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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Microbial oxidation of gaseous hydrocarbons: production of methyl ketones from their corresponding secondary alcohols by methane- and methanol-grown microbes.

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TLDR
Metal-chelating agents inhibit the production of 2-butanone, suggesting the involvement of metal(s) in the oxidation of secondary alcohols.
Abstract
Cultures of methane- or methanol-utilizing microbes, including obligate (both types I and II) and facultative methylotrophic bacteria, obligate methanol utilizers, and methanol-grown yeasts were isolated from lake water of Warinanco Park, Linden, N.J., and lake and soil samples of Bayway Refinery, Linden, N.J. Resting-cell suspensions of these, and of other known C1-utilizing microbes, oxidized secondary alcohols to their corresponding methyl ketones. The product methyl ketones accumulated extracellularly. Succinate-grown cells of facultative methylotrophs did not oxidize secondary alcohols. Among the secondary alcohols, 2-butanol was oxidized at the highest rate. The optimal conditions for in vivo methyl ketone formation were compared among five different types of C1-utilizing microbes. Some enzymatic degradation of 2-butanone was observed. The product, 2-butanone, did not inhibit the oxidation of 2-butanol. The rate of the 2-butanone production was linear for the first 4 h of incubation for all five cultures tested. A yeast culture had the highest production rate. The optimum temperature for the production of 2-butanone was 35°C for all the bacteria tested. The yeast culture had a higher temperature optimum (40°C), and there was a reasonably high 2-butanone production rate even at 45°C. Metal-chelating agents inhibit the production of 2-butanone, suggesting the involvement of metal(s) in the oxidation of secondary alcohols. Secondary alcohol dehydrogenase activity was found in the cell-free soluble extract of sonically disrupted cells. The cell-free system requires a cofactor, specifically nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, for its activity. This is the first report of a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent, secondary alcohol-specific enzyme.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Physiology, biochemistry, and specific inhibitors of CH4, NH4+, and CO oxidation by methanotrophs and nitrifiers.

C Bédard, +1 more
TL;DR: The lack of inhibitors specific for one or the other of the two groups of bacteria hampers the determination of their relative roles in nature.
Book ChapterDOI

Bacterial oxidation of methane and methanol.

TL;DR: This chapter focuses on the enzymes involved in the bacterial oxidation of methane and methanol to formaldehyde and the energy transduction systems involved in coupling these oxidations to ATP synthesis by way of electron transport chains, proton translocation, and the proton motive force.
Journal ArticleDOI

Novel NADP-linked alcohol--aldehyde/ketone oxidoreductase in thermophilic ethanologenic bacteria.

R J Lamed, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1981 - 
TL;DR: An NADP-specific alcohol--aldehyde/ketone oxidoreductase was detected in cell extracts of Thermoanaerobium brockii and Clostridium thermohydrosulfuricum and appears to have properties distinct from those of previously described primary- and secondary-alcohol dehydrogenases.
References
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Journal Article

Protein Measurement with the Folin Phenol Reagent

TL;DR: Procedures are described for measuring protein in solution or after precipitation with acids or other agents, and for the determination of as little as 0.2 gamma of protein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enrichment, isolation and some properties of methane-utilizing bacteria.

TL;DR: The organisms were classified into five groups on the basis of morphology, fine structure, and type of resting stage formed (exospores and different types of cysts) and into subgroups on other properties.
Book ChapterDOI

3 Alcohol Dehydrogenases

TL;DR: This chapter describes the advances with an emphasis on the structures of the alcohol dehydrogenases and the relationship between structure and function, and establishes that mammalian alcohol dehydrogensases have a distant evolutionary link to both the yeast and bacterial enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The soluble methane mono-oxygenase of Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). Its ability to oxygenate n-alkanes, n-alkenes, ethers, and alicyclic, aromatic and heterocyclic compounds.

TL;DR: Methane mono-oxygenase of Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) catalyses the oxidation of various substituted methane derivatives including methanol and, in some of its catalytic properties, apparently resembles the analogous enzyme from Methylomonas methanica but differs from those found in Methylosinus trichosporium and M methylomonas albus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methylobacterium, a New Genus of Facultatively Methylotrophic Bacteria

TL;DR: This bacterium differs from all previously described genera and species of methane-oxidizing bacteria in its ability to utilize a variety of organic substrates with carbon-carbon bonds as sources of carbon and energy.
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