Shu-Jun Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Shu-Jun Wang.
Biotechnology Letters | 2005
Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Ning-Yi Zhou
A strain of Pseudomonas stutzeri ZWLR2-1 was isolated from soil contaminated with chloronitrobenzenes and identified by 16S rDNA sequencing. This bacterium released chloride and nitrite into the medium when grown on 0.5 mm 2-chloronitrobenzene. PCR amplification and DNA sequencing revealed a DNA fragment encoding a polypeptide homologous to the α-subunit of ring-hydroxylating dioxygenases
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2006
Yi Xiao; Jian-Feng Wu; Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Shuang-Jiang Liu; Ning-Yi Zhou
The genes encoding enzymes involved in the initial reactions during degradation of 4-chloronitrobenzene (4CNB) were characterized from the 4CNB utilizer Pseudomonas putida ZWL73, in which a partial reductive pathway was adopted. A DNA fragment containing genes coding for chloronitrobenzene nitroreductase (CnbA) and hydroxylaminobenzene mutase (CnbB) were PCR-amplified and subsequently sequenced. These two genes were actively expressed in Escherichia coli, and recombinant E. coli cells catalyzed the conversion of 4CNB to 2-amino-5-chlorophenol, which is the ring-cleavage substrate in the degradation of 4CNB. Phylogenetic analyses on sequences of chloronitrobenzene nitroreductase and hydroxylaminobenzene mutase revealed that these two enzymes are closely related to the functionally identified nitrobenzene nitroreductase and hydroxylaminobenzene mutase from Pseudomonas strains JS45 and HS12. The nitroreductase from strain ZWL73 showed a higher specific activity toward 4CNB than nitrobenzene (approximately at a ratio of 1.6:1 for the recombinant or 2:1 for the wild type), which is in contrast to the case where the nitroreductase from nitrobenzene utilizers Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes JS45 with an apparently lower specific activity against 4CNB than nitrobenzene (0.16:1) [Kadiyala et al. Appl Environ Microbiol 69:6520–6526, 2003]. This suggests that the nitroreductase from 4-chloronitrobenzene utilizer P. putida ZWL73 may have evolved to prefer chloronitrobenzene to nitrobenzene as its substrate.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011
Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Jun-Jie Zhang; Hui Dai; Huiru Tang; Ning-Yi Zhou
ABSTRACT Pseudomonas stutzeri ZWLR2-1 utilizes 2-chloronitrobenzene (2CNB) as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy. To identify genes involved in this pathway, a 16.2-kb DNA fragment containing putative 2CNB dioxygenase genes was cloned and sequenced. Of the products from the 19 open reading frames that resulted from this fragment, CnbAc and CnbAd exhibited striking identities to the respective α and β subunits of the Nag-like ring-hydroxylating dioxygenases involved in the metabolism of nitrotoluene, nitrobenzene, and naphthalene. The encoding genes were also flanked by two copies of insertion sequence IS6100. CnbAa and CnbAb are similar to the ferredoxin reductase and ferredoxin for anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase from Burkholderia cepacia DBO1. Escherichia coli cells expressing cnbAaAbAcAd converted 2CNB to 3-chlorocatechol with concomitant nitrite release. Cell extracts of E. coli/pCNBC exhibited chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase activity. The cnbCDEF gene cluster, homologous to a 3-chlorocatechol degradation cluster in Sphingomonas sp. strain TFD44, probably contains all of the genes necessary for the conversion of 3-chlorocatechol to 3-oxoadipate. The patchwork-like structure of this catabolic cluster suggests that the cnb cluster for 2CNB degradation evolved by recruiting two catabolic clusters encoding a nitroarene dioxygenase and a chlorocatechol degradation pathway. This provides another example to help elucidate the bacterial evolution of catabolic pathways in response to xenobiotic chemicals.
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2009
Min Wei; Jun-Jie Zhang; Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; He Fu; Ning-Yi Zhou
Pseudomonas sp. strain WBC-3 utilizes methyl parathion (O,O-dimethyl O-p-nitrophenol phosphorothioate) or para-nitrophenol as the sole source of carbon, nitrogen and energy. A gene encoding methyl parathion hydrolase (MPH) had been characterized previously and found to be located on a typical class I composite transposon that comprised IS6100 (Tnmph). In this study, the transposability of this transposon was confirmed by transposition assays in two distinct mating-out systems. Tnmph was demonstrated to transpose efficiently in a random manner in Pseudomonas putida PaW340 by Southern blot and in Ralstonia sp. U2 by sequence analysis of the Tnmph insertion sites, both exhibiting MPH activity. The linkage of the mph-like gene with IS6100, together with the transposability of Tnmph, as well as its capability to transpose in other phylogenetically divergent bacterial species, suggest that Tnmph may contribute to the wide distribution of mph-like genes and the adaptation of bacteria to organophosphorus compounds.
Journal of Environmental Sciences-china | 2008
Jun-Jie Zhang; Yufeng Xin; Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Ning-Yi Zhou
Pseudomonas sp. strain WBC-3 utilized methyl parathion or para-nitrophenol (PNP) as the sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy, and methyl parathion hydrolase had been previously characterized. Its chemotactic behaviors to aromatics were investigated. The results indicated that strain WBC-3 was attracted to multiple aromatic compounds, including metabolizable or transformable substrates PNP, 4-nitrocatechol, and hydroquinone. Disruption of PNP catabolic genes had no effect on its chemotactic behaviors with the same substrates, indicating that the chemotactic response in this strain was metabolism-independent. Furthermore, it was shown that strain WBC-3 had a constitutive beta-ketoadipate chemotaxis system that responded to a broad range of aromatic compounds, which was different from the inducible beta-ketoadipate chemotaxis described in other Pseudomonas strains.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013
Xiao-Jun Tian; Xiao-Yang Liu; Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Ning-Yi Zhou
A pure bacterial culture was isolated by its ability to utilize 3-nitrotoluene (3NT) as the sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy for growth. Analysis of its 16S rRNA gene showed that the organism (strain ZWL3NT) belongs to the genus Rhodococcus. A rapid disappearance of 3NT with concomitant release of nitrite was observed when strain ZWL3NT was grown on 3NT. The isolate also grew on 2-nitrotoluene, 3-methylcatechol and catechol. Two metabolites, 3-methylcatechol and 2-methyl-cis,cis-muconate, in the reaction mixture were detected after incubation of cells of strain ZWL3NT with 3NT. Enzyme assays showed the presence of both catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and catechol 2,3-dioxygenase in strain ZWL3NT. In addition, a catechol degradation gene cluster (catRABC cluster) for catechol ortho-cleavage pathway was cloned from this strain and cell extracts of Escherichia coli expressing CatA and CatB exhibited catechol 1,2-dioxygenase activity and cis,cis-muconate cycloisomerase activity, respectively. These experimental evidences suggest a novel pathway for 3NT degradation with 3-methylcatechol as a key metabolite by Rhodococcus sp. strain ZWL3NT.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2006
Da Zhen; Hong Liu; Shu-Jun Wang; Jun-Jie Zhang; Fei Zhao; Ning-Yi Zhou
Archives of Microbiology | 2009
Xi-Wen Jiang; Hong Liu; Ying Xu; Shu-Jun Wang; David J. Leak; Ning-Yi Zhou
Archive | 2009
Shu-Jun Wang; Hong Liu; Ning-Yi Zhou
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2010
Yan Liu; Qing Wei; Shu-Jun Wang; Hong Liu; Ning-Yi Zhou