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Anaerobic aniline degradation via reductive deamination of 4-aminobenzoyl-CoA in Desulfobacterium anilini
Author(s) -
Sylvia Schnell,
Bernhard Schink
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
archives of microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.648
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1432-072X
pISSN - 0302-8933
DOI - 10.1007/bf00248615
Subject(s) - deamination , aniline , chemistry , carboxylation , medicinal chemistry , cyanide , organic chemistry , stereochemistry , enzyme , catalysis
The initial reactions involved in anaerobic aniline degradation by the sulfate-reducing were studied. Experiments for substrate induction indicated the presence of a common pathway for aniline and 4-aminobenzoate, different from that for degradation of 2-aminobenzoate, 2-hydroxybenzoate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, or phenol. Degradation of aniline by dense cell suspensions depended on CO whereas 4-aminobenzoate degradation did not. If acetyl-CoA oxidation was inhibited by cyanide, benzoate accumulated during degradation of aniline or 4-aminobenzoate, indicating an initial carboxylation of aniline to 4-aminobenzoate, and further degradation via benzoate of both substrates. Extracts of alinine or 4-aminobenzoategrown cells activated 4-aminobenzoate to 4-aminobenzoyl-CoA in the presence of CoA, ATP and Mg. 4-Aminobenzoyl-CoA-synthetase showed a for 4-aminobenzoate lower than 10 μM and an activity of 15.8 nmol · min · mg. 4-Aminobenzoyl-CoA was reductively deaminated to benzoyl-CoA by cell extracts in the presence of low-potential electron donors such as titanium citrate or cobalt sepulchrate (2.1 nmol · min · mg). Lower activities for the reductive deamination were measured with NADH or NADPH. Reductive deamination was also indicated by benzoate accumulation during 4-aminobenzoate degradation in cell suspensions under sulfate limitation. The results provide evidence that aniline is degraded via carboxylation to 4-aminobenzoate, which is activated to 4-aminobenzoyl-CoA and further metabolized by reductive deamination to benzoyl-CoA.

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