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An Oxidative Pathway for Microbial Utilization of Methylphosphonic Acid as a Phosphate Source.

Simanga R GamaMargret VogtThomas KalinaKendall HuppFriedrich HammerschmidtKatharina PallitschDavid L Zechel
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2019)
Methylphosphonic acid is synthesized by marine bacteria and is a prominent component of dissolved organic phosphorus. Consequently, methylphosphonic acid also serves as a source of inorganic phosphate (Pi) for marine bacteria that are starved of this nutrient. Conversion of methylphosphonic acid into Pi is currently only known to occur through the carbon-phosphorus lyase pathway, yielding methane as a byproduct. In this work, we describe an oxidative pathway for the catabolism of methylphosphonic acid in Gimesia maris DSM8797. G. maris can use methylphosphonic acid as Pi sources despite lacking a phn operon encoding a carbon-phosphorus lyase pathway. Instead, the genome contains a locus encoding homologues of the non-heme Fe(II) dependent oxygenases HF130PhnY* and HF130PhnZ, which were previously shown to convert 2-aminoethylphosphonic acid into glycine and Pi. GmPhnY* and GmPhnZ1 were produced in E. coli and purified for characterization in vitro. The substrate specificities of the enzymes were evaluated with a panel of synthetic phosphonates. Via 31P NMR spectroscopy, it is demonstrated that the GmPhnY* converts methylphosphonic acid to hydroxymethylphosphonic acid, which in turn is oxidized by GmPhnZ1 to produce formic acid and Pi. In contrast, 2-aminoethylphosphonic acid is not a substrate for GmPhnY* and is therefore not a substrate for this pathway. These results thus reveal a new metabolic fate for methylphosphonic acid.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • single molecule
  • sensitive detection
  • quantum dots
  • living cells
  • visible light