“不可能”微生物中的金属酶催化氨和甲烷的厌氧氧化。

Joachim Reimann, Mike S M Jetten, Jan T Keltjens
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引用次数: 22

摘要

铵和甲烷是惰性分子,需要专门的酶来分解N-H和C-H键。直到最近,人们才知道只有需氧微生物是通过氨或甲烷的氧化来生长的。除呼吸作用外,还专门利用氧气来激活惰性底物。假定的对氧的必然需要可能阻碍了对能够厌氧氧化氨和甲烷的微生物的研究。尽管生长极其缓慢,但这些“不可能”的生物确实存在,它们找到了其他方法来处理铵和甲烷。厌氧氨氧化(anammox)细菌利用一氧化氮(NO)的氧化能力将其分子锻造成铵,从而生成肼(N2H4)。依赖亚硝酸盐的厌氧甲烷氧化剂(N-DAMO)再次利用NO,但现在显然歧化成二氮和二氧气体。这种细胞内产生的二氧使N-DAMO细菌采用好氧机制进行甲烷氧化。虽然我们对肼合酶和一氧化氮歧化酶的作用机制还不太了解,但很明显,这些反应完全依赖于已知的其他酶的金属催化剂。金属依赖性转化不仅适用于这些关键酶,而且适用于大多数其他中枢分解代谢途径的反应,同样得到了模式生物中经过充分研究的酶的支持,但适应于自己的特定需要。值得注意的是,这些辅助分解代谢酶并不是厌氧氨氧化细菌和N-DAMO所特有的。在蛋白质数据库中发现同源物,这些同源物来自(部分)已知的,但在大多数情况下未知的物种,这些物种共同构成了一个知之甚少的微生物世界。
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Metal enzymes in "impossible" microorganisms catalyzing the anaerobic oxidation of ammonium and methane.

Ammonium and methane are inert molecules and dedicated enzymes are required to break up the N-H and C-H bonds. Until recently, only aerobic microorganisms were known to grow by the oxidation of ammonium or methane. Apart from respiration, oxygen was specifically utilized to activate the inert substrates. The presumed obligatory need for oxygen may have resisted the search for microorganisms that are capable of the anaerobic oxidation of ammonium and of methane. However extremely slowly growing, these "impossible" organisms exist and they found other means to tackle ammonium and methane. Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria use the oxidative power of nitric oxide (NO) by forging this molecule to ammonium, thereby making hydrazine (N2H4). Nitrite-dependent anaerobic methane oxidizers (N-DAMO) again take advantage of NO, but now apparently disproportionating the compound into dinitrogen and dioxygen gas. This intracellularly produced dioxygen enables N-DAMO bacteria to adopt an aerobic mechanism for methane oxidation.Although our understanding is only emerging how hydrazine synthase and the NO dismutase act, it seems clear that reactions fully rely on metal-based catalyses known from other enzymes. Metal-dependent conversions not only hold for these key enzymes, but for most other reactions in the central catabolic pathways, again supported by well-studied enzymes from model organisms, but adapted to own specific needs. Remarkably, those accessory catabolic enzymes are not unique for anammox bacteria and N-DAMO. Close homologs are found in protein databases where those homologs derive from (partly) known, but in most cases unknown species that together comprise an only poorly comprehended microbial world.

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