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Ph.D. candidate Antonio Bucio analyzes an immunoblot while undergraduate student Matt Wheatley prepares a chromatography column for an enzyme purification step.
In our laboratory we are investigating microbial pathways of short-chain hydrocarbon oxidation and the biochemical, mechanistic, and spectroscopic properties of the enzymes involved in these pathways. The metabolism of aliphatic hydrocarbons by aerobic bacteria involves their activation to alcohols (in the case of alkanes) or epoxides (in the case of alkenes). The oxygenases catalyzing the initial transformations of alkanes and alkenes have been shown in some instances to have potential as catalysts for stereospecific epoxide synthesis and/or chlorinated hydrocarbon degradation. The products of hydrocarbon oxidation are further metabolized by diverse reactions that include oxidation, hydration, isomerization, or carboxylation. Our research has led to the identification of new microbial transformations and enzymes of significant biotechnological and environmental interest (Figure 1).
One ongoing research project concerns the physiology and biochemistry underlying the microbial oxidation of alkenes. For these studies we are using two soil bacteria, Xanthobacter autotrophicus and Rhodococcus rhodochrous, each of which is able to grow using ethylene, propylene, or butylene as their carbon and energy source. The metabolism of alkenes is initiated by a monooxygenase that inserts O2 into the olefin bond, forming the corresponding epoxides in a stereospecific manner. The epoxides are further metabolized by the concerted action of four previously unidentified enzymes that open the epoxide ring and carboxylate a reaction intermediate, forming beta-keto acids as products (Figure 2). This process involves the usage of coenzyme M (2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid), a cofactor previously thought to be used only in the reductive formation of methane by methanogenic Archaea. A major goal of this project is the biochemical and mechanistic characterization of the enzymes of alkene and epoxide metabolism. We are also characterizing the genes involved in alkene and epoxide metabolism and studying how the expression of the alkene-oxidizing enzymes is regulated at the molecular level.
A second ongoing research project in our laboratory concerns bacterial acetone metabolism. Acetone is a toxic molecule that is synthesized industrially and formed biologically during bacterial fermentation and mammalian starvation. A number of bacteria are able to grow with acetone as a source of carbon and energy. In addition, acetone is formed as an intermediate in the metabolism of propane and isopropanol by some bacteria. Bacterial pathways of acetone metabolism and the biochemical properties of acetone-metabolizing enzymes are poorly understood. We are attempting to advance the state of knowledge of these areas by studying the pathway of acetone metabolism and the properties of the acetone-metabolizing enzyme(s) of Xanthobacter autotrophicus, Rhodococcus rhodochrous, Rhodobacter capsulatus, and other acetone-utilizing microorganisms.
We are currently expanding our studies of microbial alkene metabolism to look at pathways and enzymes of isoprene (2-methyl-1,3-butadiene) and ethylene metabolism. Ethylene and isoprene are produced in large quantities (collectively, more than two hundred million tons per year) by plants, and are metabolized by a variety of microorganisms. In spite of the importance of isoprene and ethylene as nonmethane hydrocarbon components of the atmosphere, there is little known of catabolic pathways for their oxidation. We are currently examining pathways of ethylene and isoprene metabolism in several Gram-positive and Gram-negative isolates.

© 2004 Scott A. Ensign

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
0300 Old Main Hill
Logan, UT 84322
(435) 797-3969
ensigns@cc.usu.edu