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Appl Environ Microbiol, February 1998, p. 646-650, Vol. 64, No. 2
Mikrobiologisches Institut, ETH Zürich,
CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Received 18 August 1997/Accepted 7 November 1997
The metabolism of dichloromethane by Dehalobacterium
formicoaceticum in cell suspensions and crude cell extracts was
investigated. The organism is a strictly anaerobic gram-positive
bacterium that utilizes exclusively dichloromethane as a growth
substrate and ferments this compound to formate and acetate in a molar
ratio of 2:1. When [13C]dichloromethane was degraded by
cell suspensions, formate, the methyl group of acetate, and minor
amounts of methanol were labeled, but there was no nuclear magnetic
resonance signal corresponding to the carboxyl group of acetate. This
finding and previously established carbon and electron balances
suggested that dichloromethane was converted to methylene
tetrahydrofolate, of which two-thirds was oxidized to formate while
one-third gave rise to acetate by incorporation of CO2 from
the medium in the acetyl coenzyme A synthase reaction. When crude
desalted extracts were incubated in the presence of dichloromethane,
tetrahydrofolate, ATP, methyl viologen, and molecular hydrogen,
dichloromethane and tetrahydrofolate were consumed, with the
concomitant formation of stoichiometric amounts of methylene
tetrahydrofolate. The in vitro transfer of the methylene group of
dichloromethane onto tetrahydrofolate required substoichiometric
amounts of ATP. The reaction was inhibited in a light-reversible
fashion by 20 µM propyl iodide, thus suggesting involvement of a
Co(I) corrinoid in the anoxic dehalogenation of dichloromethane.
D. formicoaceticum exhibited normal growth with 0.8 mM
sodium in the medium, and crude extracts contained ATPase activity that
was partially inhibited by
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and azide. During
growth with dichloromethane, the organism thus may conserve energy not
only by substrate-level phosphorylation but also by a chemiosmotic
mechanism involving a sodium-independent F0F1-type ATP synthase.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Metabolism of Dichloromethane by the Strict
Anaerobe Dehalobacterium formicoaceticum
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Mikrobiologisches Institut, ETH Zürich, Schmelzbergstrasse 7, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland. Phone: (41) 1 632 33 24. Fax: (41) 1 632 11 48. E-mail: leisinger{at}micro.biol.ethz.ch.
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