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F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales

Two classes of F(420)-dependent reductases (FDR-A and FDR-B) that can reduce aflatoxins and thereby degrade them have previously been isolated from Mycobacterium smegmatis. One class, the FDR-A enzymes, has up to 100 times more activity than the other. F(420) is a cofactor with a low reduction poten...

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Autores principales: Lapalikar, Gauri V., Taylor, Matthew C., Warden, Andrew C., Scott, Colin, Russell, Robyn J., Oakeshott, John G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3288000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22383957
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030114
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author Lapalikar, Gauri V.
Taylor, Matthew C.
Warden, Andrew C.
Scott, Colin
Russell, Robyn J.
Oakeshott, John G.
author_facet Lapalikar, Gauri V.
Taylor, Matthew C.
Warden, Andrew C.
Scott, Colin
Russell, Robyn J.
Oakeshott, John G.
author_sort Lapalikar, Gauri V.
collection PubMed
description Two classes of F(420)-dependent reductases (FDR-A and FDR-B) that can reduce aflatoxins and thereby degrade them have previously been isolated from Mycobacterium smegmatis. One class, the FDR-A enzymes, has up to 100 times more activity than the other. F(420) is a cofactor with a low reduction potential that is largely confined to the Actinomycetales and some Archaea and Proteobacteria. We have heterologously expressed ten FDR-A enzymes from diverse Actinomycetales, finding that nine can also use F(420)H(2) to reduce aflatoxin. Thus FDR-As may be responsible for the previously observed degradation of aflatoxin in other Actinomycetales. The one FDR-A enzyme that we found not to reduce aflatoxin belonged to a distinct clade (herein denoted FDR-AA), and our subsequent expression and analysis of seven other FDR-AAs from M. smegmatis found that none could reduce aflatoxin. Certain FDR-A and FDR-B enzymes that could reduce aflatoxin also showed activity with coumarin and three furanocoumarins (angelicin, 8-methoxysporalen and imperatorin), but none of the FDR-AAs tested showed any of these activities. The shared feature of the compounds that were substrates was an α,β-unsaturated lactone moiety. This moiety occurs in a wide variety of otherwise recalcitrant xenobiotics and antibiotics, so the FDR-As and FDR-Bs may have evolved to harness the reducing power of F(420) to metabolise such compounds. Mass spectrometry on the products of the FDR-catalyzed reduction of coumarin and the other furanocoumarins shows their spontaneous hydrolysis to multiple products.
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spelling pubmed-32880002012-03-01 F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales Lapalikar, Gauri V. Taylor, Matthew C. Warden, Andrew C. Scott, Colin Russell, Robyn J. Oakeshott, John G. PLoS One Research Article Two classes of F(420)-dependent reductases (FDR-A and FDR-B) that can reduce aflatoxins and thereby degrade them have previously been isolated from Mycobacterium smegmatis. One class, the FDR-A enzymes, has up to 100 times more activity than the other. F(420) is a cofactor with a low reduction potential that is largely confined to the Actinomycetales and some Archaea and Proteobacteria. We have heterologously expressed ten FDR-A enzymes from diverse Actinomycetales, finding that nine can also use F(420)H(2) to reduce aflatoxin. Thus FDR-As may be responsible for the previously observed degradation of aflatoxin in other Actinomycetales. The one FDR-A enzyme that we found not to reduce aflatoxin belonged to a distinct clade (herein denoted FDR-AA), and our subsequent expression and analysis of seven other FDR-AAs from M. smegmatis found that none could reduce aflatoxin. Certain FDR-A and FDR-B enzymes that could reduce aflatoxin also showed activity with coumarin and three furanocoumarins (angelicin, 8-methoxysporalen and imperatorin), but none of the FDR-AAs tested showed any of these activities. The shared feature of the compounds that were substrates was an α,β-unsaturated lactone moiety. This moiety occurs in a wide variety of otherwise recalcitrant xenobiotics and antibiotics, so the FDR-As and FDR-Bs may have evolved to harness the reducing power of F(420) to metabolise such compounds. Mass spectrometry on the products of the FDR-catalyzed reduction of coumarin and the other furanocoumarins shows their spontaneous hydrolysis to multiple products. Public Library of Science 2012-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3288000/ /pubmed/22383957 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030114 Text en Lapalikar et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lapalikar, Gauri V.
Taylor, Matthew C.
Warden, Andrew C.
Scott, Colin
Russell, Robyn J.
Oakeshott, John G.
F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title_full F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title_fullStr F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title_full_unstemmed F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title_short F(420)H(2)-Dependent Degradation of Aflatoxin and other Furanocoumarins Is Widespread throughout the Actinomycetales
title_sort f(420)h(2)-dependent degradation of aflatoxin and other furanocoumarins is widespread throughout the actinomycetales
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3288000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22383957
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030114
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