The genetic background of long-chain n-alkane degradation was investigated in detail in strain E1, a member of the genetically unexplored Dietzia genus. A suicide vector carrying a 518-bp alkB fragment was site-specifically integrated into the E1 chromosome, and the full alkB, as well as its chromosomal environment was sequenced after plasmid rescue experiments. Four out of the nine putative genes were strongly induced by long-chain n-alkanes in wild-type E1. ORF4 encoded a natural fusion protein consisting of an integral membrane alkane hydroxylase and a rubredoxin domain. The significance of the alkB-rub gene in n-alkane degradation was investigated in phenotypic tests, and the disruption mutant strain exhibited severely impaired growth on n-C(20) alkane carbon source. The mutation was successfully complemented with the expression of intact AlkB-Rub protein, the full-length form of which was detected by simultaneous immunoblotting. The presented data furnish the first experimental evidence of the in vivo existence of an AlkB-Rub natural fusion protein, which plays a major role in long-chain n-alkane degradation.
© 2011 Bay Zoltán Foundation for Applied Research FEMS Microbiology Letters © 2011 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.