Abstract

Methylated amines (MAs) are ubiquitous in the marine environment and their subsequent flux into the atmosphere can result in the formation of aerosols and ultimately cloud condensation nuclei. Therefore, these compounds have a potentially important role in climate regulation. Using Ruegeria pomeroyi as a model, we identified the genes encoding dimethylamine (DMA) monooxygenase (dmmABC) and demonstrate that this enzyme degrades DMA to monomethylamine (MMA). Although only dmmABC are required for enzyme activity in recombinant Escherichia coli, we found that an additional gene, dmmD, was required for the growth of R. pomeroyi on MAs. The dmmDABC genes are absent from the genomes of multiple marine bacteria, including all representatives of the cosmopolitan SAR11 clade. Consequently, the abundance of dmmDABC in marine metagenomes was substantially lower than the genes required for other metabolic steps of the MA degradation pathway. Thus, there is a genetic and potential metabolic bottleneck in the marine MA degradation pathway. Our data provide an explanation for the observation that DMA-derived secondary organic aerosols (SOAs) are among the most abundant SOAs detected in fine marine particles over the North and Tropical Atlantic Ocean.

Highlights

  • Methylated amines (MAs) form part of the marine dissolved organic nitrogen pool and are ubiquitous in the marine environment

  • Off the coast of California, during periods of elevated primary production, a shift in the composition of secondary organic aerosols (SOAs) toward amine-derived compounds resulted in an increase in cloud condensation nuclei activity (Sorooshian et al, 2009)

  • All available defined marine bacterial genomes were screened for enzymes catalyzing MA degradation using a BLASTP analysis with Tmm (Spo1551), Tdm (Spo1562), DmmD (Spo1579), DmmA (Spo1580), DmmB (Spo1581), DmmC (Spo1582), GmaS (Spo1573) and TmoX (Spo1548) from R. pomeroyi DSS-3 as query sequences using a stringent cutoff value of e-50

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Summary

Introduction

Methylated amines (MAs) form part of the marine dissolved organic nitrogen pool and are ubiquitous in the marine environment. Recent studies have identified a number of the key genes and enzymes catalyzing the degradation of TMA, TMAO and MMA in the marine environment (Chen et al, 2010, 2011; Lidbury et al, 2014) (Figure 1a).

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