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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2004, p. 3253-3262, Vol. 70, No. 6
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.6.3253-3262.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departments of Chemical Engineering and Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-3222
Received 30 December 2003/ Accepted 24 February 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Some of these compounds cannot be easily synthesized chemically, and the traditional chemical processes are often lengthy and require expensive starting materials (26). Direct microbial synthesis of such compounds from inexpensive substrates might provide a more cost-effective and more environmentally benign approach, and biocatalysis is likely to account for 30% of the chemical business by 2050 (37). In this paper, we report the formation of valuable hydroxylated benzenes from benzene, toluene, phenol, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, catechol, hydroquinone, and resorcinol with toluene-o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO) from Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1.
ToMO hydroxylates toluene in the ortho, meta, and para positions, as well as o-xylene in both the 3 and 4 positions, and it oxidizes many substrates, including o-xylene, m-xylene, p-xylene, toluene, benzene, ethyl benzene, styrene, naphthalene (2), and trichloroethylene (TCE) (6). It is the only known oxygenase which attacks tetrachloroethylene (30). The six genes coding for ToMO are touABE (three-component hydroxylase with two catalytic oxygen-bridged dinuclear centers, A2B2E2), touC (ferredoxin), touD (mediating protein), and touF (NADH-ferredoxin oxidoreductase) (2, 4). ToMO TouA (499 amino acids) has the highest levels of amino acid identity to the hydroxylase (TbuA1) of toluene 3-monooxygenase (T3MO) of Pseudomonas pickettii PKO1 (68%) and the hydroxylase (TmoA) of toluene 4-monooxygenase (T4MO) of Pseudomonas mendocina KR1 (66.8%) (3), but these molecules are distinct enzymes based on differences in the regiospecific oxidation of toluene.
The importance of residue V106 as an active residue in toluene monooxygenases resulting from directed evolution of toluene ortho-monooxygenase (TOM) of Burkholderia cepacia G4 has been reported previously (5). This beneficial mutation resulted in a twofold increase in the initial TCE degradation rate and a sixfold increase in naphthalene oxidation. This residue corresponds to I100 of the alpha-subunit TouA of the hydroxylase in ToMO.
The methane monooxygenase (MMO) active site residues have been identified by X-ray crystallography (9, 27, 28), and by comparison to MMO, the active site residues for T4MO, T3MO, and toluene 2-monooxygenase from Pseudomonas sp. strain JS150 have been predicted by Pikus et al. (25). The T201 residue encoded by tmoA in T4MO has been studied by saturation mutagenesis, and T4MO Q141C, Q141V, I180F, and F205I mutants with mutations in tmoA have been studied previously by using site-directed mutagenesis (24, 25). For oxidation of m-xylene by the Q141C T4MO mutant, 3-methylbenzyl alcohol formation increased sixfold from 2.2% to 11.7%, and for p-xylene oxidation the product distribution completely switched to 2,5-dimethylphenol (78%) from 4-methylbenzyl alcohol (22%). For hydroxylation of toluene by the F205I T4MO mutant, the percentage of m-cresol formation increased fivefold from 2.8% to 14.5% (25). The T201F T4MO mutant with a mutation in tmoA exhibited a large shift in the product distribution and also formed 10-fold more benzyl alcohol from toluene (24). Catechol or THB formation by these mutants was not studied as these reactions were not known previously.
Here, DNA shuffling of touA and saturation mutagenesis of TouA at residues I100, Q141, T201, and F205 in ToMO were used to study the regiospecific hydroxylation of toluene and benzene by ToMO, as well as to enhance the synthesis of catechols, methylcatechols, and THB. It was discovered that ToMO forms catechol from phenol, as well as THB from catechol, hydroquinone, and resorcinol. Overall, five new reactions were found for wild-type ToMO, and protein engineering was used to construct mutants that synthesize eight novel, industrially significant products.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Chemicals.
Benzene, toluene, phenol, p-cresol, catechol, 3-methylcatechol, 4-methylcatechol, and methylhydroquinone were purchased from Fisher Scientific Co.; resorcinol, 1,2,3-THB, 1,2,4-THB, o-cresol, and m-cresol were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, Mo.); hydroquinone, benzyl alcohol, 2-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, 3-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, 4-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, 2-methylresorcinol, and 5-methylresorcinol were obtained from Acros Organics (Morris Plains, N.J.); and 4-methylresorcinol was obtained from Apin Chemicals (Abingdon, United Kingdom).
Construction of pBS(Kan)ToMO.
To create pBS(Kan)ToMO for constitutive expression of ToMO, the touABCDEF locus was PCR amplified from plasmid pBZ1260 (2) with a mixture of Taq and Pfu polymerases (1:1), primer ToMO-KpnI-KACFront (Table 1), which generated a unique KpnI site upstream of the touA start codon, and primer ToMO-NotI-KACRear, which generated a unique NotI site downstream of the touF stop codon (Fig. 1). The PCR product was then cloned into the multiple cloning site in pBS(Kan) (5) after double digestion with KpnI and NotI to create pBS(Kan)ToMO (8,983 bp). Colonies expressing active ToMO were distinguished based on their dark blue color on LB agar plates.
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. Similarly, to substitute 19 other amino acids at residue Q141 of TouA, a 594-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers ToMO-KpnI-front and Q141-rear (Table 1), and a 332-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers Q141-front and ToMO-BstEII-rear (Table 1). The two fragments were combined at a 1:1 ratio as templates to obtain the full-length product (890 bp) with the ToMO-KpnI-front and ToMO-BstEII-rear primers, and the product was cloned by using KpnI and BstEII (Fig. 1).
To substitute 19 other amino acids at residue T201 of TouA, a 773-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers ToMO-KpnI-front and T201-rear (Table 1), and an 881-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers T201-front and ToMO-SalI-rear (Table 1). The two fragments were combined at a 1:1 ratio as templates to obtain the full-length product (1,615 bp) with the ToMO-KpnI-front and ToMO-SalI-rear primers, and the product was cloned by using MluI and SalI (Fig. 1).
To substitute 19 other amino acids at residue F205 of TouA, a 784-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers ToMO-KpnI-front and F205-rear (Table 1), and an 867-bp DNA fragment was amplified by using primers F205-front and ToMO-SalI-rear (Table 1). The two fragments were combined at a 1:1 ratio as templates to obtain the full-length product (1,615 bp) with the ToMO-KpnI-front and ToMO-SalI-rear primers, and the product was cloned by using MluI and SalI (Fig. 1).
DNA shuffling of 90% of touA was performed as described previously for the TOM gene (5). ToMO-KpnI-front and ToMO-SalI-rear (Table 1) were designed to be 50 to 100 bp upstream and downstream of the MluI and SalI natural restriction sites, respectively, used for cloning; these two sites lie within the coding region of touA so that the promoter and the ribosome binding site regions were not shuffled. The shuffled product was then cloned into plasmid pBS(Kan)ToMO to replace the 1,314-bp region between the natural MluI and SalI sites of the gene encoding wild-type ToMO with shuffled DNA (90% of touA) (Fig. 1). Amplifications were carried out with the GeneAmp 2400 PCR system (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, Conn.). A plasmid midi kit and a QIAquick gel extraction kit (QIAGEN, Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.) were used to isolate plasmids and DNA fragments from agarose gels, respectively. A Bio-Rad GenePulser/Pulse Controller was used for electroporation at 15 kV/cm, 25 µF, and 200
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Colony screening.
The plate assay which we used was a variation of the method described previously by Meyer et al. (19). The mutant libraries were first streaked from transformant plates onto plates containing LB agar supplemented with 100 µg of kanamycin per ml and 1% (wt/vol) glucose to turn off the tou operon in order to increase stability. The glucose-grown colonies were then transferred to fresh plates containing LB agar supplemented with 100 µg of kanamycin per ml and 1 mM substrate (toluene or benzene) with a nylon membrane. After incubation for 24 h at room temperature in a chamber, the colonies were checked visually to search for colonies that developed a dark brown-red color around the cell mass, indicating the formation of derivatives of hydroquinone, resorcinol, or catechol from toluene or benzene. The control expressing wild-type ToMO remained yellow to light red on toluene- or benzene-containing agar plates (indicating the formation of catechol derivatives only). The negative control expressing no monooxygenase, TG1/pBS(Kan), remained colorless on toluene- or benzene-containing plates. At least three replicates were checked before high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis was performed.
Product identification and rates of formation.
The possible mutants initially identified by screening by the agar plate assay were further examined by reverse-phase HPLC. Experiments were conducted with exponentially grown cells at an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 1.0. The cells were washed once by centrifugation at 6,000 x g for 5 min at 25°C (JA-17 rotor in a J2 series centrifuge [Beckman, Palo Alto, Calif.]) and were resuspended with 1 volume of 50 mM Tris-HNO3 buffer (pH 7.0) to an OD600 of 5 to 10. Fifteen-milliliter glass vials containing the cell suspensions (2.5 ml) were each sealed with a Teflon-coated septum and aluminum seal, and the substrates benzene, phenol, toluene, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, catechol, hydroquinone, and resorcinol were added from ethanol stock solutions at a concentration of 0.8 mM. After contact at room temperature with shaking at 250 rpm in a KS250 benchtop shaker (IKA Laboratories, Cincinnati, Ohio) for 15 to 240 min, 1 ml of each cell suspension was centrifuged at 13,000 x g for 2 to 3 min, and the supernatant (500 µl) was filtered with a 1-ml syringe (Becton Dickinson) coupled to a nylon membrane filter unit (Millex-HN; pore size, 0.45 µm; diameter, 4 mm). By using HPLC, the dihydroxy and trihydroxy derivatives of benzene and toluene were analyzed immediately, and the monohyroxy derivatives of benzene or toluene were either kept at 20°C (for not more than 24 h) or analyzed immediately. A Zorbax SB-C8 column (5 µm; 4.6 by 250 mm; Agilent Technologies) was used with a 515 solvent delivery system (Waters Corporation, Milford, Mass.) coupled to a Waters 996 photodiode array detector. To detect the methyl-substituted catechols, methyl-substituted resorcinols, and methylhydroquinone and to determine their rates of formation, gradient elution was performed with H2O (0.1% formic acid) and acetonitrile (70:30 for 0 to 8 min, 40:60 for 15 min, and 70:30 for 20 min) as the mobile phase at a flow rate of 1 ml/min. To detect catechol, resorcinol, and hydroquinone and to determine their rates of formation, an isocratic mobile phase consisting of H2O (0.1% formic acid) and acetonitrile (70:30) was used. To detect the THBs formed from catechol, resorcinol, and hydroquinone, an isocratic mobile phase consisting of H2O (0.1% formic acid) and acetonitrile (90:10) was used. To confirm product identification, the retention times and UV-visible spectra of standard chemicals were compared with those of the enzyme-derived samples (Table 2), and the enzyme products were coeluted with authentic standards. At least two independent cultures were analyzed for each substrate and strain tested, and at least five injections were made for each substrate.
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Toluene oxidation and regiospecificity.
To determine the toluene oxidation products, experiments were conducted with exponentially grown cells at an OD600 of 1.0. The cells were washed once by centrifugation at 6,000 x g for 5 min at 25°C (JA-17 rotor in a J2 series centrifuge [Beckman]), resuspended with 1 volume of 50 mM Tris-HNO3 (pH 7.0) to an OD600 of 10, and then incubated with 91 µM toluene (based on Henry's law [7]) at room temperature and harvested every 5 min. Hexadecane (0.5 mM) was used as an internal standard for calculations (retention time, 17.8 min) and was added prior to extraction. Ethyl acetate-hexadecane (0.5 mM) was used to extract the toluene by adding 1 ml to 2 ml of a cell suspension. The suspension was centrifuged for 1 to 2 min, and the ethyl acetate phase (upper phase) was analyzed by gas chromatography by using a 6890N gas chromatograph (Hewlett-Packard, Wilmington, Del.) equipped with an EC-WAX capillary column (30 m by 0.25 mm; thickness, 0.25 µm; Alltech Associates, Inc., Deerfield, Ill.) and a flame ionization detector. The injector and detector temperatures were maintained at 250 and 275°C, respectively, and a split ratio of 3:1 was used. The He carrier gas flow rate was maintained at 0.8 ml/min. The temperature program was as follows: 80°C for 5 min, increase from 80 to 205°C at a rate of 5°C/min, increase from 205 to 280°C at a rate of 15°C/min, and 280°C for 5 min. Under these conditions, p- and m-cresol are separated, and the retention times for toluene and o-, p-, and m-cresol were 4.2, 27.6, 29.3, and 29.5 min, respectively. The experiments were performed at least two times for each strain tested. The molar amount of toluene degraded and the molar amounts of o-, m-, and p-cresol formed were calculated by constructing a calibration curve, and the retention times were compared with the retention times of standards.
DNA sequencing.
A dideoxy chain termination procedure (33) with an ABI Prism BigDye terminator cycle sequencing Ready Reaction kit (Perkin-Elmer, Wellesley, Mass.) and a PE Biosystems ABI 373 DNA sequencer (Perkin-Elmer) was used to determine the ToMO nucleotide sequence. Ten primers (Table 1) that were 20 to 25 bp long were generated from the wild-type ToMO sequence (GenBank accession number AJ005663) (3) for sequencing of the ToMO touABCDEF locus in one direction for pBS(Kan)ToMO (Fig. 1) and pBZ1260. The sequence data generated were analyzed by using the Vector NTI software (InfoxMax, Inc., Bethesda, Md.).
Modeling of ToMO TouA.
Part of the wild-type ToMO TouA alpha subunit (amino acid residues P65 to E284) was modeled using SWISS-MODEL Server (13, 23, 34) and was based on the soluble MMO (sMMO) MmoX alpha subunit (polymer chain D) from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) (27). The I100Q, F205G, and M180T mutations were modeled from the wild-type TouA ToMO model by use of the Swiss-Pdb Viewer program (DeepView) (13, 23, 34). The program Swiss-Pdb Viewer made the amino acid substitutions isosterically for ToMO TouA based on residue interactions, steric hindrance, and energy minimization.
| RESULTS |
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We identified mutants that formed dark red-brown halos with amino acid changes at TouA residues I100 and F205 (by saturation mutagenesis) and at residues M180 and E284 (by DNA shuffling). No benzene or toluene mutants that formed dark red-brown halos were found after saturation mutagenesis for TouA residue T201 or Q141. Wild-type ToMO and mutant cultures were further examined by HPLC, and Fig. 2 and 3 show both the products and the initial reaction rates for the oxidation of benzene, phenol, toluene, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, catechol, hydroquinone, and resorcinol. The best mutants were sequenced to identify the beneficial amino acid changes (Table 3).
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For both wild-type ToMO and the TouA variants, there was good agreement between the rates of disappearance of all of the substrates (phenol, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, and catechol) and the overall rates of appearance of the products (THB, catechol, hydroquinone, resorcinol, 3-methylcatechol, 4-methylcatechol, methylhydroquinone, and 4-methylresorcinol) (Table 3). For example, with wild-type ToMO, the rate of formation of 1,2,3-THB (0.71 nmol/min/mg of protein) and the rate of disappearance of catechol (0.75 nmol/min/mg of protein) were consistent.
The I100Q TouA variant hydroxylated benzene and formed phenol like wild-type ToMO (Fig. 2), and then it hydroxylated phenol at positions 2 and 4 and formed primarily hydroquinone (80%), as well as catechol (20%), whereas wild-type ToMO performed the second hydroxylation only at position 2 and formed catechol. The rate of hydroquinone formation by the I100Q variant was comparable to the rate of catechol formation by the wild type. The I100Q variant further hydroxylated catechol to form 1,2,4-THB instead of the 1,2,3-THB formed by wild-type ToMO. Both the I100Q variant and wild-type ToMO formed 1,2,4-THB from hydroquinone and resorcinol (Fig. 2); these reactions are two previously unknown reactions for wild-type ToMO.
The F205G TouA variant hydroxylated benzene and formed phenol (like both wild-type ToMO and the I100Q variant) (Fig. 2); however, it hydroxylated phenol at positions 2, 3, and 4, and it formed significant amounts of resorcinol (13%), catechol (76%), and hydroquinone (11%), whereas wild-type ToMO formed only catechol. The F205G variant further hydroxylated hydroquinone and formed 1,2,4-THB like wild-type ToMO, but it formed 1,2,3-THB (100%) from resorcinol, which is different from the wild-type ToMO and I100Q variant reactions. No product peak was observed when we used 0.8 mM catechol with TG1 expressing variant F205G.
The M180T/E284G TouA variant hydroxylated benzene and formed phenol like wild-type ToMO and the I100Q and F205G variants. The M180T/E284G variant performed the second hydroxylation at positions 2 and 4 and formed catechol (98%), as well as hydroquinone (2%); the rate of catechol formation was 33% higher than the wild-type rate at a concentration of 0.8 mM. The M180T/E284G variant further hydroxylated hydroquinone and formed 1,2,4-THB, like wild-type ToMO. In contrast to wild-type ToMO, the M180T/E284G variant formed both 1,2,3-THB (86%) and 1,2,4-THB (14%) from catechol. The M180T/E284G variant also formed both 1,2,3-THB and 1,2,4-THB from resorcinol, unlike wild-type ToMO (Fig. 2).
To investigate the enhanced rate of catechol formation by the M180T/E284G variant compared to the rate of formation by wild-type ToMO, the apparent Vmax was measured for whole cells, and the values were found to be 5.7 and 6.1 nmol/min/mg of protein for the M180T/E284G variant and the wild type, respectively, whereas the apparent Km was 7.5 µM for the M180T/E284G variant and 25 µM for wild-type ToMO. Hence, Vmax/Km was threefold greater for the M180T/E284G variant. The rates of formation of 3-methylcatechol and 4-methylcatechol for the M180T/E284G variant were also greater than the rates of formation for wild-type ToMO (1.4- to 1.7-fold) (Fig. 3).
Oxidation of toluene by wild-type ToMO and TouA variants.
Oxidation of toluene as a substrate was also evaluated with the enzyme variants to see whether addition of methyl groups to the benzene ring affected the regiospecificity and to determine if the oxidation rate of the natural substrate was altered significantly. Table 4 summarizes the products obtained from whole-cell oxidation of toluene with wild-type ToMO and with the I100Q, F205G, and M180T/E284G TouA variants. It was shown previously that wild-type ToMO hydroxylates toluene to o-cresol, m-cresol, and p-cresol and 3- and 4-methylcatechol (2), and the same results were obtained in this study, except that slight 3-methylcatechol formation (4%) from m-cresol was found in addition to formation of 4-methylcatechol (96%) (Fig. 3).
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The I100Q and F205G variants had a different regiospecificity for the second hydroxylation of toluene. Figure 3 shows the oxidation of o-cresol with wild-type ToMO and with the I100Q, F205G, and M180T/E284G TouA variants. Wild-type ToMO formed only 3-methylcatechol; however, the I100Q variant formed methylhydroquinone (50%) and 3-methylcatechol (50%). Unlike wild-type ToMO, the F205G variant formed 4-methylresorcinol (70%), 3-methylcatechol (22%), and methylhydroquinone (8%) from o-cresol. The M180T/E284G variant formed 3-methylcatechol (85%) at slightly elevated rates compared with the wild-type isoform rate, along with methylhydroquinone (15%).
Figure 3 shows the pathways for oxidation of m-cresol. Wild-type ToMO formed 4-methylcatechol (96%) and 3-methylcatechol (4%). Unlike wild-type ToMO, the I100Q variant formed methylhydroquinone (50%) and 4-methylcatechol (50%). Like wild-type ToMO, the F205G variant formed 4-methylcatechol (78%) and 3-methylcatechol (22%); however, the F205G variant formed 3-methylcatechol 2.4-fold faster from 0.8 mM m-cresol. Unlike wild-type ToMO and the I100Q and F205G variants, the M180T/E284G variant formed 4-methylcatechol (92%; 1.7-fold faster than the wild type), 3-methylcatechol (4%), and methylhydroquinone (4%).
Figure 3 also shows the pathways for oxidation of p-cresol by ToMO and the variants. ToMO and the I100Q variant formed only 4-methylcatechol at comparable rates; however, the F205G and M180T/E284G variants formed both 4-methylcatechol (78 and 88%, respectively) and 4-methylresorcinol (22 and 12%, respectively).
To characterize the conversion of p-cresol to 4-methylcatechol more fully (Fig. 3), the apparent Vmax values for whole cells were found to be 3.3 nmol/min/mg of protein for the I100Q variant and 2.7 nmol/min/mg of protein for the wild type. The apparent Km values were 111 µM for the I100Q variant and 58 µM for the wild type; hence, Vmax/Km was reduced 63% for the I100Q variant.
All of the methyl-substituted catechol, methylhydroquinone, and methyl-substituted resorcinol samples were relatively unstable due to nonenzymatic reactions since standards incubated with Tris-HNO3 buffer (no cells) overnight formed unknown compounds (as observed by HPLC). However, this did not affect our results because the analyses were done in the first 4 h.
DNA sequence.
By using primers (Table 1) generated from the ToMO sequence in the GenBank database (accession number AJ005663) (3), the entire wild-type ToMO locus from plasmid pBS(Kan)ToMO (touA region sequenced at least 10 times in the same direction) (Fig. 1) and the ToMO locus of pBZ1260 (2) were sequenced. pBZ1260 was the source of our ToMO tou locus and the original source of the GenBank DNA sequence (3). Both touABCDEF in pBS(Kan)ToMO and touABCDEF in pBZ1260 have the S269C codon change in touF [TCT for the GenBank sequence and TGT for the pBS(Kan)ToMO and pBZ1260 sequences]. In addition, pBS(Kan)ToMO has the K445E codon change in touA [AAA for the GenBank sequence and GAA for the pBS(Kan)ToMO sequence] and the N283S codon change in touF [AAT for the GenBank sequence and AGT for the pBS(Kan)ToMO sequence], which do not affect activity (there is no change in the regiospecific oxidation of toluene).
Enzyme expression level.
The I100Q and F205G TouA variants were expression down mutants, as shown by SDS-PAGE; a single nucleotide change in one codon led to a less elevated protein expression level (1.5- to 2-fold). Hence, the enzymes were even more active than the rates shown in Fig. 2 and 3 indicate. Similar changes in expression levels due to mutations have been observed with naphthalene dioxygenase and para-nitrobenzyl esterase (21, 31). The variation in the protein expression level could have been due to modification of the primary amino acid sequence, which led to an increase in protein lability, or the single nucleotide change may have led to increased lability of the transcript (the ribosome binding site and promoter were not altered). The expression level of the M180T/E284G variant was approximately the same as that of wild-type ToMO.
ToMO TouA modeling.
The approximate three-dimensional coordinates for the TouA four-helix bundle anchoring the active site are shown in Fig. 4 (the model was based on the crystal structure of sMMO). The accuracy of the wild-type ToMO TouA alpha-subunit model was judged by conservation of the spatial positions of the diiron coordinating residues in ToMO (E104, E134, H137, E197, E231, and H234) compared to the residues of sMMO (E114, E144, H147, E209, E243, and H246) (27).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Previously, it was shown that a phenol-acclimated activated sludge formed 3-methylcatechol (the main product), 4-methylresorcinol, and methylhydroquinone from o-cresol (17, 18), but the microorganisms and the enzymes responsible were not elucidated. A pathway for the degradation of o-cresol by Pseudomonas sp. strain CP4 has been proposed (but not confirmed); in this pathway 4-methylresorcinol is a possible product and 3-methlycatechol is a confirmed product (1).
Pikus et al. studied one substitution in the related enzyme T4MO, I180F, but this change resulted in no change in the product distribution for the oxidation of toluene, m-xylene, and p-xylene (25). Here, we report that M180 of ToMO TouA, which corresponds to I180 of T4MO TmoA and which was identified by DNA shuffling, might play an important role in the regiospecificity of the oxidation of phenol, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, catechol, and resorcinol. The M180T/E284G variant obtained from DNA shuffling has a second amino acid change at TouA residue E284, which may also help change the regiospecificity of oxidation by this mutant. The significance of residue E284 has not been described previously. The M180T/E284G variant is also an up-mutant for nitrobenzene and nitrophenol oxidation (data not shown). Thus, in the future these two residues (M180 and E284) will be studied by using saturation mutagenesis.
The whole-cell rate of formation of catechol from phenol (1.5 nmol/min/mg of protein) and the whole-cell rate of formation of 1,2,3-THB from catechol (0.71 nmol/min/mg of protein) were found to be comparable to the oxidation rate of the natural substrate toluene (2.63 ± 0.15 nmol/min/mg of protein) by whole cells expressing wild-type ToMO (Fig. 2 and Tables 3 and 4). Hence, the rates of these two newly discovered reactions are relatively high, although the reactions do not appear to be physiologically relevant. The initial rates of formation of the uncommon chemical 4-methylresorcinol by the F205G and M180T/E284G variants and the rates of methylhydroquinone formation by the I100Q variant from o- and m-cresol were also high. The overall rates of product formation from phenol, o-cresol, m-cresol, and p-cresol with the I100Q and F205G variants were as high as the wild-type ToMO rates of product formation, whereas with the M180T/E284G variant the product formation rates were slightly greater (1.3- to 1.6-fold); hence, regiospecificity was changed for these variants without reducing the rates. In contrast, some of the recently described P. mendocina KR1 T4MO regiospecific mutants (24, 25) have lower activities; for example, the rate of toluene oxidation (kcat) was around 10-fold lower with a Q141C T4MO mutant than with the wild-type T4MO (25); the rates of toluene oxidation were also lower with other T201 T4MO mutants that were selected to be active (24).
Methyl substitution on the benzene ring did not affect the regiospecificity of oxidation by wild-type ToMO and TouA variants. For example, wild-type ToMO formed catechol from benzene and methylcatechols from toluene. The I100Q and M180T/E284G variants formed catechol and hydroquinone from benzene and methylcatechols and methylhydroquinone from toluene. The F205G variant, on the other hand, formed catechol, hydroquinone, and resorcinol from benzene, as well as methylcatechols, methylhydroquinone, and 4-methylresorcinol from toluene.
The regiospecificities of hydroxylation by the I100Q, F205G, and M180T/E284G TouA variants were different from that of the wild-type ToMO; hence, residues I100, F205, and M180/E284 of the alpha subunit TouA of ToMO (499 amino acids) govern phenol, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, catechol, and resorcinol hydroxylation. These results also confirm that the ToMO hydroxylase subunit influences hydroxylation regiospecificity. The I100Q mutation also increased TCE degradation with ToMO (data not shown), as observed for variant Tom-Green of B. cepacia G4, which has an amino acid change at residue 106 (V106A) that corresponds to the change at residue I100 in ToMO (5). Hence, the results here support the hypothesis that residue I100 is a key amino acid residue in the alpha subunit of toluene monooxygenases.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Ayelet Fishman for her help with the HPLC analysis and acknowledge that K. A. Canada of the Wood lab constructed strain E. coli TG1/pBS(Kan)ToMO.
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| REFERENCES |
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