The synthesis of ubiquinone under anaerobic conditions was examined in a variety of strains of Escherichia coli K12. All were shown to synthesize appreciable quantities of ubiquinone 8 when grown anaerobically on glycerol in the presence of fumarate. Under these conditions, ubiquinone 8 was in most cases the principal quinone formed, and levels in the range 50--70% of those obtained aerobically were observed. Studies with mutants blocked in the various reactions of the aerobic pathway for ubiquinone 8 synthesis established that under anaerobic conditions three alternative hydroxylation reactions not involving molecular oxygen are used to derive the C-4, -5, and -6 oxygens of ubiquinone 8. Thus, mutants blocked in either of the three hydroxylation reactions of the aerobic pathway (ubiB, ubiH, or ubiF) are each able to synthesize ubiquinone 8 anaerobically, whereas mutants lacking the octaprenyltransferase (ubiA), carboxy-lyase (ubiD), or methyltransferases (ubiE or ubiG) of the aerobic pathway remain blocked anaerobically. The demonstration that E. coli possesses a special mechanism for the anaerobic biosynthesis of ubiquinone suggests that this quinone may play an important role in anaerobic metabolism.
The biosynthetic origin of the oxygen atoms of ubiquinone 8 from aerobically grown Escherichia coli was studied by 18O labeling. An apparatus was developed which allowed the growth of cells under a defined atmosphere. Mass spectral analysis of ubiquinone 8 from cells grown under highly enriched 18O2 showed that three oxygen atoms of the quinone are derived from molecular oxygen. It was established that the molecular oxygen is incorporated into the two methoxyl groups (at C-5 and C-6) and one of the carbonyl positions of the ubiquinone molecule by demonstrating that only one of the incorporated oxygens will exchange with water under acidic conditions that specifically catalyze the exchange of carbonyl, but not methoxyl, oxygens. That the C-4 carbonyl oxygen is derived from molecular oxygen was shown by the incorporation of three atoms of 18O2 into ubiquinone 8 biosynthesized from added 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. Comparison of ubiquinone 8 and menaquinone 8 from E. coli grown under 18O2 confirmed that the labeled carbonyl oxygen of the [18O2]ubiquinone 8 is incorporated biosynthetically and not by chemical exchange in the cell. It is concluded that the three hydroxylation reactions involved in the pathway for the aerobic biosynthesis of ubiquinone are all catalyzed by monooxygenases. The implications of this study for the anaerobic biosynthesis of ubiquinone 8 in E coli are discussed.
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