Abstract

Burkholderia cepacia (formerly Pseudomonas cepacia) grows in media containing acetamide or propionamide as C and N sources. Chromosomal DNA from a hospital isolate of B. cepacia served as a template in PCRs using primers designed for the amplification of the P. aeruginosa amiE gene that encodes an aliphatic amidase. Partial sequencing of the PCR products gave a translated sequence 100% identical with the amino acid sequence of P. aeruginosa amidase. A search of Burkholderia genomes detected a putative amidase in B. cepacia J2315 with high identity to the P. aeruginosa amidase and predicted that other Burkholderia species also possessed CN_hydrolases that use the same catalytic triad (Glu–Lys–Cys) as amidase. Superimposition of theoretical three-dimensional models suggested that differences in the amino acid sequences between amidases from B. cepacia (hospital isolate) and B. cepacia J2315 do not affect their three-dimensional structure.

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