6533b854fe1ef96bd12ae125
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Evidence for Natural Horizontal Transfer of the pcpB Gene in the Evolution of Polychlorophenol-Degrading Sphingomonads
Lars PaulinMarja TiirolaMarkku S. KulomaaHong Wangsubject
Molecular Sequence Datamedicine.disease_causeSphingomonasApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMixed Function OxygenasesGene product03 medical and health sciencesTransduction GeneticRNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineEnvironmental Microbiology and BiodegradationAmino Acid SequenceAlleleGeneEscherichia coli030304 developmental biologySphingobium chlorophenolicumGenetics0303 health sciencesSequence Homology Amino AcidEcologybiology030306 microbiologybiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNASphingomonasBiological EvolutionHorizontal gene transferChlorophenolsFood ScienceBiotechnologydescription
ABSTRACT The chlorophenol degradation pathway in Sphingobium chlorophenolicum is initiated by the pcpB gene product, pentachlorophenol-4-monooxygenase. The distribution of the gene was studied in a phylogenetically diverse group of polychlorophenol-degrading bacteria isolated from contaminated groundwater in Kärkölä, Finland. All the sphingomonads isolated were shown to share pcpB gene homologs with 98.9 to 100% sequence identity. The gene product was expressed when the strains were induced by 2,3,4,6-tetrachlorophenol. A comparative analysis of the 16S rDNA and pcpB gene trees suggested that a recent horizontal transfer of the pcpB gene was involved in the evolution of the catabolic pathway in the Kärkölä sphingomonads. The full-length Kärkölä pcpB gene allele had approximately 70% identity with the three pcpB genes previously sequenced from sphingomonads. It was very closely related to the environmental clones obtained from chlorophenol-enriched soil samples (M. Beaulieu, V. Becaert, L. Deschenes, and R. Villemur, Microbiol. Ecol. 40: 345-355, 2000). The gene was not present in polychlorophenol-degrading nonsphingomonads isolated from the Kärkölä source.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2002-09-01 | Applied and Environmental Microbiology |