Mutational analysis of the hydantoin hydrolysis pathway in Pseudomonas putida RU-KM3s
The biocatalytic conversion of 5-mono-substituted hydantoins to the corresponding D-amino acids or L-amino acids involves first the hydrolysis of hydantoin to a N-carbamoylamino acid by an hydantoinase or dihydropyrimidinase, followed by the conversion of the N-carbamoylamino acid to the amino acid...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied microbiology and biotechnology 2004-09, Vol.65 (4), p.391-400 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The biocatalytic conversion of 5-mono-substituted hydantoins to the corresponding D-amino acids or L-amino acids involves first the hydrolysis of hydantoin to a N-carbamoylamino acid by an hydantoinase or dihydropyrimidinase, followed by the conversion of the N-carbamoylamino acid to the amino acid by N-carbamylamino acid amidohydrolase ( N-carbamoylase). Pseudomonas putida strain RU-KM3S, with high levels of hydantoin-hydrolysing activity, has been shown to exhibit non-stereoselective hydantoinase and L-selective N-carbamoylase activity. This study focused on identifying the hydantoinase and N-carbamoylase-encoding genes in this strain, using transposon mutagenesis and selection for altered growth phenotypes on minimal medium with hydantoin as a nitrogen source. Insertional inactivation of two genes, dhp and bup, encoding a dihydropyrimidinase and beta-ureidopropionase, respectively, resulted in loss of hydantoinase and N-carbamoylase activity, indicating that these gene products were responsible for hydantoin hydrolysis in this strain. dhp and bup are linked to an open reading frame encoding a putative transport protein, which probably shares a promoter with bup. Two mutant strains were isolated with increased levels of dihydropyrimidinase but not beta-ureidopropionase activity. Transposon mutants in which key elements of the nitrogen regulatory pathway were inactivated were unable to utilize hydantoin or uracil as a nitrogen source. However, these mutations had no effect on either the dihydropyrimidinase or beta-ureidopropionase activity. Disruption of the gene encoding dihydrolipoamide succinyltransferase resulted in a significant reduction in the activity of both enzymes, suggesting a role for carbon catabolite repression in the regulation of hydantoin hydrolysis in P. putida RU-KM3S cells. |
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ISSN: | 0175-7598 1432-0614 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00253-004-1597-3 |