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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2000, p. 1385-1392, Vol. 66, No. 4
Institut für Mikrobiologie der
Universität Stuttgart, 70550 Stuttgart, Germany
Received 5 November 1999/Accepted 23 January 2000
Pseudomonas lemoignei is equipped with at least five
polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) depolymerase structural genes
(phaZ1 to phaZ5) which enable the bacterium to
utilize extracellular poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB),
poly(3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHV), and related polyesters consisting of
short-chain-length hxdroxyalkanoates (PHASCL) as the sole
sources of carbon and energy. Four genes (phaZ1,
phaZ2, phaZ3, and phaZ5) encode PHB
depolymerases C, B, D, and A, respectively. It was speculated that the
remaining gene, phaZ4, encodes the PHV depolymerase (D. Jendrossek, A. Frisse, A. Behrends, M. Andermann, H. D. Kratzin, T. Stanislawski, and H. G. Schlegel, J. Bacteriol. 177:596-607, 1995). However, in this study, we show that phaZ4 codes for
another PHB depolymeraes (i) by disagreement of 5 out of 41 amino acids that had been determined by Edman degradation of the PHV depolymerase and of four endoproteinase GluC-generated internal peptides with the
DNA-deduced sequence of phaZ4, (ii) by the lack of
immunological reaction of purified recombinant PhaZ4 with PHV
depolymerase-specific antibodies, and (iii) by the low activity of the
PhaZ4 depolymerase with PHV as a substrate. The true PHV
depolymerase-encoding structural gene, phaZ6, was
identified by screening a genomic library of P. lemoignei
in Escherichia coli for clearing zone formation on PHV
agar. The DNA sequence of phaZ6 contained all 41 amino
acids of the GluC-generated peptide fragments of the PHV depolymerase. PhaZ6 was expressed and purified from recombinant E. coli
and showed immunological identity to the wild-type PHV depolymerase and
had high specific activities with PHB and PHV as substrates. To our
knowledge, this is the first report on a PHASCL
depolymerase gene that is expressed during growth on PHV or
odd-numbered carbon sources and that encodes a protein with high PHV
depolymerase activity. Amino acid analysis revealed that PhaZ6
(relative molecular mass [Mr], 43,610 Da)
resembles precursors of other extracellular PHASCL
depolymerases (28 to 50% identical amino acids). The mature protein
(Mr, 41,048) is composed of (i) a large
catalytic domain including a catalytic triad of S136,
D211, and H269 similar to serine hydrolases;
(ii) a linker region highly enriched in threonine residues and other
amino acids with hydroxylated or small side chains (Thr-rich region);
and (iii) a C-terminal domain similar in sequence to the
substrate-binding domain of PHASCL depolymerases. Differences in the codon usage of phaZ6 for some codons
from the average codon usage of P. lemoignei indicated that
phaZ6 might be derived from other organisms by gene
transfer. Multialignment of separate domains of bacterial
PHASCL depolymerases suggested that not only complete
depolymerase genes but also individual domains might have been
exchanged between bacteria during evolution of PHASCL depolymerases.
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Poly(3-Hydroxyvalerate) Depolymerase of
Pseudomonas lemoignei

and
*
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.
Present address: Institut für Mikrobiologie und
Hygiene/Charite, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
Present address: Abteilung Biochemie II, Universität
Göttingen, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
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