Publications by authors named "Christian Jacoby"

Steroid hormone metabolism by the gut microbiome has multiple implications for mammalian physiology, but the underlying mechanisms and broader significance of this activity remains largely unknown. Here, we isolate a novel human gut bacterium, strain HCS.1, that reduces cortisol, progesterone, testosterone, and related steroid hormones to 3β,5β-tetrahydrosteroid products.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sterols are common compounds found in cell membranes and are resistant to breakdown due to their water-insoluble nature; a new pathway for degrading cholesterol has been discovered in the bacterium Sterolibacterium denitrificans.
  • This pathway includes a series of ATP-dependent enzyme reactions that modify sterol structures, specifically targeting cholesterol while being unsuitable for other steroids like stigmasterol.
  • Researchers identified a key enzyme from S. denitrificans that facilitates the oxidation of sterol intermediates, ultimately enabling a process to hydroxylate the isoprenoid side chain without requiring oxygen, thus presenting a novel method for sterol degradation.
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Quaternary carbon-containing compounds exist in natural and fossil oil-derived products and are used in chemical and pharmaceutical applications up to industrial scale. Due to the inaccessibility of the quaternary carbon atom for a direct oxidative or reductive attack, they are considered as persistent in the environment. Here, we investigated the unknown degradation of the quaternary carbon-containing model compound pivalate (2,2-dimethyl-propionate) in the denitrifying bacterium Thauera humireducens strain PIV-1 (formerly Thauera pivalivorans).

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The degradation of cholesterol and related steroids by microbes follows fundamentally different strategies in aerobic and anaerobic environments. In anaerobic bacteria, the primary C26 of the isoprenoid side chain is hydroxylated without oxygen via a three-step cascade: (i) water-dependent hydroxylation at the tertiary C25, (ii) ATP-dependent dehydration to form a subterminal alkene, and (iii) water-dependent hydroxylation at the primary C26 to form an allylic alcohol. However, the enzymes involved in the ATP-dependent dehydration have remained unknown.

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Bacterial degradation of endocrine disrupting and carcinogenic estrogens is essential for their elimination from the environment. Recent studies of the denitrifying, estrogen-degrading strain DHT3 revealed the conversion of estrogens to androgens by a putative cobalamin-dependent methyltransferase encoded by the genes. The methyl donor and its continuous regeneration to initiate estradiol catabolism have remained unknown.

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Enzymatic hydroxylation of unactivated primary carbons is generally associated with the use of molecular oxygen as co-substrate for monooxygenases. However, in anaerobic cholesterol-degrading bacteria such as Sterolibacterium denitrificans the primary carbon of the isoprenoid side chain is oxidised to a carboxylate in the absence of oxygen. Here, we identify an enzymatic reaction sequence comprising two molybdenum-dependent hydroxylases and one ATP-dependent dehydratase that accomplish the hydroxylation of unactivated primary C26 methyl group of cholesterol with water: (i) hydroxylation of C25 to a tertiary alcohol, (ii) ATP-dependent dehydration to an alkene via a phosphorylated intermediate, (iii) hydroxylation of C26 to an allylic alcohol that is subsequently oxidised to the carboxylate.

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Side chain-containing steroids are ubiquitous constituents of biological membranes that are persistent to biodegradation. Aerobic, steroid-degrading bacteria employ oxygenases for isoprenoid side chain and tetracyclic steran ring cleavage. In contrast, a Mo-containing steroid C-25 dehydrogenase (S25DH) of the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reductase family catalyzes the oxygen-independent hydroxylation of tertiary C-25 in the anaerobic, cholesterol-degrading bacterium Its genome contains eight paralogous genes encoding active site α-subunits of putative S25DH-like proteins.

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The denitrifying betaproteobacterium Chol1S catabolizes steroids such as cholesterol via an oxygen-independent pathway. It involves enzyme reaction sequences described for aerobic cholesterol and bile acid degradation as well as enzymes uniquely found in anaerobic steroid-degrading bacteria. Recent studies provided evidence that in , the cholest-4-en-3-one intermediate is oxygen-independently oxidized to Δ-dafachronic acid (C-oic acid), which is subsequently activated by a substrate-specific acyl-coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) synthetase (ACS).

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The denitrifying betaproteobacterium Sterolibacterium denitrificans serves as model organism for studying the oxygen-independent degradation of cholesterol. Here, we demonstrate its capability of degrading various globally abundant side chain containing zoo-, phyto- and mycosterols. We provide the complete genome that empowered an integrated genomics/proteomics/metabolomics approach, accompanied by the characterization of a characteristic enzyme of steroid side chain degradation.

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