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Título: First Betalain-producing bacteria break the exclusive presence of the pigments in the plant kingdom
Fecha de publicación: 19-mar-2019
Editorial: American Society for Microbiology
Cita bibliográfica: mBIO, 2019, Vol. 10, Issue 2 : e00345-19
ISSN: Print: 2161-2129
Electronic: 2150-7511
Materias relacionadas: CDU::5 - Ciencias puras y naturales::57 - Biología::577 - Bioquímica. Biología molecular. Biofísica
Palabras clave: Bioactive compounds
Bioquímica
Biotecnología
Betalains
Betalamic acid
Dioxygenase
Enzyme mining
Pigments
Resumen: The biosynthesis of antioxidant pigments, namely, betalains, was believed to be restricted to Caryophyllales plants. This paper changes this paradigm, and enzyme mining from bacterial hosts promoted the discovery of bacterial cultures producing betalains. The spectrum of possible sources of betalain pigments in nature is broadened by our description of the first betalain-forming bacterium, Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus. The enzyme-specific step is the extradiol cleavage of the precursor amino acid L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) to form the structural unit betalamic acid. Molecular and functional work conducted led to the characterization of a novel dioxygenase, a polypeptide of 17.8 kDa with a Km of 1.36 mM, with higher activity and affinity than those of its plant counterparts. Its superior activity allowed the first experimental characterization of the early steps in the biosynthesis of betalains by fully characterizing the presence and time evolution of 2,3- and 4,5- seco-DOPA intermediates. Furthermore, spontaneous chemical reactions are characterized and incorporated into a comprehensive enzymatic-chemical mechanism that yields the final pigments. Several studies have demonstrated the health-promoting effects of betalains due to their high antioxidant capacity and their positive effect on the dose-dependent inhibition of cancer cells and their proliferation. To date, betalains were restricted to plants of the order Caryophyllales and some species of fungi, but the present study reveals the first betalain-producing bacterium, as well as the first steps in the formation of pigments. This finding demonstrates that betalain biosynthesis can be expanded to prokaryotes.
Autor/es principal/es: Contreras Llano, Luis Eduardo
Guerrero Rubio, María Alejandra
Lozada Ramírez, José Daniel
García Carmona, Francisco
Gandía Herrero, Fernando
Versión del editor: https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.00345-19
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10201/149864
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00345-19
Tipo de documento: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Número páginas / Extensión: 12
Derechos: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Atribución 4.0 Internacional
Descripción: © 2019 Contreras-Llano et al. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This document is the Published Manuscript, version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in mBio. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00345-19
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