4.7 Article

Purification, characterization and cloning of aldehyde dehydrogenase from Rhodococcus erythropolis UPV-1

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages 1073-1086

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-006-0558-4

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The enzyme responsible for formaldehyde removal in industrial wastewaters by cells of Rhodococcus erythropolis UPV-1 was identified as a broad-specific aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3). The enzyme was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from ethanol-grown cells with a specific activity of 19.5 U mg(-1) protein and an activity recovery of 56%. The enzyme showed an isoelectric point (pI) of 5.3 and was a trimer of 162 kDa consisting of three identical 54-kDa subunits. It was specific for NAD(+) and showed hyperbolic kinetics for this coenzyme (K (m)=90 mu M), but sigmoidal kinetics for the aliphatic aldehydes used as substrates. The enzyme affinity for aldehydes increased with their hydrocarbon chain length, ranging from 333 mu M for formaldehyde to 85 nM for n-octanal. The corresponding calculated Hill coefficients were in the 1.55-2.77 range. With n-propanal as substrate, the optimum pH and temperature for activity were 9.5-10.0 and 47.5 degrees C, respectively, with an E-a for catalysis of 28.6 kJ mol(-1). NAD(+)s protected the enzyme against thermal inactivation, but aldehydes were ineffective. The activity was severely inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, indicating that a thiol was essential for catalysis. The 1,524-bp aldhR gene encoding a 507-amino-acid protein was expressed in cells of Escherichia coli M15 as a hexahistidine-tagged protein.

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