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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jul 1995, 2499-2505, Vol 61, No. 7
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology

Metabolism of Hydroxydibenzofurans, Methoxydibenzofurans, Acetoxydibenzofurans, and Nitrodibenzofurans by Sphingomonas sp. Strain HH69

H Harms, H Wilkes, R Wittich and P Fortnagel
Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland, and Research Center Julich (KFA), Institute for Petroleum and Organic Geochemistry (ICG-4), D-52425 Julich, and Institut fur Allgemeine Botanik, Abteilung Mikrobiologie, Universitat Hamburg, D-22609 Hamburg, Federal Republic of Germany

The metabolism of 11 substituted dibenzofurans by the dibenzofuran-degrading Sphingomonas sp. strain HH69 was investigated. Strain HH69 utilizes 2-, 3-, and 4-acetoxydibenzofuran as well as 2-, 3-, and 4-hydroxydibenzofuran as sole sources of carbon and energy. The degradation of acetoxydibenzofurans is initiated by hydrolysis of the ester bonds, yielding the corresponding hydroxydibenzofurans and acetate. Strain HH69 grew on 2-methoxydibenzofuran only after it was adapted to the utilization of 5-methoxysalicylic acid, whereas 3- and 4-methoxydibenzofuran as well as 2- and 3-nitrodibenzofuran were only cooxidized. During the breakdown of all eight hydroxy-, methoxy-, and nitrodibenzofurans studied here, the corresponding substituted salicylic acids accumulated in the culture broth. In the cases of 2- and 3-hydroxydibenzofuran as well as 2- and 3-nitrodibenzofuran, salicylic acid was also formed. Those four dibenzofurans which did not serve as carbon sources for strain HH69 were converted to a nonutilizable salicylic acid derivative. From turnover experiments with the mutant HH69/II, which is deficient in meta-cleavage, 2,2(prm1),3,4(prm1)-tetrahydroxybiphenyl, 2,2(prm1),3-trihydroxy-5(prm1)-methoxybiphenyl, 2,2(prm1),3-trihydroxy-5(prm1)-nitrobiphenyl, and 2,2(prm1),3-trihydroxy-4(prm1)-nitrobiphenyl were isolated as the main products formed from 3-hydroxydibenzofuran, 2-methoxydibenzofuran, and 2- and 3-nitrodibenzofuran, respectively. These results indicate significant regioselectivity for the dioxygenolytic cleavage of the ether bond of these monosubstituted dibenzofurans, with a preference for the nonsubstituted aromatic nucleus. Substituted trihydroxybiphenyls are converted further by meta-cleavage followed by the removal of the side chain of the resulting product. A stepwise degradation of this side chain was found to be involved in the metabolism of 2-hydroxydibenzofuran.


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