonization of the polymer, while a Xanthomonas sp. was able to degrade rubber without significant surface colonization by secreting water-soluble factors into the culture medium. One additional observation concerning the primary attack of rubber has been described for a Gordonia isolate recently (4). This strain is able to solubilize rubber to water-soluble products in a mineral salts solution with solid poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) as the sole carbon source.
On the molecular level, two basic mechanisms can be involved in polymer degradation. The exo type of degradation requires that each polymer chain is degraded from one end to the other before the next molecule is attacked. In this case the molecular weight of the residual polymer remains very high until all polymer molecules are degraded. This has not been observed for any of the rubber-degrading bacteria. In contrast, the polymer chains can be cleaved somewhere within the chain (endo type of degradation), yielding products with significantly lower molecular weights. Analysis of rubber partially degraded by S. coelicolor 1A and P. citronellolis clearly revealed a time-dependent decrease in the molecular weight to low-molecular-weight products for both strains (Fig. 4). Similar results have been found for rubbers partially degraded by all other bacteria that have been analyzed so far (data not shown). Therefore, we conclude that an endo type of mechanism is mainly involved in the primary attack of poly(cis-1,4-isoprene); however, we cannot exclude additional exo-type degradation. Analysis of the relative frequencies of the partially degraded polymer molecules showed that there was a sharp cutoff for compounds with molecular weights less than 5,000. The small degradation products might have been preferentially used by the bacteria and therefore could not be recovered from the remaining polymer.
The biochemical reactions which cleave the polymer and the subsequent reactions leading to central metabolism are unknown. Dioxygenase-mediated cleavage of the polymer has been suggested by Tsuchii and Takeda (11) for rubber degradation by a Xanthomonas sp. This suggestion was based on identification of acetonyl diprenyl acetoaldehyde (compound 1) in the culture fluid of a rubber-grown Xanthomonas sp. culture. Spectroscopical analysis of the remaining synthetic poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) clearly confirmed the presence of carbonyl groups in the surface of the partially degraded material in this and other studies (10; A. Linos, personal communication). Therefore, we assume that oxidative cleavage of the double bond of poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) is a general feature of rubber-degrading microorganisms.
In this study we isolated three intermediates, compounds 2 to 4 (Fig.
1), from a 70-day-old culture of S. coelicolor 1A grown on
vulcanized latex gloves. At the time of harvest the polymer had
significantly disintegrated, and the surface was colonized with the
bacteria. The long incubation time, 70 days, was chosen in order to
promote the formation of stable intermediates of rubber degradation
rather than accumulation of the primary degradation products. Figure
5 shows a potential biochemical route leading from
intact polymer to the metabolites identified. The first step is
oxidative cleavage of the double bonds of the polymer, resulting in the
formation of cis-1,4-isoprene oligomers such as compound 1 (Fig. 5) with terminal keto and aldehyde groups, as has been proposed
for a Nocardia sp. and a Xanthomonas sp.
(10, 11). Oligomers with sufficiently low molecular weights
are taken up by the bacteria, and the aldehyde group is oxidized to the
corresponding carboxylic acid. The acid is activated as a coenzyme A
(CoA) ester, followed by one cycle of
-oxidation. An additional
complete cycle of
-oxidation might be difficult due to the presence
of the
-methyl group, resulting in accumulation of this
intermediate. After ester hydrolysis, the unstable
-keto acid
spontaneously decarboxylates to compound 3 or 4; compounds 3 and 4 have
been isolated from culture broth (Fig. 5). Alternatively, the
intermediate after the first cycle of
-oxidation can be reduced to
the saturated CoA ester, resulting in the free acid compound 2 after
hydrolysis.
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It should be mentioned that compounds 2 to 4 are stable products which
accumulated in the culture broth during incubation for 10 weeks but
which do not necessarily represent intermediates of
poly(cis-1,4-isoprene) utilization. For example, if we
assume that
-oxidation can proceed slowly in S. coelicolor 1A despite the presence of
-methyl groups,
propionyl-CoA would be generated. S. coelicolor 1A and
P. citronellolis grew well on propionate as the sole source
of carbon. Analysis of the role of the enzymatic reactions involving
the primary degradation products of rubber in the central metabolism is needed.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (to K.P. and D.J.) and by a grant from the Graduiertenkolleg (GRK 227, "Chemische Aktivitäten von Mikroorganismen") (to H.B.B. and A.Z.).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut für Mikrobiologie, Universität Stuttgart, Allmandring 31, 70550 Stuttgart, Germany. Phone: 49-711-685-5483. Fax: 49-711-685-5725. E-mail: dieter.jendrossek{at}po.uni-stuttgart.de.
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