Study of anoxic and oxic cholesterol metabolism by Sterolibacterium denitrificans

  • Yin Ru Chiang
  • , Wael Ismail
  • , Dimitri Heintz
  • , Christine Schaeffer
  • , Alain Van Dorsselaer
  • , Georg Fuchs*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

76 Scopus citations

Abstract

The initial enzymes and genes involved in the anoxic metabolism of cholesterol were studied in the denitrifying bacterium Sterolibacterium denitrificans Chol-1ST. The second enzyme of the proposed pathway, cholest-4-en-3-one-Δ1-dehydrogenase (AcmB), was partially purified. Based on amino acid sequence analysis, a gene probe was derived to screen a cosmid library of chromosomal DNA for the acmB gene. A positive clone comprising a 43-kbp DNA insert was sequenced. In addition to the acmB gene, the DNA fragment harbored the acmA gene, which encodes the first enzyme of the pathway, cholesterol dehydrogenase/isomerase. The acmA gene was overexpressed, and the recombinant dehydrogenase/isomerase was purified. This enzyme catalyzes the predicted transformation of cholesterol to cholest-4-en-3-one. S. denitrificans cells grown aerobically with cholesterol exhibited the same pattern of soluble proteins and cell extracts formed the same 14C-labeled products from [14C]cholesterol as cells that were grown under anoxic, denitrifying conditions. This is especially remarkable for the late products that are formed by anaerobic hydroxylation of the cholesterol side chain with water as the oxygen donor. Hence, this facultative anaerobic bacterium may use the anoxic pathway lacking any oxygenase-dependent reaction also under oxic conditions. This confers metabolic flexibility to such facultative anaerobic bacteria.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)905-914
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Bacteriology
Volume190
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 02 2008
Externally publishedYes

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