Characterization of a Linuron-Specific Amidohydrolase from the Newly Isolated Bacterium Sphingobium sp. Strain SMB.

2020 
The phenylurea herbicide linuron is globally used and has caused considerable concern due to its environmental pollution. In this study, a highly efficient linuron-transforming strain Sphingobium sp. SMB was isolated, and a gene (lahB) responsible for the hydrolysis of linuron to 3,4-dichloroaniline and N,O-dimethylhydroxylamine was cloned from the genome of strain SMB. The lahB gene encodes an amidohydrolase, which shares 20%-53% identity with other biochemically characterized amidohydrolases, except the newly reported linuron hydrolase Phh (75%). The optimal conditions for the hydrolysis of linuron by LahB were determined to be pH 7.0 and 30 degrees C, and the Km value of LahB for linuron was 37.3 +/- 1.2 microM. Although LahB and Phh shared relatively high identity, LahB exhibited a narrow substrate spectrum (specific for linuron) compared to Phh (active for linuron, diuron, chlortoluron, etc.). Sequence analysis and site-directed mutagenesis revealed that Ala261 of Phh was the key amino acid residue affecting the substrate specificity. Our study provides a new amidohydrolase for the specific hydrolysis of linuron.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    53
    References
    6
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []