While some organisms, including humans, eliminate oxidized purines to get rid of excess nitrogen, for many others the recovery of the purine ring nitrogen is vital. In the so-called ureide pathway, nitrogen is released as ammonia from allantoate through a series of reactions starting with allantoate amidohydrolase (AAH), a manganese-dependent enzyme found in plants and bacteria. We report NMR evidence that the true product of the AAH reaction is S-ureidoglycine, a nonstandard alpha-amino acid that spontaneously releases ammonia in vitro. Using gene proximity and logical genome analysis, we identified a candidate gene (ylbA) for S-ureidoglycine metabolism. The proteins encoded by Escherichia coli and Arabidopsis thaliana genes catalyze the manganese-dependent release of ammonia through hydrolysis of S-ureidoglycine. Hydrolysis then inverts the configuration and yields S-ureidoglycolate. S-Ureidoglycine aminohydrolase (UGHY) is cytosolic in bacteria, whereas in plants it is localized, like allantoate amidohydrolase, in the endoplasmic reticulum. These findings strengthen the basis for the known sensitivity of the ureide pathway to Mn availability and suggest a further rationale for the active transport of Mn in the endoplasmic reticulum of plant cells.
This work provides more information about the new s-kdr M918L mutation in M. persicae, describing a more complicated situation arising from the possible combination with the classic L1014F and M918T. Our data open new questions concerning the origin of these new genotypes with different combinations of target-site mutations, and also their possible influence on control strategies.
Microbial Molecular hydrogen (H2) cycling plays an important role in several ecological niches. Hydrogenases (H2ases), enzymes involved in H2 metabolism, are of great interest for investigating microbial communities, and producing BioH2. To obtain an overall picture of the genetic ability of Cyanobacteria to produce H2ases, we conducted a phylum wide analysis of the distribution of the genes encoding these enzymes in 130 cyanobacterial genomes. The concomitant presence of the H2ase and genes involved in the maturation process, and that of well-conserved catalytic sites in the enzymes were the three minimal criteria used to classify a strain as being able to produce a functional H2ase. The [NiFe] H2ases were found to be the only enzymes present in this phylum. Fifty-five strains were found to be potentially able produce the bidirectional Hox enzyme and 33 to produce the uptake (Hup) enzyme. H2 metabolism in Cyanobacteria has a broad ecological distribution, since only the genomes of strains collected from the open ocean do not possess hox genes. In addition, the presence of H2ase was found to increase in the late branching clades of the phylogenetic tree of the species. Surprisingly, five cyanobacterial genomes were found to possess homologs of oxygen tolerant H2ases belonging to groups 1, 3b, and 3d. Overall, these data show that H2ases are widely distributed, and are therefore probably of great functional importance in Cyanobacteria. The present finding that homologs to oxygen-tolerant H2ases are present in this phylum opens new perspectives for applying the process of photosynthesis in the field of H2 production.
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