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J. Bacteriol., 08 1995, 4713-4720, Vol 177, No. 16
MB Leddy, DW Phipps and HF Ridgway
Pseudomonas putida 54g grew on mineral salts with toluene and exhibited
catechol-2,3-dioxygenase (C23O) activity, indicating a meta pathway. After
10 to 15 days on toluene, nondegrading (Tol-) variants approached nearly
10% of total CFU. Auxotrophs were not detected among variants, suggesting
selective loss of catabolic function(s). Variant formation was substrate
dependent, since Tol- cells were observed on neither ethylbenzene, glucose,
nor peptone-based media nor when toluene catabolism was suppressed by
glucose. Unlike wild-type cells, variants did not grow on gasoline,
toluene, benzene, ethylbenzene, benzoate, or catechol, suggesting loss of
meta pathway function. Catabolic and C23O activities were restored to
variants via transfer of a 78-mDa TOL-like plasmid from a wild-type Tol+
donor. Tests for reversion of variants to Tol+ were uniformly negative,
suggesting possible delection or excision of catabolic genes. Deletions
were confirmed in some variants by failure to hybridize with a DNA probe
specific for the xylE gene encoding C23O. Cells grown on benzoate remained
Tol+ but were C23O- and contained a plasmid of reduced size or were plasmid
free, suggesting an alternate chromosomal catabolic pathway, also defective
in variants. Cells exposed to benzyl alcohol, the initial oxidation product
of toluene, accumulated > 13% variants in 5 days, even when cell
division was repressed by nitrogen deprivation to abrogate selection
processes. No variants formed in identical ethylbenzene-exposed controls.
The results suggest that benzyl alcohol mediates irreversible defects in
both a plasmid-associated meta pathway and an alternate chromosomal
pathway.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Catabolite-mediated mutations in alternate toluene degradative pathways in Pseudomonas putida
Biotechnology Research Department, Orange County Water District, Fountain Valley, California 92728-8300, USA.
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