4.6 Article

Haloalkylphosphorus Hydrolases Purified from Sphingomonas sp Strain TDK1 and Sphingobium sp Strain TCM1

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 80, Issue 18, Pages 5866-5873

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01845-14

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [21710075, 20310039]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20310039, 21710075, 24780096] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Phosphotriesterases catalyze the first step of organophosphorus triester degradation. The bacterial phosphotriesterases purified and characterized to date hydrolyze mainly aryl dialkyl phosphates, such as parathion, paraoxon, and chlorpyrifos. In this study, we purified and cloned two novel phosphotriesterases from Sphingomonas sp. strain TDK1 and Sphingobium sp. strain TCM1 that hydrolyze tri(haloalkyl) phosphates, and we named these enzymes haloalkylphosphorus hydrolases (TDK-HAD and TCMHAD, respectively). Both HADs are monomeric proteins with molecular masses of 59.6 (TDK-HAD) and 58.4 kDa (TCM-HAD). The enzyme activities were affected by the addition of divalent cations, and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry analysis suggested that zinc is a native cofactor for HADs. These enzymes hydrolyzed not only chlorinated organophosphates but also a brominated organophosphate [tris(2,3-dibromopropyl) phosphate], as well as triaryl phosphates (tricresyl and triphenyl phosphates). Paraoxon-methyl and paraoxon were efficiently degraded by TCM-HAD, whereas TDK-HAD showed weak activity toward these substrates. Dichlorvos was degraded only by TCM-HAD. The enzymes displayed weak or no activity against trialkyl phosphates and organophosphorothioates. The TCM-HAD and TDK-HAD genes were cloned and found to encode proteins of 583 and 574 amino acid residues, respectively. The primary structures of TCM-HAD and TDK-HAD were very similar, and the enzymes also shared sequence similarity with fenitrothion hydrolase (FedA) of Burkholderia sp. strain NF100 and organophosphorus hydrolase (OphB) of Burkholderia sp. strain JBA3. However, the substrate specificities and quaternary structures of the HADs were largely different from those of FedA and OphB. These results show that HADs from sphingomonads are novel members of the bacterial phosphotriesterase family.

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