Protein Information

ID 741
Name MR 1
Synonyms AWQG2491; MR1; PDC; BRP17; Brain protein 17; DYT 8; DYT8; FKSG19…

Compound Information

ID 366
Name anthraquinone
CAS 9,10-anthracenedione

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
12732551 Saltikov CW, Cifuentes A, Venkateswaran K, Newman DK: The ars detoxification system is advantageous but not required for As (V) respiration by the genetically tractable Shewanella species strain ANA-3. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2003 May;69(5):2800-9.
Arsenate [As (V); HAsO (4)(2-)] respiration by bacteria is poorly understood at the molecular level largely due to a paucity of genetically tractable organisms with this metabolic capability. We report here the isolation of a new As (V)-respiring strain (ANA-3) that is phylogenetically related to members of the genus Shewanella and that also provides a useful model system with which to explore the molecular basis of As (V) respiration. This gram-negative strain stoichiometrically couples the oxidation of lactate to acetate with the reduction of As (V) to arsenite [As (III); HAsO (2)]. The generation time and lactate molar growth yield (Y (lactate)) are 2.8 h and 10.0 g of cells mol of lactate (-1), respectively, when it is grown anaerobically on lactate and As (V). ANA-3 uses a wide variety of terminal electron acceptors, including oxygen, soluble ferric iron, oxides of iron and manganese, nitrate, fumarate, the humic acid functional analog 2,6-anthraquinone disulfonate, and thiosulfate. ANA-3 also reduces As (V) to As (III) in the presence of oxygen and resists high concentrations of As (III) (up to 10 mM) when grown under either aerobic or anaerobic conditions. ANA-3 possesses an ars operon (arsDABC) that allows it to resist high levels of As (III); this operon also confers resistance to the As-sensitive strains Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 and Escherichia coli AW3110. When the gene encoding the As (III) efflux pump, arsB, is inactivated in ANA-3 by a polar mutation that also eliminates the expression of arsC, which encodes an As (V) reductase, the resulting As (III)-sensitive strain still respires As (V); however, the generation time and the Y (lactate) value are two- and threefold lower, respectively, than those of the wild type. These results suggest that ArsB and ArsC may be useful for As (V)-respiring bacteria in environments where As concentrations are high, but that neither is required for respiration.
1(0,0,0,1)