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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2009, p. 1774-1777, Vol. 75, No. 6
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02547-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
C29 Olefinic Hydrocarbons Biosynthesized by Arthrobacter Species
,
Janice A. Frias,
Jack E. Richman, and
Lawrence P. Wackett*
Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Biophysics and BioTechnology Institute, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
Received 7 November 2008/
Accepted 13 January 2009

ABSTRACT
Arthrobacter aurescens TC1,
Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6,
Arthrobacter crystallopoietes, and
Arthrobacter oxydans produce
long-chain monoalkenes, predominantly
cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene.
Four other
Arthrobacter strains did not form alkenes. The level
of
cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene in
Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 remained proportional to cell mass during growth.
cis-3,25-Dimethyl-13-heptacosene
did not support growth of
A. chlorophenolicus A6.

INTRODUCTION
Bacterial hydrocarbon biosynthesis has garnered renewed interest
in the context of generating new biofuels that are superior
to ethanol (
8,
12). A number of bacteria make long-chain, nonisoprenoid
hydrocarbons that are being explored for biofuel and specialty
chemical applications (
23). An unusual class of unsaturated
C
22 to C
31 alkenes produced by
Micrococcus and
Stenotrophomonas species was first described more than 40 years ago, but the
biological function and mechanism of formation of these alkenes
have not yet been elucidated (
4,
18,
21). In addition, the assignment
of the structure for specific compounds has differed in different
reports (
19,
20). The precise structures of the compounds are
relevant to understanding the biosynthetic mechanism and biological
utility of these compounds.
Micrococcus and
Stenotrophomonas make a complex mixture of alkenes; identifying new organisms
with a simpler product profile should facilitate mechanistic
and biological experiments. Moreover, discovering alkenes in
new bacteria that have been subjected to complete genome sequencing
should advance efforts to identify the relevant biosynthetic
genes and enzymes.
Arthrobacter spp. are high-G+C-content gram-positive bacteria (10) for which several genome sequences are currently available (NCBI sequence accession number NC_008541 and NCBI sequence accession number ABKU00000000 [13]). In the present study, we screened cultures of divergent Arthrobacter species for the presence of hydrocarbons. Long-chain alkenes, reminiscent of a subset of those previously found in Micrococcus, were observed in several Arthrobacter species. Arthrobacter strains tested here were observed to produce a more uniform alkene chain length, predominantly C29. To positively identify the products, C29 alkenes with different methyl branching patterns and with cis or trans stereochemistry were prepared by chemical synthesis (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). The corresponding alkanes were also synthesized. This set of 11 chemical standards allowed the identification of the products as specific dimethyl-13-heptacosenes with an unambiguous demonstration of a cis relative stereochemistry at the double bonds.

Demonstration of alkenes in cultures of Arthrobacter spp.
Nonpolar material extracted from
Arthrobacter strains was compared
to the hydrocarbons produced by
Micrococcus luteus ISU and
Stenotrophomonas (formerly
Pseudomonas)
maltophilia ATCC 17674 (
17) (Fig.
1).
Four-day-old cultures were extracted by using a modified Bligh
and Dyer protocol (
5) as described previously (
24). Evaporated
extracts were dissolved in 1 ml chloroform and applied to a
3.5-g silica gel column, eluted with 30 ml hexanes, concentrated,
and subjected to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS)
analysis using an HP6890 gas chromatograph connected to an HP5973
mass spectrometer (Hewlett Packard, Palo Alto, CA). The GC conditions
were helium gas, 1 ml/min; HP-1ms column (100% dimethylpolysiloxane
capillary; 30 m by 250 µm by 0.25 µm); temperature
ramp, 100 to 320°C; and 10°C/min, with a 5-min hold
at 320°C. The MS was run in electron impact mode at 70 eV
and 35 µA.
Unlike the more-complex
Stenotrophomonas (Fig.
1A) and
Micrococcus (Fig.
1B) hydrocarbon profiles, the large majority of the
Arthrobacter hydrocarbons were apparent in three readily resolvable peaks
that eluted in the narrow range of 18.8 to 19.1 min. The major
hydrocarbons extracted from
Arthrobacter strains, represented
in Fig.
1C and D, were identified by MS as C
29 monoalkenes (
m/z = 406; C
29H
58). Treatment of the alkenes with hydrogen gas over
a palladium catalyst produced saturated alkanes, and subsequent
GC-MS gave slightly longer retention times and mass spectra
that were consistent with a gain of two mass units for each
(
m/z = 408; C
29H
60).
Table 1 shows the relative distribution of different alkene chain lengths in Stenotrophomonas, Micrococcus, and eight Arthrobacter species. The Arthrobacter strains were obtained from other researchers (9, 14) or the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) or were isolated in this laboratory (7, 16). The Arthrobacter strains generally showed a narrower distribution of chain lengths (Table 1). This trend was most pronounced with A. oxydans ATCC 14358, which produced only C29 alkenes. Four other Arthrobacter strains did not yield any detectable alkenes. One of those not producing alkenes, Arthrobacter sp. strain FB24, has been subjected to genome sequencing (NCBI sequence accession number CP000454). Two Arthrobacter strains producing alkenes have had their genomes sequenced (NCBI sequence accession numbers ABKU00000000 and NC_008711 [13]).
View this table:
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|
TABLE 1. Distribution of alkene chain lengths detected by GC-MS for a variety of Arthrobacter strains and comparison to their distribution in two previously studied bacteria, S. maltophilia and M. luteus
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Rigorous assignment of structures to resolved C29 isomers.
The mass spectra of the major alkenes produced by
Arthrobacter bacteria were consistent with their assignment as dimethylheptacosenes
(
m/z = 406; C
29H
58).
Arthrobacter strains produce predominantly
C
15 methyl-branched fatty acids (
6,
22), and thus, if a head-to-head
fatty acid condensation mechanism were operative as previously
proposed (
2,
3), dimethylheptacosenes (C
29H
58) would be the
anticipated products.
Arthrobacter bacteria produce both iso
and anteiso methyl-branched C
15 fatty acids, and so the alkenes
could be iso-iso, iso-anteiso, anteiso-iso, anteiso-anteiso,
or some mixture of the different isomers (see Fig. S1 in the
supplemental material). Hydrogenation of the alkenes provided
preliminary evidence from fragmentation patterns (M-15 and M-43)
that the 18.8-min peak (I) was iso-iso branched, or 2,26-dimethylheptacosene
(data not shown). The 19.0-min (major) peak (III) showed fragmentation
(M-29 and M-59) consistent with an anteiso-anteiso branching
that identifies the compound as 3,25-dimethylheptacosene (data
not shown). The middle (18.9 min) peak (II) showed characteristics
of iso-anteiso branching and thus could be identified as 2,25-dimethylheptacosene,
3,26-dimethylheptacosene, or a mixture of the two.
To help resolve these issues, and to determine the precise structures of the products, synthetic standards were prepared. Previous reports of alkenes biosynthesized by Micrococcus luteus indicated that the double bond of the alkenes was near the middle of the chain, based on their chemical degradation to fatty acids (1). The stereochemistry of the double bond was proposed to be cis based on their retarded migration on silica gel impregnated with silver (1). However, no synthetic chemical standards were available in those previous studies to compare the properties of cis- and trans-alkenes. Moreover, the same peak was assigned different structures in different studies (19, 20). In that context, cis- and trans-13-dimethylheptacosenes with all combinations of iso and anteiso branching patterns were synthesized (detailed synthetic conditions will be described elsewhere). The selective synthesis of cis or trans isomeric standards could be controlled by the synthetic methods used and was confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Hydrogenation of different dimethylheptacosynes to the corresponding alkenes by using a Lindlar catalyst produced predominantly cis-olefins with trace amounts of the trans isomer, as shown in Fig. 2B, C, and D. The trans isomers eluted as a shoulder on the tail end of each cis-isomer peak. A more-aggressive hydrogenation reaction using 5% Pd/C catalyst produced predominately trans isomers. Long-term hydrogenation with 5% Pd/C led to complete reduction, yielding the corresponding alkanes. In this manner, eight different dimethyl-13-heptacosene standards and three dimethylheptacosane standards were synthesized. All of these were used as GC standards to determine retention times and mass spectra by GC-MS. This allowed the identification of the three major peaks as (Fig. 2A, left to right) cis-2,26-dimethyl-13-heptacosene (I), either cis-2,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene or cis-3,26-dimethyl-13-heptacosene or a mixture of the two (II), and cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene (III).
The structural identifications made via separate injections
were further confirmed by coinjection of standards in admixture
with biological material on a GC. Coinjection of the respective
standards gave uniform peaks, thus confirming the identity of
the biological material eluting in peaks I and III as described
above. Synthetic
cis-2,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene and
cis-3,26-dimethyl-13-heptacosene
had identical retention times and similar mass spectra, consistent
with the conclusion that peak II could be either one of the
compounds by itself or a mixture of the two.

Growth studies.
Micrococcus bacteria are spherical cells at all growth stages,
whereas
Arthrobacter species grow as rod-shaped cells during
the exponential phase and become spherical during stationary
phase (
10). Thus, it was considered that alkenes might be preferentially
formed by
Arthrobacter bacteria during stationary phase. To
test this hypothesis, a 50-µl preculture was used to inoculate
50 ml tryptic soy broth in a 125-ml Erlenmeyer flask. Cultures
were grown at 28°C with shaking at 225 rpm. Duplicate cultures
for growth studies were extracted at the time points of 0 h,
8 h, 16 h, 24 h, 32 h, 48 h, 96 h, and 288 h. The cells underwent
a characteristic rod-to-coccus transition at 48 h. Prior to
extraction, 62.5 µmol of
cis-9-tricosene was added as
an internal standard to quantitatively determine the levels
of 3,25-dimethylheptacosene. The data obtained from these extractions
showed that the alkene levels closely paralleled culture optical
density (Fig.
3). Thus, both rod and spherical cell forms contain
similar levels of 3,25-dimethylheptacosene.
Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 was tested for growth on
S,
S-
cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene,
the major isomer thought to be formed biosynthetically by that
strain.
A. chlorophenolicus A6 was grown in M9 minimal medium
(
15) containing either glucose or
S,
S-
cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene,
added to a concentration equivalent to 130 mM of carbon. Phenol
was also used as a positive control, at 2 mM, 10 mM, and 20
mM in different cultures (
14). Growth studies with each carbon
source were set up in triplicate. For the inoculum, cells were
grown overnight in tryptic soy broth and washed twice with M9
minimal medium without a carbon source. The medium was inoculated
to an optical density of 0.07 at 600 nm and grown in capped
test tubes at 28°C with shaking at 255 rpm. Optical density
measurements were taken at 600 nm (Beckman DU 7400) after 17
days of growth.
No discernible cell growth was supported by cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene. The average optical density at 600 nm in the test cultures was 0.049 ± 0.001 (mean ± standard deviation). That compared to an average of 0.042 ± 0.001 in a control without alkene. With phenol substituted for the alkene, the optical density at the same time point was 1.04 ± 0.03. With D-glucose as the carbon source, the optical density was 1.70 ± 0.18. These data suggested that the long-chain alkenes are not produced for the function of storing carbon or energy. The observation in this study that some Arthrobacter strains produce long-chain alkenes and others do not (Table 1) indicated that these compounds are not essential under the laboratory growth conditions used.

Conclusions.
This study has shown that some
Arthrobacter strains produce
C
29 olefinic hydrocarbons, the structures of which were rigorously
established by comparison with synthetic standards. In one previous
study of
Micrococcus bacteria, it was noted that one
Arthrobacter strain, now identified as
Arthrobacter citreus, also produced
alkenes and that other
Arthrobacter strains did not (
11). No
data were shown. However, that report, coupled with the present
study, suggests that alkene formation is not ubiquitous amongst
Arthrobacter species, in contrast to
Micrococcus strains, which
appear to uniformly produce olefinic hydrocarbons. Complete
genome sequences are available for
Arthrobacter aurescens TC1
(
13) and
Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 (NCBI sequence accession
numbers NC_00871 and ABXU00000000), which produced alkenes,
and for
Arthrobacter sp. strain FB24 (NCBI sequence accession
number NC_008541), which did not. These observations pave the
way to use comparative genomic analysis to identify alkene-biosynthetic
genes in these microorganisms.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Cindy Nakatsu and Janet Jansson for providing
Arthrobacter sp. strain FB24 and
Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6, respectively.
This work was supported by NIH Training Grant T32 GM08347 and NIH Training Grant 5 T32 GM008700 (to J.A.F.) and by grant LG-B13 from the Institute for Renewable Energy and the Environment and a Discovery Grant from the Institute of the Environment (to L.P.W.).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108. Phone: (651) 487-3664. Fax: (612) 625-5780. E-mail:
wacke003{at}umn.edu 
Published ahead of print on 23 January 2009. 
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2009, p. 1774-1777, Vol. 75, No. 6
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02547-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.