Geraniol and geranial dehydrogenases induced in anaerobic monoterpene degradation by Castellaniella defragrans

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Abstract

Castellaniella defragrans is a Betaproteobacterium capable of coupling the oxidation of monoterpenes with denitrification. Geraniol dehydrogenase (GeDH) activity was induced during growth with limonene in comparison to growth with acetate. The N-terminal sequence of the purified enzyme directed the cloning of the corresponding open reading frame (ORF), the first bacterial gene for a GeDH (geoA, for geraniol oxidation pathway). The C. defragrans geraniol dehydrogenase is a homodimeric enzyme that affiliates with the zinc-containing benzyl alcohol dehydrogenases in the superfamily of medium-chain-length dehydrogenases/reductases (MDR). The purified enzyme most efficiently catalyzes the oxidation of perillyl alcohol (kcat/Km=2.02×106M-1 s-1), followed by geraniol (kcat/Km=1.57×106M-1 s-1). Apparent Km values of<10μMare consistent with an in vivo toxicity of geraniol above 5μM. In the genetic vicinity of geoA is a putative aldehyde dehydrogenase that was named geoB and identified as a highly abundant protein during growth with phellandrene. Extracts of Escherichia coli expressing geoB demonstrated in vitro a geranial dehydrogenase (GaDH) activity. GaDH activity was independent of coenzyme A. The irreversible formation of geranic acid allows for a metabolic flux from β-myrcene via linalool, geraniol, and geranial to geranic acid. © 2012, American Society for Microbiology.

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Lüddeke, F., Wülfing, A., Timke, M., Germer, F., Weber, J., Dikfidan, A., … Harder, J. (2012). Geraniol and geranial dehydrogenases induced in anaerobic monoterpene degradation by Castellaniella defragrans. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 78(7), 2128–2136. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.07226-11

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