Degradation of arylglycerol--aryl ether is the most important process in bacterial lignin catabolism. Sphingobium sp. strain SYK-6 degrades guaiacylglycerol--guaiacyl ether (GGE) to ␣-(2-methoxyphenoxy)--hydroxypropiovanillone (MPHPV), and then the ether linkage of MPHPV is cleaved to generate ␣-glutathionyl--hydroxypropiovanillone (GS-HPV) and guaiacol. We have characterized three enantioselective glutathione S-transferase genes, including two genes that are involved in the ether cleavage of two enantiomers of MPHPV and one gene that is involved in the elimination of glutathione from a GS-HPV enantiomer. However, the first step in the degradation of four different GGE stereoisomers has not been characterized. In this study, three alcohol dehydrogenase genes, ligL, ligN, and ligO, which conferred GGE transformation activity in Escherichia coli, were isolated from SYK-6 and characterized, in addition to the previously cloned ligD gene. The levels of amino acid sequence identity of the four GGE dehydrogenases, which belong to the short-chain dehydrogenase/ reductase family, ranged from 32% to 39%. Each gene was expressed in E. coli, and the stereospecificities of the gene products with the four GGE stereoisomers were determined by using chiral high-performance liquid chromatography with recently synthesized authentic enantiopure GGE stereoisomers.
LigD and LigO converted (␣R,S)-GGE and (␣R,R)-GGE into (S)-MPHPV and (R)-MPHPV, respectively, while LigL and LigN transformed (␣S,R)-GGE and (␣S,S)-GGE to (R)-MPHPV and (S)-MPHPV, respectively. Disruption of the genes indicated that ligD is essential for the degradation of (␣R,S)-GGE and (␣R,R)-GGE and that both ligL and ligN contribute to the degradation of the two other GGE stereoisomers.
Sphingomonas paucimobilis SYK-6, which can degrade various low molecular weight compounds derived from plant polyphenols such as lignin, lignan, and tannin, metabolizes these substances via 2-pyrone-4,6-dicarboxylic acid (PDC). We focused on this metabolic intermediate as a potential raw material for novel, bio-based polymers. We cloned the ligAB and ligC genes of SYK-6, which respectively encode protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase and 4-carboxy-2-hydroxymuconate-6-semialdehyde dehydrogenase, into a broad host range plasmid vector, pKT230MC. The resulting plasmid, pDVABC, was introduced into the PpY1100 strain of Pseudomonas putida, and we found that PDC could be stably produced from protocatechuate and accumulated. In addition, we examined the efficiency of production of PDC from protocatechuate on a 5-L scale in a Luria-Bertani medium containing 100 mM glucose and determined that PDC was stably produced from protocatechuate to yield 10 g/L or more.
Eucalyptus camaldulensis is a tree species in the Myrtaceae that exhibits extremely high resistance to aluminum (Al). To explore a novel mechanism of Al resistance in plants, we examined the Al-binding ligands in roots and their role in Al resistance of E. camaldulensis. We identified a novel type of Al-binding ligand, oenothein B, which is a dimeric hydrolyzable tannin with many adjacent phenolic hydroxyl groups. Oenothein B was isolated from root extracts of E. camaldulensis by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry analyses. Oenothein B formed water-soluble or -insoluble complexes with Al depending on the ratio of oenothein B to Al and could bind at least four Al ions per molecule. In a bioassay using Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), Al-induced inhibition of root elongation was completely alleviated by treatment with exogenous oenothein B, which indicated the capability of oenothein B to detoxify Al. In roots of E. camaldulensis, Al exposure enhanced the accumulation of oenothein B, especially in EDTA-extractable forms, which likely formed complexes with Al. Oenothein B was localized mostly in the root symplast, in which a considerable amount of Al accumulated. In contrast, oenothein B was not detected in three Al-sensitive species, comprising the Myrtaceae tree Melaleuca bracteata, Populus nigra, and Arabidopsis. Oenothein B content in roots of five tree species was correlated with their Al resistance. Taken together, these results suggest that internal detoxification of Al by the formation of complexes with oenothein B in roots likely contributes to the high Al resistance of E. camaldulensis.Aluminum (Al) toxicity is a major factor that limits plant growth in acid soils and affects approximately 30% of the total ice-free land area of the world (von Uexküll and Mutert, 1995). Although Al in soils exist in nonphytotoxic silicate or oxide forms at neutral pH, it is solubilized into a phytotoxic form, mainly as Al 3+
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