Abstract

Caffeine (1,3,7-trimethylxanthine), a ubiquitous component of human diet has been suggested as a chemical indicator of ecosystem impacts of sewage spills and treated effluent discharges because it is not sufficiently metabolized by wastewater microorganisms. This study identified enzymes responsible for caffeine metabolism in sewage bacteria. Pseudomonas putida biotype A (ATCC 700097) originally isolated as a rare caffeine-degrading organism in domestic wastewater exhibited diauxic growth on caffeine, concomitant with the expression of a P450-type cytochrome and peroxidase enzyme activities. Initial growth phase lasted 13.8 ± 1.4 h with a growth rate that was five times slower than the secondary growth phase that lasted 5.5 ± 1.2 h. Molecular and enzymatic characteristics of the cytochrome P450-type enzyme differ from the previously described cytochrome P450 (P450cam) of P. putida (ATCC 17453) involved in camphor metabolism. The caffeine-inducible cytochrome P450-type enzyme exhibited a carbon monoxide difference spectrum peak at 450 nm, but does not allow growth on camphor. Caffeine induced production of haem-associated peroxidase activity was confirmed with 3,3′, 5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine–H2O2 reaction in polyacrylamide gels. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers derived from the gene for cytochrome P450cam (camC) of P. putida (ATCC 17453) did not yield an amplification product when DNA extracted from P. putida strain ATCC 700097 was used as template. The data demonstrate that caffeine is metabolized through a specific biphasic pathway driven by oxygen-demanding enzymes.

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