Degradation of homogentisate by strains of Bacillus and Moraxella.
The metabolic pathways whereby strains of Moraxella and Bacillus degrade homogentisate (2,5-dihydroxyphenylacetate) are delineated. The Moraxella (strain OA3) is shown to degrade homogentisate via the pathway previously described in liver: homogentisate is cleaved by a 1,2-dioxygenase (E.C 1.13.11.5) yielding maleylacetoacetate which is isomerized by a GSH-dependent isomerase to fumarylacetoacetate before hydrolysis to acetoacetate and fumarate. A strain of Bacillus (B11c) is shown to catabolize homogentisate via a previously undescribed version of the above sequence: homogentisate is cleaved by a 1,2-dioxygenase (E.C 1.13.11.5) yielding maleylacetoacetate which is hydrolyzed directly to acetoacetate and maleate.[1]References
- Degradation of homogentisate by strains of Bacillus and Moraxella. Crawford, R.L. Can. J. Microbiol. (1976) [Pubmed]
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