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The 7α-hydroxysteroid dehydratase Hsh2 is essential for anaerobic degradation of the steroid skeleton of 7α-hydroxyl bile salts in the novel denitrifying bacterium Azoarcus sp. strain Aa7.

Authors :
Yücel O
Borgert SR
Poehlein A
Niermann K
Philipp B
Source :
Environmental microbiology [Environ Microbiol] 2019 Feb; Vol. 21 (2), pp. 800-813. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jan 24.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Bile salts are steroid compounds from the digestive tract of vertebrates and enter the environment via defecation. Many aerobic bile-salt degrading bacteria are known but no bacteria that completely degrade bile salts under anoxic conditions have been isolated so far. In this study, the facultatively anaerobic Betaproteobacterium Azoarcus sp. strain Aa7 was isolated that grew with bile salts as sole carbon source under anoxic conditions with nitrate as electron acceptor. Phenotypic and genomic characterization revealed that strain Aa7 used the 2,3-seco pathway for the degradation of bile salts as found in other denitrifying steroid-degrading bacteria such as Sterolibacterium denitrificans. Under oxic conditions strain Aa7 used the 9,10-seco pathway as found in, for example, Pseudomonas stutzeri Chol1. Metabolite analysis during anaerobic growth indicated a reductive dehydroxylation of 7α-hydroxyl bile salts. Deletion of the gene hsh2 <subscript>Aa7</subscript> encoding a 7-hydroxysteroid dehydratase led to strongly impaired growth with cholate and chenodeoxycholate but not with deoxycholate lacking a hydroxyl group at C7. The hsh2 <subscript>Aa7</subscript> deletion mutant degraded cholate and chenodeoxycholate to the corresponding C <subscript>19</subscript> -androstadienediones only while no phenotype change was observed during aerobic degradation of cholate. These results showed that removal of the 7α-hydroxyl group was essential for cleavage of the steroid skeleton under anoxic conditions.<br /> (© 2018 Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1462-2920
Volume :
21
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Environmental microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30680854
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.14508