Abstract

Phosphonopyruvate hydrolase, a novel bacterial carbon-phosphorus bond cleavage enzyme, was purified to homogeneity by a series of chromatographic steps from cell extracts of a newly isolated environmental strain of Variovorax sp. Pal2. The enzyme was inducible in the presence of phosphonoalanine or phosphonopyruvate; unusually, its expression was independent of the phosphate status of the cell. The native enzyme had a molecular mass of 63 kDa with a subunit mass of 31.2 kDa. Activity of purified phosphonopyruvate hydrolase was Co2+-dependent and showed a pH optimum of 6.7-7.0. The enzyme had a Km of 0.53 mm for its sole substrate, phosphonopyruvate, and was inhibited by the analogues phosphonoformic acid, 3-phosphonopropionic acid, and hydroxymethylphosphonic acid. The nucleotide sequence of the phosphonopyruvate hydrolase structural gene indicated that it is a member of the phosphoenolpyruvate phosphomutase/isocitrate lyase superfamily with 41% identity at the amino acid level to the carbon-to-phosphorus bond-forming enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate phosphomutase from Tetrahymena pyriformis. Thus its apparently ancient evolutionary origins differ from those of each of the two carbon-phosphorus hydrolases that have been reported previously; phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase is a member of the haloacetate dehalogenase family, whereas phosphonoacetate hydrolase belongs to the alkaline phosphatase superfamily of zinc-dependent hydrolases. Phosphonopyruvate hydrolase is likely to be of considerable significance in global phosphorus cycling, because phosphonopyruvate is known to be a key intermediate in the formation of all naturally occurring compounds that contain the carbon-phosphorus bond.

Highlights

  • Organophosphonates are a group of biogenic compounds characterized by the presence of a stable covalent carbon to

  • Bacterial strains capable of metabolizing the compound as sole carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus source were obtained from all six sites sampled; the isolates were found to utilize only the L-enantiomer of phosphonoalanine

  • Enzyme assays carried out on crude extracts of the cultures demonstrated that each strain contained phosphonopyruvate hydrolase (PPH) activity, which was inducible in the presence of phosphonoalanine or phosphonopyruvate or both

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

C–P, covalent carbon to phosphorus bond; PEP mutase, phosphoenolpyruvate phosphomutase; PPH, phosphonopyruvate hydrolase; CAPS, 3-(cyclohexylamino)propanesulfonic acid. The enzyme shares a common ancestry with PEP mutase, which is responsible for phosphonopyruvate biosynthesis (see above); the interaction of the two activities is likely to play an important regulatory role in global phosphorus cycling

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