Functional characterization of the methylarsenite-inducible arsRM operon from Noviherbaspirillum denitrificans HC18.

Environ Microbiol

Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Organic Waste Utilization, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Solid Organic Waste Resource Utilization, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, 210095, China.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • * In the study, researchers identified an arsRM operon in the strain Noviherbaspirillum denitrificans HC18, where the arsM gene is regulated by an MAs(III)-responsive transcriptional regulator and expressed upon MAs(III) exposure.
  • * The enzyme NdArsM, derived from this strain, specifically methylates MAs(III) to less toxic forms but does not affect As(III), indicating a potential evolutionary adaptation in microbial

Article Abstract

Microbial arsenic methylation by arsenite (As(III)) S-adenosylmethionine methyltransferases (ArsMs) can produce the intermediate methylarsenite (MAs(III)), which is highly toxic and is used by some microbes as an antibiotic. Other microbes have evolved mechanisms to detoxify MAs(III). In this study, an arsRM operon was identified in the genome of an MAs(III)-methylation strain Noviherbaspirillum denitrificans HC18. The arsM gene (NdarsM) is located downstream of an open reading frame encoding an MAs(III)-responsive transcriptional regulator (NdArsR). The N. denitrificans arsRM genes are co-transcribed whose expression is significantly induced by MAs(III), likely by alleviating the repressive effect of ArsR on arsRM transcription. Both in vivo and in vitro assays showed that NdArsM methylates MAs(III) to dimethyl- and trimethyl-arsenicals but does not methylate As(III). Heterologous expression of NdarsM in arsenic-sensitive Escherichia coli AW3110 conferred resistance to MAs(III) but not As(III). NdArsM has the four conserved cysteine residues present in most ArsMs, but only two of them are essential for MAs(III) methylation. The ability to methylate MAs(III) by enzymes such as NdArsM may be an evolutionary step originated from enzymes capable of methylating As(III). This finding reveals a mechanism employed by microbes such as N. denitrificans HC18 to detoxify MAs(III) by further methylation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8881391PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.15909DOI Listing

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