Sulfonamide antibiotics have a wide application range in human and veterinary medicine. Because they tend to persist in the environment, they pose potential problems with regard to the propagation of antibiotic resistance. Here, we identified metabolites formed during the degradation of sulfamethoxazole and other sulfonamides in Microbacterium sp. strain BR1. Our experiments showed that the degradation proceeded along an unusual pathway initiated by ipso-hydroxylation with subsequent fragmentation of the parent compound. The NADH-dependent hydroxylation of the carbon atom attached to the sulfonyl group resulted in the release of sulfite, 3-amino-5-methylisoxazole, and benzoquinone-imine. The latter was concomitantly transformed to 4-aminophenol. Sulfadiazine, sulfamethizole, sulfamethazine, sulfadimethoxine, 4-amino-N-phenylbenzenesulfonamide, and N-(4-aminophenyl)sulfonylcarbamic acid methyl ester (asulam) were transformed accordingly. Therefore, ipso-hydroxylation with subsequent fragmentation must be considered the underlying mechanism; this could also occur in the same or in a similar way in other studies, where biotransformation of sulfonamides bearing an amino group in the para-position to the sulfonyl substituent was observed to yield products corresponding to the stable metabolites observed by us.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00911-13 | DOI Listing |
Water Res
July 2023
State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China. Electronic address:
Figuring out the comprehensive metabolic mechanism of sulfonamide antibiotics (SA) is critical to improve and optimize SA removal in the bioremediation process, but relevant studies are still lacking. Here, an approach integrating metagenomic analysis, degraders' isolation, reverse transcriptional quantification and targeted metabolite determination was used to decipher microbial interactions and functional genes' characteristics in SA-degrading microbial consortia enriched from wetland sediments. The SA-degrading consortia could rapidly catalyze ipso-hydroxylation and subsequent reactions of SA to achieve the complete mineralization of sulfadiazine and partial mineralization of the other two typical SA (sulfamethoxazole and sulfamethazine).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
October 2018
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, Institute of Biochemistry, Life Sciences Center, Vilnius University, Sauletekio al. 7, LT-10257 Vilnius, Lithuania.
A gene cluster, denoted as , required for the degradation of 3-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-propionic acid has been cloned from 7-hydroxycoumarin-degrading 7HK4 (DSM 107615), and sequenced. Bioinformatic analysis shows that the operon encodes a flavin-binding hydroxylase (HcdA), an extradiol dioxygenase (HcdB), and a putative hydroxymuconic semialdehyde hydrolase (HcdC). The analysis of the recombinant HcdA activity in vitro confirms that this enzyme belongs to the group of -hydroxylases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
September 2013
Institute for Ecopreneurship, School of Life Sciences, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Muttenz, Switzerland.
Sulfonamide antibiotics have a wide application range in human and veterinary medicine. Because they tend to persist in the environment, they pose potential problems with regard to the propagation of antibiotic resistance. Here, we identified metabolites formed during the degradation of sulfamethoxazole and other sulfonamides in Microbacterium sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
October 2010
Department of Chemistry and Center for Metals in Biocatalysis, University of Minnesota, 207 Pleasant Street SE, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA.
The iron complex [Fe(II)(TPA)(CH(3)CN)(2)](OTf)(2) (1) [TPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine] with H(2)O(2) as an oxidant performs ipso-hydroxylation of electron-withdrawing benzoic acids at room temperature, leading to multiple turnovers of corresponding phenols. ipso-Hydroxylation competes with olefin epoxidation and cis-dihydroxylation in the presence of olefins, with the product ratios being modulated by the relative amounts of benzoic acid, olefin, and water. It is proposed that benzoic acid and water compete for the available sixth site on the [(TPA)Fe(III)(OOH)] intermediate, which undergoes O-O bond heterolysis to form, respectively, the Fe(V)(O)(O(2)CAr) and Fe(V)(O)(OH) oxidants that determine the product outcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
July 2009
Department of Environmental Microbiology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ, Leipzig, Germany.
The aquatic hyphomycete Clavariopsis aquatica was used to quantify the effects of extracellular laccase and intracellular reactions on the isomer-specific biotransformation of technical nonylphenol (t-NP). In laccase-producing cultures, maximal removal rates of t-NP and the isomer 4-(1-ethyl-1,4-dimethylpentyl)phenol (NP112) were about 1.6- and 2.
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