Biodegradation of methyl parathion and p-nitrophenol: evidence for the presence of a p-nitrophenol 2-hydroxylase in a Gram-negative Serratia sp. strain DS001

Pakala, SB; Gorla, P; Pinjari, AB; Krovidi, RK; Baru, R; Yanamandra, M; Merrick, M; Siddavattam, D

HERO ID

2530291

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2007

Language

English

PMID

17043828

HERO ID 2530291
In Press No
Year 2007
Title Biodegradation of methyl parathion and p-nitrophenol: evidence for the presence of a p-nitrophenol 2-hydroxylase in a Gram-negative Serratia sp. strain DS001
Authors Pakala, SB; Gorla, P; Pinjari, AB; Krovidi, RK; Baru, R; Yanamandra, M; Merrick, M; Siddavattam, D
Journal Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Volume 73
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1452-1462
Abstract A soil bacterium capable of utilizing methyl parathion as sole carbon and energy source was isolated by selective enrichment on minimal medium containing methyl parathion. The strain was identified as belonging to the genus Serratia based on a phylogram constructed using the complete sequence of the 16S rRNA. Serratia sp. strain DS001 utilized methyl parathion, p-nitrophenol, 4-nitrocatechol, and 1,2,4-benzenetriol as sole carbon and energy sources but could not grow using hydroquinone as a source of carbon. p-Nitrophenol and dimethylthiophosphoric acid were found to be the major degradation products of methyl parathion. Growth on p-nitrophenol led to release of stoichiometric amounts of nitrite and to the formation of 4-nitrocatechol and benzenetriol. When these catabolic intermediates of p-nitrophenol were added to resting cells of Serratia sp. strain DS001 oxygen consumption was detected whereas no oxygen consumption was apparent when hydroquinone was added to the resting cells suggesting that it is not part of the p-nitrophenol degradation pathway. Key enzymes involved in degradation of methyl parathion and in conversion of p-nitrophenol to 4-nitrocatechol, namely parathion hydrolase and p-nitrophenol hydroxylase component "A" were detected in the proteomes of the methyl parathion and p-nitrophenol grown cultures, respectively. These studies report for the first time the existence of a p-nitrophenol hydroxylase component "A", typically found in Gram-positive bacteria, in a Gram-negative strain of the genus Serratia.
Doi 10.1007/s00253-006-0595-z
Pmid 17043828
Wosid WOS:000243802100030
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Peer Review No