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Vol. 180, Issue 13, 3368-3374, July 1, 1998
Enantioselective Uptake and Degradation of the Chiral Herbicide
Dichlorprop [(RS)-2-(2,4-Dichlorophenoxy)propanoic acid]
by Sphingomonas herbicidovorans MH
Christian
Zipper
,
Monika
Bunk,
Alexander J. B.
Zehnder, and
Hans-Peter E.
Kohler*
Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental
Science and Technology, CH-8600 Dübendorf, and Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
 |
ABSTRACT |
Sphingomonas herbicidovorans MH was able to completely
degrade both enantiomers of the chiral herbicide dichlorprop
[(RS)-2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)propanoic acid], with
preferential degradation of the (S) enantiomer over the
(R) enantiomer. These results are in agreement with the
recently reported enantioselective degradation of
mecoprop [(RS)-2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)propanoic acid] by this bacterium (C. Zipper, K. Nickel, W. Angst, and
H.-P. E. Kohler, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 62:4318-4322, 1996).
Uptake of (R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) was inducible. Initial uptake
rates of cells grown on the respective substrate showed substrate
saturation kinetics with apparent affinity constants
(Kt) of 108, 93, and 117 µM and maximal velocities (Vmax) of 19, 10, and 21 nmol
min
1 mg of protein
1 for
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D, respectively. Transport of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D was completely inhibited by
various uncouplers and by nigericin but was only marginally inhibited
by valinomycin and by the ATPase inhibitor N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimine.
Experiments on the substrate specificity of the putative transport
systems revealed that (R)-dichlorprop uptake was inhibited
by (R)-mecoprop but not by
(S)-mecoprop, (S)-dichlorprop, or
2,4-D. On the other hand, the (S)-dichlorprop transport was
inhibited by (S)-mecoprop but not by
(R)-mecoprop, (R)-dichlorprop, or 2,4-D.
These results provide evidence that the first step in the degradation
of dichlorprop, mecoprop, and 2,4-D by S. herbicidovorans is active transport and that three inducible,
proton gradient-driven uptake systems exist: one for (R)-dichlorprop and (R)-mecoprop, another
for (S)-dichlorprop and (S)-mecoprop, and a
third for 2,4-D.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Research on the biodegradation of
chiral xenobiotics can provide a better understanding of the processes
that govern enantioselectivity in the microbial degradation and
environmental fate of stereoisomers. We have examined the microbial
degradation of the widely used chiral herbicide mecoprop
[(RS)-2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy)propanoic acid] by
a pure bacterial strain that was isolated from soil. This
strain, Sphingomonas herbicidovorans MH, can utilize
both enantiomers of mecoprop as sole carbon and energy sources
for growth (24). Growth experiments with the pure
enantiomers as well as with racemic mecoprop revealed that the
(S) enantiomer disappeared much faster from the culture
medium than the (R) enantiomer. Based on these results, we
concluded that specific catabolic enzymes must be involved in the
degradation of each enantiomer of mecoprop (24). This
view was confirmed by the finding that two
-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases are involved in the enantioselective degradation of
mecoprop in S. herbicidovorans MH, one that is
specific for (R)-mecoprop and one that is
specific for (S)-mecoprop (17). The
(S) enantiomer-specific dioxygenase activity is
constitutively expressed, whereas the (R)
enantiomer-specific enzyme activity is present only when cells grow on
the (R) enantiomer. Both enzymes are present in cells grown
on the racemic mixture. Extracts of cells grown on complex medium and
extracts of cells grown on (S)-mecoprop contain
equally high activities of the (S) enantiomer-specific dioxygenase (17). However, intact cells grown on
complex medium show very low oxygen uptake rates with
(S)-mecoprop, whereas
(S)-mecoprop-grown cells show high oxygen
consumption with (S)-mecoprop (24). These findings suggested the existence of specific uptake systems and led us
to examine the uptake of phenoxyalkanoic acids by S. herbicidovorans after growth on various substrates.
Many aromatic compounds are taken up by bacteria through
energy-dependent transport systems (4, 5, 10, 11, 15, 16).
The uptake of 4-chlorobenzoate by the coryneform bacterium NTB-1 is
inducible and coupled to the proton motive force (4). The
uptake of 4-toluene sulfonate by Comamonas testosteroni T-2 is also inducible and shows substrate saturation kinetics
(11). Transport of 4-toluene sulfonate is inhibited
completely by uncouplers but only marginally by ATPase inhibitors, and
the authors proposed that 4-toluene sulfonate is taken up by an
inducible secondary proton symport system (11). The uptake
of 4-hydroxybenzoate by Pseudomonas putida is driven by the
proton motive force, and the gene that encodes a 4-hydroxybenzoate
transporter was identified, cloned, and expressed in
Escherichia coli. Furthermore, it was found that
4-hydroxybenzoate transport is an integral feature of the
-ketoadipate pathway in P. putida (5, 15, 16). The uptake of the herbicide 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) by
Ralstonia eutropha JMP134 is inducible, is sensitive to
metabolic inhibitors, and shows substrate saturation kinetics
(10). Moreover, the authors identified a gene, designated
tfdK, whose translation product shows resemblance to
transport proteins of the major facilitator superfamily, and they
suggested that tfdK encodes the 2,4-D transporter of
R. eutropha JMP134.
Our results indicate that S. herbicidovorans MH has two
distinct uptake systems for chiral phenoxypropionic acid herbicides, one for the (R) enantiomer and another one for the
(S) enantiomer of dichlorprop and mecoprop. Furthermore,
evidence was obtained that 2,4-D was taken up by a third transport
system.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Organism and growth conditions.
S.
herbicidovorans MH (DSM 11019) was cultured and maintained as
described before (24), unless stated otherwise. Growth experiments were performed in 1-liter Erlenmeyer flasks equipped with
magnetic stirring bars. The flasks were equipped with a silicon tube
that allowed easy sterile sampling. The experiments were carried out in
a water bath at a temperature of 30°C, with stirring held constant at
370 rpm (24).
Uptake assays.
We performed the transport experiments with
(R)- and
(S)-[14C]dichlorprop synthesized from
14C-labeled 2,4-dichlorophenol (23).
Radiolabeled (R)- and (S)-mecoprop were
not commercially available. Uptake of 14C-labeled compounds
was routinely assayed by a filtration method (18). Cells
were harvested at the mid-exponential growth phase by centrifugation
(15 min, 7,500 × g, 4°C), washed twice with ice-cold
minimal medium (24), and resuspended in a phosphate buffer
(20 mM Na2HPO4-KH2PO4
[pH 6.5]) at concentrations of 0.15 ± 0.03 mg of protein per
ml. Cell suspensions could be kept on ice and aerated for 2 h
without significant loss of transport activity. In some experiments,
the cell suspension was preincubated for 5 min with potential uptake
inhibitors. The cell suspension was acclimated at 30 ± 2°C for
5 min before the addition of the C-labeled compound. At
intervals of 15 s, uptake was terminated by filtering a 200-µl
sample through a 0.45-µm-pore-size cellulose-nitrate filter
(Sartorius AG, Göttingen, Germany) that had been prewashed with 2 ml of phosphate buffer (washing buffer) containing 50 µM of unlabeled
2,4-D or (R)- or (S)-dichlorprop. After
filtration, the filters were washed once with 5 ml of the washing
buffer to remove extracellular 14C-labeled compounds and
then transferred to scintillation vials. After addition of the
scintillation cocktail (Filter-Count; Packard Instrument Company,
Meriden, Conn.), the radioactivity was determined in a liquid
scintillation counter (Kontron Analytical, Zürich, Switzerland). The kinetic uptake parameters
Kt (apparent affinity constant) and
Vmax (maximum velocity) were calculated with a
computer program (IGOR Pro; WaveMetrics Inc., Lake Oswego, Oreg.). The calculations were based on weighted nonlinear regression analysis of the Michaelis-Menten model. Error estimates for the biological variance were obtained from the data of four independent assays with
different cell batches at one specific substrate concentration and by
making the assumption that the error was heteroscedastically distributed with a constant relative standard deviation.
Estimation of intracellular volume.
The specific
intracellular volume of S. herbicidovorans MH
was estimated from the dimensions of the cells (average length of
the rods, 2.8 µm; average width, 0.7 µm [24]), the
protein content (0.15 ± 0.03 mg ml
1 at an
optical density at 546 nm of 1), and the cell number ([1.71 ± 0.13] × 108 ml
1 at an optical density
at 546 nm of 1). From these data, a specific internal cell volume of
1.2 µl/mg of protein was calculated. This value is in the same range
as the volumes of other gram-negative rods (11, 13) and was
used for all calculations.
Analytical procedures. (i) HPLC analysis.
High-pressure
liquid chromatography (HPLC) analyses were performed on a Gynkotek
HPLC system with a M480G pump, a Gina 50T autosampler, and a
UVD340S photodiode array detector (Gynkotek GmbH, Germering,
Germany). The system was operated isocratically with an eluent
consisting of 70% (vol/vol) methanol and 30% (vol/vol) NaH2PO4 (50 mM, pH 3.0) at a flow rate of 0.7 ml/min. Forty microliters of the samples was injected, and the eluting
compounds were detected at a wavelength of 230 nm. The analytes were
separated on a Nucleodex-
-PM column (200 by 4.0 mm) with
permethylated
-cyclodextrin as the chiral stationary phase
(Macherey-Nagel, Düren, Germany). Retention times were typically
6.0, 6.7, and 8.6 min for 2,4-D, (R)-dichlorprop, and (S)-dichlorprop, respectively. The detection limits
for the dichlorprop enantiomers and 2,4-D were 0.1 and 0.05 µM,
and the relative standard deviations (n = 3) were
±0.8% and ±0.7%, respectively.
(ii) Determination of ATP content.
ATP was determined by
means of the firefly luciferase assay with an ATP bioluminescence assay
kit (HS II; Boehringer, Mannheim, Germany).
(iii) Protein determination.
Protein contents were
determined by the method of Lowry et al. (12), with bovine
serum albumin as the standard.
(iv) Ion chromatography.
Chloride concentrations were
determined with an ion chromatograph equipped with a conductivity
detector (Dionex, Olten, Switzerland) after separation on an
anion-exchange column (IonPac AS11; Dionex) (24).
Chemicals.
[ring-U-14C]2,4-D
(
98%; 807 GBq/mol) was obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St.
Louis, Mo.).
[ring-U-14C](R)-dichlorprop
(
98.3%; enantiomeric purity, 99.4%; 126 GBq/mol) and
[ring-U-14C](S)-dichlorprop
(
98.4%; enantiomeric purity, >99.4%; 166 GBq/mol) were
prepared by Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England, as described elsewhere (23). All other chemicals were obtained from
Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland, or Merck, Dietikon, Switzerland.
 |
RESULTS |
Growth on dichlorprop and 2,4-D.
S.
herbicidovorans MH utilized both enantiomers of dichlorprop as
sole carbon and energy sources for growth (Fig. 1A and
C). However, the
(S)-dichlorprop was completely removed from the culture medium after 43 h of incubation (Fig. 1A), while in experiments with (R)-dichlorprop as the growth substrate, 82 h
passed until the degradation was complete (Fig. 1C). When strain MH
was offered racemic dichlorprop as the growth substrate, it
could degrade both enantiomers, with the
(S)-dichlorprop being preferentially degraded
(Fig. 1B). Chloride release was stoichiometric with
(R)-, (S)-, and
(RS)-dichlorprop as the growth substrate (Fig. 1), which is a strong indication for the mineralization of the aromatic ring. In
all growth experiments, strain MH did not excrete any metabolites into
the medium that could be detected by HPLC, and the levels of dissolved
organic carbon at the beginning and at the end of a growth experiment
(data not shown) corresponded to a complete conversion of dichlorprop
into biomass and presumably carbon dioxide. 2,4-D was also
completely degraded by strain MH, as shown by biomass formation,
substrate consumption, and stoichiometric chloride release (data not
shown). Typically, growth on 2,4-D started without a lag phase and
was complete after 15 h of incubation. The growth rates and the
growth yields obtained are listed in Table
1.

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Fig. 1.
Growth experiments with S. herbicidovorans MH
incubated with (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and racemic
(RS)-dichlorprop. Precultures were grown in
chloride-free complex medium for 12 h at 30°C. (A) Growth on the
pure (S) enantiomer; (B) growth on the racemic mixture; (C)
growth on the pure (R) enantiomer. An
A546 of 0.1 corresponds to 20.8 mg (dry weight)
per liter.
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Table 1
Growth characteristics of S. herbicidovorans
MH grown on (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, (RS)-dichlorprop,
and 2,4-D and of the strain grown on
(R)-mecoprop, (S)-mecoprop,
and (RS)-mecopropa
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Induction of uptake.
Cells of S. herbicidovorans MH
grown on (R)-dichlorprop were induced for the uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop and 2,4-D, but such cells did not
take up (S)-dichlorprop (Fig.
2A). When S. herbicidovorans MH grew on (S)-dichlorprop, uptake of
(S)-dichlorprop and 2,4-D was induced but uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop was not (Fig. 2B). Interestingly, cells
of S. herbicidovorans MH grown on 2,4-D were able to
take up 2,4-D but not the dichlorprop enantiomers (Fig. 2C).
Control experiments with succinate-grown cells revealed that
these cells took up (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D, but with very low rates
(Fig. 2D). However, these rates were slightly higher than the rates
for uptake by noninduced cells in the experiments described above (Fig.
2A to C).

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Fig. 2.
Induction experiments with S. herbicidovorans
MH grown on (R)-dichlorprop (A),
(S)-dichlorprop (B), 2,4-D (C), and succinate (D).
Cells were washed and resuspended in 20 mM phosphate buffer, pH 6.5 (0.15 mg of protein per ml), and uptake was started by the addition of
60 µM 14C-labeled (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, or 2,4-D. Values represent means of
three replicates; standard deviations are indicated by the error
bars.
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Kinetics of uptake.
The kinetic parameters of
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D uptake were estimated from the initial uptake rates (15 to 60 s) at concentrations from 0.7 to 450 µM. Uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop,
and 2,4-D showed monophasic saturation kinetics (Fig.
3), with Kt values
of 108 ± 21, 93 ± 19, and 117 ± 25 µM and
Vmax values of 19 ± 2, 10 ± 1, and 21 ± 3 nmol min
1 mg of protein
1,
respectively. Succinate-grown cells (Fig. 3C) took up 2,4-D with
much lower rates than did 2,4-D-grown cells, and the relationship between 2,4-D concentration and 2,4-D uptake in such cells
could be modeled with a linear function.

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Fig. 3.
Effect of substrate concentration on uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop (A), (S)-dichlorprop (B),
and 2,4-D (C) by S. herbicidovorans MH grown on
(R)-dichlorprop (A), (S)-dichlorprop (B),
and succinate and 2,4-D (C). The initial uptake rates (15 s to 2 min) are plotted versus the external concentration of the substrate in
the assay (0.7 to 450 µM). Analysis of the data gave
Kt values of 108, 93, and 117 µM and
Vmax values of 19, 10, and 21 nmol
min 1 mg of protein 1 for (R)-
and (S)-dichlorprop and 2,4-D, respectively.
Error bars represent relative standard deviations (15%) (see Materials
and Methods).
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Effect of structurally related compounds on uptake.
To
study the substrate specificity of the (R)- and
(S)-dichlorprop uptake, we examined how the addition of
unlabeled (R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, (R)-mecoprop,
(S)-mecoprop, and 2,4-D affected transport.
The unlabeled compounds were added at concentrations almost
threefold higher than those of the labeled compounds. The presence of
(S)-dichlorprop, (S)-mecoprop, and
2,4-D exerted only a small influence on
(R)-dichlorprop uptake (Table
2). As expected, (R)-dichlorprop uptake was reduced by unlabeled
(R)-mecoprop and (R)-dichlorprop.
Similarly, (R)-mecoprop,
(R)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D had only a small effect
on (S)-dichlorprop uptake, whereas the (S)
enantiomers of mecoprop and dichlorprop reduced the uptake of
(S)-dichlorprop (Table 2).
Substrate accumulation.
To measure substrate
accumulation, cells were grown on succinate, 2,4-D,
(R)-dichlorprop, and
(S)-dichlorprop. Cells from each batch were incubated in
60 µM [14C]2,4-D,
[14C](R)-dichlorprop, and
[14C](S)-dichlorprop solutions for 60 s, and the accumulated radioactivity was determined. Apparent
intracellular substrate concentrations were calculated with a cell
volume of 1.2 µl/mg of protein. Division of these values by the
external substrate concentration yielded the apparent accumulation of
the substrates within the cells (Table 3).
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Table 3
Accumulation of radioactivity by cells of S. herbicidovorans MH grown on succinate, 2,4-D,
(R)-dichlorprop, and (S)-dichlorprop
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Effect of metabolic inhibitors on uptake.
The uncouplers
carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP),
carbonylcyanide-4-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (CCFP), and 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), which can dissipate the proton motive force
p (i.e., both the electrical potential 
and the pH
gradient
pH) (9), inhibited the uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D almost completely (Table 4).
Almost complete inhibition of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D uptake was also observed
in the presence of nigericin (Table 4), a K+ ionophore that
catalyzes an electroneutral K+-H+ exchange and
thus selectively dissipates the
pH in the presence of high
K+ concentrations (9). Valinomycin, another
potassium ionophore which can selectively dissipate the 
in the
presence of high concentrations of K+ (9),
showed little effect on uptake of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D. On the other hand,
valinomycin and nigericin in combination reduced the transport of all
three substrates to values from 0.4 to 10.9% of the control values
(Table 4). In combination, these two ionophores function as an
uncoupler (9). Although the ATPase inhibitor
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimine (DCCD) reduced
uptake of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D to some extent, no
correlation between uptake activity and internal ATP concentration was
found. For instance, the ATP content of
(S)-dichlorprop-grown cells treated with nigericin was
83% of the control, whereas uptake of (S)-dichlorprop
was almost completely inhibited (Table 4). Moreover, transport of
(S)-dichlorprop was completely inhibited by the
uncouplers CCCP, CCFP and DNP, whereas the ATP concentrations were
still in the range of 50 to 73% of the control (Table 4).
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Table 4
Effects of inhibitors on the uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D and on the intracellular ATP concentration in
S. herbicidovorans MHa
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Growth characteristics.
Racemic mixtures of the chiral
herbicide dichlorprop were degraded in an enantioselective manner
by S. herbicidovorans MH (Fig. 1B). The growth patterns of
strain MH incubated with (R)-, (S)-, and
(RS)-mecoprop, a structurally related
compound, were essentially similar, with preferential degradation
of the (S) enantiomer (24). The growth rates with
dichlorprop were in the same range, and the growth yields were
nearly identical to those obtained with mecoprop (Table 1).
Hence, the two enantiomers of these compounds were equally
well suited as a carbon and energy source for this bacterium. These
results are in contrast to findings with Alcaligenes
denitrificans, which exclusively degraded
(R)-mecoprop (19, 20), and with
laboratory soil systems with low concentrations of mecoprop, where
extensive enantiomerization was observed (2, 14). Strain MH
was also able to degrade the (achiral) 2,4-D to completion, with
maximum growth rates that were higher than those with the enantiomers
of dichlorprop and mecoprop (Table 1).
Induction and specificity of uptake.
Our data clearly indicate
that the uptake of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D was inducible. The data
presented in Fig. 2 clearly demonstrate that the uptake of dichlorprop
was enantioselective and that there must be a separate uptake system for each enantiomer. These results substantiate the view that uptake of
both enantiomers was carrier mediated, as (chiral) transport proteins
can be expected to bind enantiomers in a selective manner (6). D- and L-xylose were
transported at different rates by the yeast Rhodotorula
gracilis, a fact that was used to illustrate the substrate
specificity of carrier-mediated transport systems (6, 7).
Because cells grown on 2,4-D could not take up
(R)-dichlorprop and (S)-dichlorprop and
because uptake of (R)-dichlorprop and (S)-dichlorprop by (R)- and
(S)-dichlorprop-grown cells, respectively, was
only slightly reduced by 2,4-D (Table 2), we suggest that there is
a specific transport system for 2,4-D. The first common metabolite
in the degradation of dichlorprop and 2,4-D by strain MH is
2,4-dichlorophenol (17), which is further metabolized via the modified ortho pathway (8).
Regulation of transport systems by downstream metabolites of the
ortho pathway was reported by Nichols and Harwood
(16).
-Ketoadipate, a common metabolite of
benzoate and 4-hydroxybenzoate degradation by P. putida,
induces the 4-hydroxybenzoate transporter, whereas benzoate represses it. These findings made clear why P. putida cells
preferentially degrade benzoate over 4-hydroxybenzoate in a
mixture of both compounds (16). Filer and Harker
demonstrated that dichloromuconate is the inducing agent of the
2,4-D pathway in R. eutropha JMP134 (3). The model for induction of the uptake of
phenoxyalkanoic acids is presented in Fig.
4. The suggestion that 2,4-D uptake of strain MH was induced by a common metabolite of 2,4-D and
dichlorprop degradation agrees well with our data but needs more
elaborate experiments for definitive proof. On the other hand,
the inducing agents of the (R)-dichlorprop and
(S)-dichlorprop carriers must be
(R)-dichlorprop and
(S)-dichlorprop, respectively. This is a necessary
consequence of the induction pattern of the
(R)-dichlorprop and (S)-dichlorprop
carriers (Fig. 2A and B), because, except for the first step,
(R)- and (S)-dichlorprop are degraded
identically (17). From the data presented in Table 2, we
conclude that (R)-mecoprop was transported by the
(R)-dichlorprop carrier and that
(S)-mecoprop was transported by the
(S)-dichlorprop carrier. This shows that the
transport systems were specific with respect to the substitution
and the configuration at the stereogenic center (C-2 atom of the
alkanoic side chain) and rather unspecific with respect to the aromatic
moiety of the phenoxyalkanoic acids.

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Fig. 4.
Model proposed for the uptake of (R)- and
(S)-dichlorprop, (R)- and
(S)-mecoprop, and 2,4-D by S. herbicidovorans MH. Evidence is provided that strain MH has three
inducible uptake systems: one for (R)-dichlorprop and
(R)-mecoprop, one for (S)-dichlorprop
and (S)-mecoprop, and a third for 2,4-D. Studies
with inhibitors of energy metabolism indicate that the proton gradient
is the driving force and that the uptake of these phenoxyalkanoic acids
proceeds in symport together with protons. The number of protons
(n) transported together with the phenoxyalkanoic acids was
equal or larger than 1.
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Kinetics of uptake.
The rates of uptake of 2,4-D-grown
cells in response to increasing 2,4-D concentrations were in
accordance with saturation kinetics (Fig. 3C). Saturation kinetics was
also observed for the transport of (R)-dichlorprop and
(S)-dichlorprop into (R)-dichlorprop- and
(S)-dichlorprop-grown cells, respectively, in response
to increasing substrate concentrations (Fig. 3A and B). Saturation kinetics is often interpreted as an indicator for carrier-mediated transport for which the uptake rate increases with increasing substrate
concentration up to a maximal velocity, at which the carrier is
saturated (6). The apparent affinity constants and the
maximal velocities for transport of (R)-dichlorprop,
(S)-dichlorprop, and 2,4-D, are similar to those
reported for uptake of 4-toluene sulfonate by C. testosteroni T-2 (11) and 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than those reported for the transport of benzoic acid
into Alcaligenes denitrificans (13) and
4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid into Klebsiella pneumoniae
(1). Saturation kinetics was also reported for adsorption of
2,4-D to the cell wall of Pseudomonas fluorescens, a
strain that does not metabolize 2,4-D (21). But as
adsorption is neither inducible nor sensitive to metabolic inhibitors,
we excluded it as an important contributor to the observed saturation
kinetics. Biological membranes are good diffusion barriers for charged
molecules, but they are not completely impermeable. It is generally
assumed that the diffusion of deprotonated (negatively charged) organic
acids is low compared with diffusion of the protonated (neutral) acid
(6). The uptake assays with strain MH were performed at pH
6.5, at which more than 99.9% of the 2,4-D molecules are deprotonated (pKa of 2,4-D is 2.6 [22]). Therefore, we assume that diffusion of the
protonated species of 2,4-D was negligible. To assess the impact of
unspecific transport of phenoxyalkanoic acids, we examined the
2,4-D uptake by succinate-grown cells. A linear relationship
between 2,4-D concentration and uptake rate was found for these
cells (Fig. 3C), indicating that 2,4-D uptake of succinate-grown
cells might be due to diffusion of 2,4-D into the cells. But it
cannot be excluded that succinate-grown cells are partially induced for
uptake of 2,4-D, (R)-dichlorprop, and (S)-dichlorprop. In induction experiments (Fig. 2), it
was evident that (R)- and (S)-dichlorprop
uptake was higher with succinate-grown cells (Fig. 2D) than
with 2,4-D-grown cells (Fig. 2C). Therefore, we report apparent
uptake rates and did not correct the values for these influences.
Furthermore, these influences were smaller than the standard deviation
of the measurements in the concentration range that was used for most
experiments (0.7 to 300 µM). We assume that diffusion of dichlorprop
was also of minor importance, as dichlorprop and 2,4-D have similar
pKa values (pKa of dichlorprop is 3.0 [22]).
Carrier-mediated transport.
The apparent accumulation
factors were obtained in the presence of catabolic activity (Table
3). Therefore, they cannot be used as an argument for active transport.
However, as laid out below, they are proof for the existence of
carrier-mediated transport for 2,4-D,
(R)-dichlorprop, and (S)-dichlorprop.
Cells grown on complex medium and on succinate constitutively express
dioxygenase activities for the degradation of 2,4-D and
(S)-dichlorprop (17). But
succinate-grown cells accumulated significantly smaller amounts of
2,4-D or (S)-dichlorprop than
(S)-dichlorprop-grown cells. Furthermore,
2,4-D-grown cells, which contain dioxygenase activity toward
(S)-dichlorprop, did not accumulate radioactivity from this latter chemical. Growth on 2,4-D and
(S)-dichlorprop triggers much higher accumulation of
2,4-D and (S)-dichlorprop, respectively, than growth
on other substrates (Table 3). These results clearly demonstrate that
metabolic substrate depletion together with passive diffusion does not
account for the accumulation of radioactivity in strain MH.
Facilitated diffusion or active transport?
Two types of
carrier-mediated transport systems can be distinguished:
facilitated diffusion and active transport (6). The accumulation of compounds against the concentration gradient and the dependence on metabolic energy (i.e., ATP or proton motive force) are characteristic for active transport systems. To study if transport of 2,4-D, (R)-dichlorprop, and
(S)-dichlorprop depended on metabolic energy, we tested
the effect of different inhibitors of energy metabolism on the uptake
rate (Table 4). Evidence in favor of an ATP-driven transport mechanism
could not be obtained. In fact, the inhibitor studies and the lack of
correlation between transport activity and ATP pools argue against such
a mechanism. On the other hand, uptake of
(R)-dichlorprop, (S)-dichlorprop, and
2,4-D was strongly inhibited by all uncouplers that were tested and
by a combination of valinomycin and nigericin (Table 4). These results
suggest that the proton motive force
p drives the uptake of
2,4-D, (R)-dichlorprop, and
(S)-dichlorprop. Inhibition experiments with valinomycin
and nigericin gave evidence that the
pH rather than the 
was
necessary for transport, as nigericin completely inhibited uptake
of 2,4-D, (R)-dichlorprop, and
(S)-dichlorprop. In contrast, valinomycin only had a
small effect. These results support the conclusion that the uptake of
all three compounds was driven by the proton gradient rather than by
ATP or by the electrical potential. Therefore, we propose that the
uptake of phenoxyalkanoic acids by S. herbicidovorans MH
proceeded in symport with one or more protons (Fig. 4). More detailed
investigations are needed for a full understanding of these uptake
systems.
By combining the results of previous studies (17, 24) with
those in this paper, we demonstrate that the selective degradation of
the enantiomers of mecoprop (24) and dichlorprop by the
soil isolate S. herbicidovorans MH was due not only to
enantioselective metabolism (17) but also to
enantioselective uptake. To the best of our knowledge, this is the
first report of enantioselective uptake of environmentally relevant
chiral xenobiotics by bacteria.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Kathrin Nickel, Hauke Harms, and Sol Resnick
for critical reading of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, EAWAG, Ueberlandstrasse 133, CH-8600 Duebendorf,
Switzerland. Phone: 41 1 823 5521. Fax: 41 1 823 5547. E-mail:
kohler{at}eawag.ch.
Present address: BMG Engineering, CH-8952 Schlieren, Switzerland.
 |
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