Novel AroA with high tolerance to glyphosate, encoded by a gene of Pseudomonas putida 4G-1 isolated from an extremely polluted environment in China
View/ Open
Date
2005Author
Sun, Yi-Cheng
Chen, Yan-Cheng
Tian, Zhe-Xian
Li, Feng-Mei
Wang, Xin-Yue
Zhang, Jing
Xiao, Zhen-Long
Lin, Min
Gilmartin, Niamh
Dowling, David N.
Wang, Yi-Ping
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Glyphosate has been used globally as a safe herbicide for weed control. It inhibits 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate (EPSP) synthase (AroA), which is a key enzyme in the aromatic amino acid biosynthetic pathway in microorganisms and plants. A Pseudomonas putida strain, 4G-1, was isolated from a soil heavily contaminated by glyphosate in China. Its AroA-encoding gene (aroA) has been cloned, sequenced, and expressed in Escherichia coli. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that this AroA belongs neither to class I nor to class II AroA enzymes. When compared with E. coli AroA, 4G-1 AroA shows similar values for Km[PEP], Km[S3P], and specific enzyme activity. Moreover, 4G-1 AroA exhibits high tolerance to glyphosate, which indicates a protein with a high potential for structural and functional studies of AroA in general and its potential usage for the generation of transgenic crops resistant to the herbicide.
Collections
- Life Sciences [34]
The following license files are associated with this item: