Physiology And Biochemistry

Genetic and chemical characterization of ibuprofen degradation by Sphingomonas Ibu-2

  • 1Graduate Program in Environmental Toxicology, Institute for Comparative and Environmental Toxicology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
  • 2Department of Microbiology, B53A Wing Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
  • Correspondence
    Anthony G. Hay agh5{at}cornell.edu
  • Microbiology 2013; 159(Pt 3):621–632 · https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.062273-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    Sphingomonas Ibu-2 has the unusual ability to cleave the acid side chain from the pharmaceutical ibuprofen and related arylacetic acid derivatives to yield corresponding catechols under aerobic conditions via a previously uncharacterized mechanism. Screening a chromosomal library of Ibu-2 DNA in Escherichia coli EPI300 allowed us to identify one fosmid clone (pFOS3G7) that conferred the ability to metabolize ibuprofen to isobutylcatechol. Characterization of pFOS3G7 loss-of-function transposon mutants permitted identification of five ORFs, ipfABDEF, whose predicted amino acid sequences bore similarity to the large and small units of an aromatic dioxygenase (ipfAB), a sterol carrier protein X (SCPx) thiolase (ipfD), a domain of unknown function 35 (DUF35) protein (ipfE) and an aromatic CoA ligase (ipfF). Two additional ORFs, ipfH and ipfI, which encode putative ferredoxin reductase and ferredoxin components of an aromatic dioxygenase system, respectively, were also identified on pFOS3G7. Complementation of a markerless loss-of-function ipfD deletion mutant restored catechol production as did complementation of the ipfF Tn mutant. Expression of subcloned ipfABDEF alone in E. coli did not impart full metabolic activity unless coexpressed with ipfHI. CoA ligation followed by ring oxidation is common to phenylacetic acid pathways. However, the need for a putative SCPx thiolase (IpfD) and DUF35 protein (IpfE) in aerobic arylacetic acid degradation is unprecedented. This work provides preliminary insights into the mechanism behind this novel arylacetic acid-deacylating, catechol-generating activity.

    • The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession number for the sequences of ipfABDEF is EF090268.1.

    • One supplementary table and one supplementary figure are available with the online version of this paper.

    • Edited by: R. E. Parales

    Abbreviations:
    Amp
    ampicillin
    Chl
    chloramphenicol
    DUF
    domain of unknown function
    NCBI
    National Center for Biotechnology Information
    NSAID
    non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
    PAA
    phenylacetic acid
    SCPx
    sterol carrier protein X
    Tet
    tetracycline