Jeffrey R. Allen
Utah State University
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Archives of Microbiology | 1998
Scott A. Ensign; Frederick J. Small; Jeffrey R. Allen; Miriam K. Sluis
Abstract Short-chain aliphatic epoxides and ketones are two classes of toxic organic compounds formed biogenically and anthropogenically. In spite of their toxicity, these compounds are utilized as primary carbon and energy sources or are generated as intermediate metabolites in the metabolism of other compounds (e.g., alkenes, alkanes, and secondary alcohols) by a number of diverse bacteria. One bacterium capable of using both classes of compounds is the gram-negative aerobe Xanthobacter strain Py2. Studies of epoxide and ketone (acetone) metabolism by Xanthobacter strain Py2 have revealed a central role for CO2 in these processes. Both classes of compounds are metabolized by carboxylation reactions that produce β-keto acids as products. The epoxide- and ketone-converting enzymes are distinct carboxylases with molecular properties and cofactor requirements unprecedented for other carboxylases. Epoxide carboxylase is a four-component multienzyme complex that requires NADPH and NAD+ as cofactors. In the course of epoxide carboxylation, a transhydrogenation reaction occurs wherein NADPH undergoes oxidation and NAD+ undergoes reduction. Acetone carboxylase is a multimeric (three-subunit) ATP-dependent enzyme that forms AMP and inorganic phosphate as ATP hydrolysis products in the course of acetone carboxylation. Recent studies have demonstrated that acetone metabolism in diverse anaerobic bacteria (sulfate reducers, denitrifiers, phototrophs, and fermenters) also proceeds by carboxylation reactions. ATP-dependent acetone carboxylase activity has been demonstrated in cell-free extracts of the anaerobic acetone-utilizers Rhodobacter capsulatus, Rhodomicrobium vannielii, and Thiosphaera pantotropha. These studies have identified new roles for CO2 as a cosubstrate in the metabolism of two classes of important xenobiotic compounds. In addition, two new classes of carboxylases have been identified, the investigation of which promises to reveal new insights into biological strategies for the fixation of CO2 to organic substrates.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Epoxide metabolism in the aerobic bacteriumXanthobacter strain Py2 proceeds by an NADPH- and NAD+-dependent carboxylation reaction that forms β-keto acids as products. Epoxide carboxylase, the enzyme catalyzing this reaction, was resolved from the soluble fraction of cell-free extracts into four protein components that are obligately required for functional reconstitution of epoxide carboxylase activity. One of these components, component II, has previously been purified and characterized as an NADPH:disulfide oxidoreductase. In the present study, the three additional epoxide carboxylase components have been purified to homogeneity and characterized. These component proteins are as follows: component I, a homohexameric protein consisting of 41.7-kDa subunits; component III, a dimeric protein consisting of 26.0- and 26.2-kDa polypeptides; and component IV, a dimeric protein consisting of a single 25.4-kDa polypeptide. Component I contained 5 mol of tightly bound zinc per mol of protein. Component I was specifically inactivated by methylepoxypropane, a time-dependent irreversible inactivator of epoxide carboxylase activity, suggesting that this component plays an integral role in epoxide binding and activation. No metals or organic cofactors were detected for components III and IV. The molecular weights, N-terminal sequences, and amino acid compositions of the purified epoxide carboxylase components were determined and found to correlate with open reading frames within and adjacent to a cloned fragment of DNA that complementsXanthobacter Py2 mutants defective in epoxide degradation. Using the purified epoxide carboxylase system, epoxide carboxylation was found to be stoichiometrically coupled to the transhydrogenation of pyridine nucleotide cofactors according to the following equation: epoxypropane + CO2 + NADPH + NAD+ → acetoacetate + H+ + NADP+ + NADH.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Jeffrey R. Allen; Daniel D. Clark; Jonathan G. Krum; Scott A. Ensign
Journal of Bacteriology | 1996
Miriam K. Sluis; F J Small; Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Annual Review of Biochemistry | 2003
Scott A. Ensign; Jeffrey R. Allen
Journal of Bacteriology | 1996
Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Biochemistry | 1999
Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Journal of Bacteriology | 1998
Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Biochemistry | 2000
Daniel D. Clark; Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign
Journal of Bacteriology | 1997
Jeffrey R. Allen; Scott A. Ensign