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Howard Junca
Research Scientist
National Research Network on Genomics and Bioinformatics
of Extreme Environments - GeBiX
¬ www.gebix.org.co
CorpoGen Corporation
¬ www.corpogen.org
Bogota D.C., Colombia

Address: Carrera 5 No. 66A-34
Bogotá, Colombia
Phone: +57 1 8050122
Fax: +57 1 3484607
http://howardjunca.awardspace.co.uk
Born in Bogotá DC, Colombia, 1975.

» Academic and Professional Experience
1992- 1997: Microbiologist, (Diploma) Universidad de los Andes, Bogotá, Colombia
1998-2004: M.Sc. Biology (Lic. Biologia, 2° Ciclo), Universidad Complutense de Madrid & Spanish Ministry of Science and Education, Madrid, Spain
1998-2001: Postgraduate Studies on Genetics, (Estudios 3er Ciclo, Suficiencia Investigadora) Doctoral Program on Genetics, Department of Genetics, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
2001-2004: Master in Environmental Impact Assessment,(MA in EIA) Institute for Ecological Research, INIEC, Málaga, Spain.
2001-2004. PhD Thesis: Junca H. 2004. Characterization of Genetic Potential, Catabolic Structure, and Degrading Activities of Microbial Communities from Oligotrophic Aquifers during Adaptation to Organic Contaminants" Doctoral Thesis, TU-Braunschweig. Thesis awarded with Summa Cum Laude, Supervisor: PD Dr. Dietmar Pieper
¬ Link: http://opus.tu-bs.de/opus/volltexte/2005/799/
2004: Ph.D. in Biological Sciences, TU–Brunswick, Germany. „Doktor der Naturwissenschaften, Dr. rer. nat. mit Auszeichnung bestanden“ Gemeinsame Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Technischen Universität Carolo-Wilhelmina zu Braunschweig.
2004-2006: Postdoctoral Research Scientist, AG Biodegradation, German Research Centre for Biotechnology (Gesellschaft für Biotechnologische Forschung) - GBF. Braunschweig, Germany. Biotool EC Project.
2006-2008. Postdoctoral Research Scientist. AG Biodegradation, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung (Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research - Helmholtz Society). HZI Braunschweig, Germany. Biotool EC Project

» Memberships and Awards
1998- Young Researcher fellowship. National Institute for Development of Science and Technology of Colombia, Colciencias
1998- Member of Colombian Association for Advancement of Science ACAC
2004- Doctoral Title awarded with Summa Cum Laude
2006- Member of the American Society for Microbiology - ASM
2006- Member of the Association for General and Applied Microbiology – VAAM (Germany)
2006- Member of the Public Library of Science (PLoS)

» Reviewer for international journals (>50 articles since 2003)
Environmental Microbiology (Blackwell Publishing)
Trends in Biotechnology (Elsevier)
FEMS Microbiology Ecology (under Elsevier or Blackwell)
Microbiology-SGM (Society of General Microbiology, UK)
Mycological Research (Cambridge Journals)
FEMS Microbiology Letters (under Elsevier or Blackwell)
Journal of Applied Microbiology (Blackwell Publishing)
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology (Springer)
Bulletin of Marine and Coastal Research (Invemar)
Bioresource Technology (Elsevier)
Journal of Environmental Quality (ASA, CSSA, and SSSA)
European Journal of Soil Biology (Elsevier)

Journal articles

2009
 
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Brennerova, Josefiova, Brenner, Pieper, Junca (2009)  Metagenomics reveals diversity and abundance of meta-cleavage pathways in microbial communities from soil highly contaminated with jet fuel under air-sparging bioremediation.   Environ Microbiol Feb  
Abstract: The extradiol dioxygenase diversity of a site highly contaminated with aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons under air-sparging treatment was assessed by functional screening of a fosmid library in Escherichia coli with catechol as substrate. The 235 positive clones from inserts of DNA extracted from contaminated soil were equivalent to one extradiol dioxygenase-encoding gene per 3.6 Mb of DNA screened, indicating a strong selection for genes encoding this function. Three subfamilies were identified as being predominant, with 72, 55 and 43 fosmid inserts carrying genes, related to those encoding TbuE of Ralstonia pickettii PK01 (EXDO-D), IpbC of Pseudomonas sp. JR1 (EXDO-K2) or DbtC of Burkholderia sp. DBT1 (EXDO-Dbt), respectively, whereas genes encoding enzymes related to XylE of Pseudomonas putida mt-2 were not observed. Genes encoding oxygenases related to isopropylbenzene dioxygenases were usually colocalized with genes encoding EXDO-K2 dioxygenases. Functional analysis of representative proteins indicated a subcluster of EXDO-D proteins to show exceptional high affinity towards different catecholic substrates. Based on V(max)/K(m) specificity constants, a task-sharing between different extradiol dioxygenases in the community of the contaminated site can be supposed, attaining a complementary and community-balanced catalytic power against diverse catecholic derivatives, as necessary for effective degradation of mixtures of aromatics.
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Nadja Kabelitz, Jirina Machackova, Gwenaël Imfeld, Maria Brennerova, Dietmar H Pieper, Hermann J Heipieper, Howard Junca (2009)  Enhancement of the microbial community biomass and diversity during air sparging bioremediation of a soil highly contaminated with kerosene and BTEX.   Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 82: 3. 565-577 Mar  
Abstract: In order to obtain insights in complexity shifts taking place in natural microbial communities under strong selective pressure, soils from a former air force base in the Czech Republic, highly contaminated with jet fuel and at different stages of a bioremediation air sparging treatment, were analyzed. By tracking phospholipid fatty acids and 16S rRNA genes, a detailed monitoring of the changes in quantities and composition of the microbial communities developed at different stages of the bioventing treatment progress was performed. Depending on the length of the air sparging treatment that led to a significant reduction in the contamination level, we observed a clear shift in the soil microbial community being dominated by Pseudomonads under the harsh conditions of high aromatic contamination to a status of low aromatic concentrations, increased biomass content, and a complex composition with diverse bacterial taxonomical branches.
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Farrakh Mehboob, Howard Junca, Gosse Schraa, Alfons J M Stams (2009)  Growth of Pseudomonas chloritidismutans AW-1(T) on n-alkanes with chlorate as electron acceptor.   Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 83: 4. 739-747 Jun  
Abstract: Microbial (per)chlorate reduction is a unique process in which molecular oxygen is formed during the dismutation of chlorite. The oxygen thus formed may be used to degrade hydrocarbons by means of oxygenases under seemingly anoxic conditions. Up to now, no bacterium has been described that grows on aliphatic hydrocarbons with chlorate. Here, we report that Pseudomonas chloritidismutans AW-1(T) grows on n-alkanes (ranging from C7 until C12) with chlorate as electron acceptor. Strain AW-1(T) also grows on the intermediates of the presumed n-alkane degradation pathway. The specific growth rates on n-decane and chlorate and n-decane and oxygen were 0.5 +/- 0.1 and 0.4 +/- 0.02 day(-1), respectively. The key enzymes chlorate reductase and chlorite dismutase were assayed and found to be present. The oxygen-dependent alkane oxidation was demonstrated in whole-cell suspensions. The strain degrades n-alkanes with oxygen and chlorate but not with nitrate, thus suggesting that the strain employs oxygenase-dependent pathways for the breakdown of n-alkanes.
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Beatriz Cámara, Patricia Nikodem, Piotr Bielecki, Roberto Bobadilla, Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2009)  Characterization of a gene cluster involved in 4-chlorocatechol degradation by Pseudomonas reinekei MT1.   J Bacteriol 191: 15. 4905-4915 Aug  
Abstract: Pseudomonas reinekei MT1 has previously been reported to degrade 4- and 5-chlorosalicylate by a pathway with 4-chlorocatechol, 3-chloromuconate, 4-chloromuconolactone, and maleylacetate as intermediates, and a gene cluster channeling various salicylates into an intradiol cleavage route has been reported. We now report that during growth on 5-chlorosalicylate, besides a novel (chloro)catechol 1,2-dioxygenase, C12O(ccaA), a novel (chloro)muconate cycloisomerase, MCI(ccaB), which showed features not yet reported, was induced. This cycloisomerase, which was practically inactive with muconate, evolved for the turnover of 3-substituted muconates and transforms 3-chloromuconate into equal amounts of cis-dienelactone and protoanemonin, suggesting that it is a functional intermediate between chloromuconate cycloisomerases and muconate cycloisomerases. The corresponding genes, ccaA (C12O(ccaA)) and ccaB (MCI(ccaB)), were located in a 5.1-kb genomic region clustered with genes encoding trans-dienelactone hydrolase (ccaC) and maleylacetate reductase (ccaD) and a putative regulatory gene, ccaR, homologous to regulators of the IclR-type family. Thus, this region includes genes sufficient to enable MT1 to transform 4-chlorocatechol to 3-oxoadipate. Phylogenetic analysis showed that C12O(ccaA) and MCI(ccaB) are only distantly related to previously described catechol 1,2-dioxygenases and muconate cycloisomerases. Kinetic analysis indicated that MCI(ccaB) and the previously identified C12O(salD), rather than C12O(ccaA), are crucial for 5-chlorosalicylate degradation. Thus, MT1 uses enzymes encoded by a completely novel gene cluster for degradation of chlorosalicylates, which, together with a gene cluster encoding enzymes for channeling salicylates into the ortho-cleavage pathway, form an effective pathway for 4- and 5-chlorosalicylate mineralization.
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2008
 
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Tania González, María Carmen Terrón, Susana Yagüe, Howard Junca, José María Carbajo, Ernesto Javier Zapico, Ricardo Silva, Ainhoa Arana-Cuenca, Alejandro Téllez, Aldo Enrique González (2008)  Melanoidin-containing wastewaters induce selective laccase gene expression in the white-rot fungus Trametes sp. I-62.   Res Microbiol 159: 2. 103-109 Mar  
Abstract: Wastewaters generated from the production of ethanol from sugar cane molasses may have detrimental effects on the environment due to their high chemical oxygen demand and dark brown color. The color is mainly associated with the presence of melanoidins, which are highly recalcitrant to biodegradation. We report here the induction of laccases by molasses wastewaters and molasses melanoidins in the basidiomycetous fungus Trametes sp. I-62. The time course of effluent decolorization and laccase activity in the culture supernatant of the fungus were correlated. The expression of laccase genes lcc1 and lcc2 increased as a result of the addition of complete molasses wastewater and its high molecular weight fraction to fungal cultures. This is the first time differential laccase gene expression has been reported to occur upon exposure of fungal cultures to molasses wastewaters and their melanoidins.
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Hamdy A H Aly, Nguyen B Huu, Victor Wray, Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2008)  Two angular dioxygenases contribute to the metabolic versatility of dibenzofuran-degrading Rhodococcus sp. strain HA01.   Appl Environ Microbiol 74: 12. 3812-3822 Jun  
Abstract: Rhodococcus sp. strain HA01, isolated through its ability to utilize dibenzofuran (DBF) as the sole carbon and energy source, was also capable, albeit with low activity, of transforming dibenzo-p-dioxin (DD). This strain could also transform 3-chlorodibenzofuran (3CDBF), mainly by angular oxygenation at the ether bond-carrying carbon (the angular position) and an adjacent carbon atom, to 4-chlorosalicylate as the end product. Similarly, 2-chlorodibenzofuran (2CDBF) was transformed to 5-chlorosalicylate. However, lateral oxygenation at the 3,4-positions was also observed and yielded the novel product 2-chloro-3,4-dihydro-3,4-dihydroxydibenzofuran. Two gene clusters encoding enzymes for angular oxygenation (dfdA1A2A3A4 and dbfA1A2) were isolated, and expression of both was observed during growth on DBF. Heterologous expression revealed that both oxygenase systems catalyze angular oxygenation of DBF and DD but exhibited complementary substrate specificity with respect to CDBF transformation. While DfdA1A2A3A4 oxygenase, with high similarity to DfdA1A2A3A4 oxygenase from Terrabacter sp. strain YK3, transforms 3CDBF by angular dioxygenation at a rate of 29% +/- 4% that of DBF, 2CDBF was not transformed. In contrast, DbfA1A2 oxygenase, with high similarity to the DbfA1A2 oxygenase from Terrabacter sp. strain DBF63, exhibited complementary activity with angular oxygenase activity against 2CDBF but negligible activity against 3CDBF. Thus, Rhodococcus sp. strain HA01 constitutes the first described example of a bacterial strain where coexpression of two angular dioxygenases was observed. Such complementary activity allows for the efficient transformation of chlorinated DBFs.
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Sander A B Weelink, Nico C G Tan, Harm ten Broeke, Corné van den Kieboom, Wim van Doesburg, Alette A M Langenhoff, Jan Gerritse, Howard Junca, Alfons J M Stams (2008)  Isolation and characterization of Alicycliphilus denitrificans strain BC, which grows on benzene with chlorate as the electron acceptor.   Appl Environ Microbiol 74: 21. 6672-6681 Nov  
Abstract: A bacterium, strain BC, was isolated from a benzene-degrading chlorate-reducing enrichment culture. Strain BC degrades benzene in conjunction with chlorate reduction. Cells of strain BC are short rods that are 0.6 microm wide and 1 to 2 microm long, are motile, and stain gram negative. Strain BC grows on benzene and some other aromatic compounds with oxygen or in the absence of oxygen with chlorate as the electron acceptor. Strain BC is a denitrifying bacterium, but it is not able to grow on benzene with nitrate. The closest cultured relative is Alicycliphilus denitrificans type strain K601, a cyclohexanol-degrading nitrate-reducing betaproteobacterium. Chlorate reductase (0.4 U/mg protein) and chlorite dismutase (5.7 U/mg protein) activities in cell extracts of strain BC were determined. Gene sequences encoding a known chlorite dismutase (cld) were not detected in strain BC by using the PCR primers described in previous studies. As physiological and biochemical data indicated that there was oxygenation of benzene during growth with chlorate, a strategy was developed to detect genes encoding monooxygenase and dioxygenase enzymes potentially involved in benzene degradation in strain BC. Using primer sets designed to amplify members of distinct evolutionary branches in the catabolic families involved in benzene biodegradation, two oxygenase genes putatively encoding the enzymes performing the initial successive monooxygenations (BC-BMOa) and the cleavage of catechol (BC-C23O) were detected. Our findings suggest that oxygen formed by dismutation of chlorite can be used to attack organic molecules by means of oxygenases, as exemplified with benzene. Thus, aerobic pathways can be employed under conditions in which no external oxygen is supplied.
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Beatriz Cámara, Macarena Marín, Michael Schlömann, Hans-Jürgen Hecht, Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2008)  trans-Dienelactone hydrolase from Pseudomonas reinekei MT1, a novel zinc-dependent hydrolase.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 376: 2. 423-428 Nov  
Abstract: Pseudomonas reinekei MT1 is capable of growing on 4- and 5-chlorosalicylate, involving a pathway with trans-dienelactone hydrolase (trans-DLH) as a key enzyme. It acts on 4-chloromuconolactone formed during cycloisomerization of 3-chloromuconate by hydrolyzing it to maleylacetate. The gene encoding this activity was localized, sequenced and expressed in Escherichia coli. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry showed that both the wild-type as well as recombinant enzymes contained 2 moles of zinc but variable amounts of manganese/mol of protein subunit. The inactive metal-free apoenzyme could be reactivated by Zn(2+) or Mn(2+). Thus, trans-DLH is a Zn(2+)-dependent hydrolase using halosubstituted muconolactones and trans-dienelactone as substrates, where Mn(2+) can substitute for Zn(2+). It is the first member of COG1878 and PF04199 for which a direct physiological function has been reported.
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2007
 
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Robert Witzig, Hamdy A H Aly, Carsten Strömpl, Victor Wray, Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2007)  Molecular detection and diversity of novel diterpenoid dioxygenase DitA1 genes from proteobacterial strains and soil samples.   Environ Microbiol 9: 5. 1202-1218 May  
Abstract: Resin acids are tricyclic diterpenoids naturally synthesized by trees that are released from wood during pulping processes. Using a newly designed primer set, genes similar to that encoding the DitA1 catalytic alpha-subunit of the diterpenoid dioxygenase, a key enzyme in abietane resin acid degradation by Pseudomonas abietaniphila BKME-9, could be amplified from different Pseudomonas strains, whereas ditA1 gene sequence types representing distinct branches in the evolutionary tree were amplified from Burkholderia and Cupriavidus isolates. All isolates harbouring a ditA1-homologue were capable of growth on dehydroabietic acid as the sole source of carbon and energy and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis in three strains confirmed that ditA1 was expressed constitutively or in response to DhA, demonstrating its involvement in DhA-degradation. Evolutionary analyses indicate that gyrB (as a phylogenetic marker) and ditA1 genes have coevolved under purifying selection from their ancestral variants present in the most recent common ancestor of the genera Pseudomonas, Cupriavidus and Burkholderia. A polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation poylmorphism fingerprinting method was established to monitor the diversity of ditA1 genes in environmental samples. The molecular fingerprints indicated the presence ofa broad, previously unrecognized diversity of diterpenoid dioxygenase genes in soils, and suggest that other bacterial phyla may also harbour the genetic potential for DhA-degradation.
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2006
 
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Robert Witzig, Howard Junca, Hans-Jürgen Hecht, Dietmar H Pieper (2006)  Assessment of toluene/biphenyl dioxygenase gene diversity in benzene-polluted soils: links between benzene biodegradation and genes similar to those encoding isopropylbenzene dioxygenases.   Appl Environ Microbiol 72: 5. 3504-3514 May  
Abstract: The PCR-single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) technique was used to assess the diversity and distribution of Rieske nonheme iron oxygenases of the toluene/biphenyl subfamily in soil DNA and bacterial isolates recovered from sites contaminated with benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes (BTEX). The central cores of genes encoding the catalytic alpha subunits were targeted, since they are responsible for the substrate specificities of these enzymes. SSCP functional genotype fingerprinting revealed a substantial diversity of oxygenase genes in three differently BTEX-contaminated soil samples, and sequence analysis indicated that in both the soil DNA and the bacterial isolates, genes for oxygenases related to the isopropylbenzene (cumene) dioxygenase branch of the toluene/biphenyl oxygenase subfamily were predominant among the detectable genotypes. The peptide sequences of the two most abundant alpha subunit sequence types differed by only five amino acids (residues 258, 286, 288, 289, and 321 according to numbering in cumene dioxygenase alpha subunit CumA1 of Pseudomonas fluorescens IP01). However, a strong correlation between sequence type and substrate utilization pattern was observed in isolates harboring these genes. Two of these residues were located at positions contributing, according to the resolved crystal structure of cumene dioxygenase from Pseudomonas fluorescens IP01, to the inner surface of the substrate-binding pocket. Isolates containing an alpha subunit with isoleucine and leucine at positions 288 and 321, respectively, were capable of degrading benzene and toluene, whereas isolates containing two methionine substitutions were found to be incapable of degrading toluene, indicating that the more bulky methionine residues significantly narrowed the available space within the substrate-binding pocket.
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Barbara Hendrickx, Howard Junca, Jolana Vosahlova, Antje Lindner, Irene Rüegg, Margarete Bucheli-Witschel, Folkert Faber, Thomas Egli, Margit Mau, Michael Schlömann, Maria Brennerova, Vladimir Brenner, Dietmar H Pieper, Eva M Top, Winnie Dejonghe, Leen Bastiaens, Dirk Springael (2006)  Alternative primer sets for PCR detection of genotypes involved in bacterial aerobic BTEX degradation: distribution of the genes in BTEX degrading isolates and in subsurface soils of a BTEX contaminated industrial site.   J Microbiol Methods 64: 2. 250-265 Feb  
Abstract: Eight new primer sets were designed for PCR detection of (i) mono-oxygenase and dioxygenase gene sequences involved in initial attack of bacterial aerobic BTEX degradation and of (ii) catechol 2,3-dioxygenase gene sequences responsible for meta-cleavage of the aromatic ring. The new primer sets allowed detection of the corresponding genotypes in soil with a detection limit of 10(3)-10(4) or 10(5)-10(6) gene copies g(-1) soil, assuming one copy of the gene per cell. The primer sets were used in PCR to assess the distribution of the catabolic genes in BTEX degrading bacterial strains and DNA extracts isolated from soils sampled from different locations and depths (vadose, capillary fringe and saturated zone) within a BTEX contaminated site. In both soil DNA and the isolates, tmoA-, xylM- and xylE1-like genes were the most frequently recovered BTEX catabolic genes. xylM and xylE1 were only recovered from material from the contaminated samples while tmoA was detected in material from both the contaminated and non-contaminated samples. The isolates, mainly obtained from the contaminated locations, belonged to the Actinobacteria or Proteobacteria (mainly Pseudomonas). The ability to degrade benzene was the most common BTEX degradation phenotype among them and its distribution was largely congruent with the distribution of the tmoA-like genotype. The presence of tmoA and xylM genes in phylogenetically distant strains indicated the occurrence of horizontal transfer of BTEX catabolic genes in the aquifer. Overall, these results show spatial variation in the composition of the BTEX degradation genes and hence in the type of BTEX degradation activity and pathway, at the examined site. They indicate that bacteria carrying specific pathways and primarily carrying tmoA/xylM/xylE1 genotypes, are being selected upon BTEX contamination.
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2004
 
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Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2004)  Functional gene diversity analysis in BTEX contaminated soils by means of PCR-SSCP DNA fingerprinting: comparative diversity assessment against bacterial isolates and PCR-DNA clone libraries.   Environ Microbiol 6: 2. 95-110 Feb  
Abstract: Developments in molecular biology based techniques have led to rapid and reliable tools to characterize microbial community structures and to monitor their dynamics under in situ conditions. However, there has been a distinct lack of emphasis on monitoring the functional diversity in the environment. Genes encoding catechol 2,3-dioxygenases (C23O), as key enzymes of various aerobic aromatic degradation pathways, were used as functional targets to assess the catabolic gene diversity in differentially BTEX contaminated environments by polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP). Site specific PCR-SSCP fingerprints were obtained, showing that gene diversity experienced shifts correlated to temporal changes and levels of contamination. PCR-SSCP enabled the recovery of predominant gene polymorphs, and results closely matched with the information retrieved from random sequencing of PCR-DNA clone libraries. A new method for isolating strains capable of growing on BTEX compounds was developed to diminish preselection or enrichment bias and to assess the function of predominant gene polymorphs. C23O abundance in isolates correlated with the levels of BTEX pollution in the soil samples analysed. Isolates harbouring C23O genes, identical to the gene polymorph predominant in all contaminated sites analysed, showed an unexpected benzene but not toluene mineralizing phenotype whereas isolates harbouring a C23O gene variant differing by a single point mutation and observed in highly polluted sites only, were capable, among some other isolates, to mineralize benzene and toluene, indicating a catabolically determined sharing of carbon sources on-site. The PCR-SSCP technique is thus a powerful tool for assessing the diversity of functional genes and the identification of predominant gene polymorphs in environmental samples as a prerequisite to understand the functioning of microbial communities.
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M C Terrón, M López-Fernández, J M Carbajo, H Junca, A Téllez, S Yagüe, A Arana-Cuenca, T González, A E González (2004)  Tannic acid interferes with the commonly used laccase-detection assay based on ABTS as the substrate.   Biochimie 86: 8. 519-522 Aug  
Abstract: Laccase enzymatic activity in biological samples is usually detected spectrophotometrically through its capacity to oxidize several specific aromatic compounds. One of the most commonly used substrates is the compound 2-2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS), which becomes green-blue coloured when it is oxidized by laccase. In this work we study the interference of tannic acid with the spectrophotometric assay to detect laccase by using ABTS as the substrate. Our data show that under the normal reaction conditions of this assay, but in the absence of any catalyst, tannic acid is able to carry out the chemical reduction of the oxidized specie of ABTS, thus decreasing the overall detectable laccase-activity values observed when this enzyme is present in the reaction mixture. Therefore, our results represent an important warning concerning a commonly used method for measuring, detecting or screening laccases in biological samples that may content tannic acid or structural-related molecules.
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Howard Junca, Iris Plumeier, Hans-Jürgen Hecht, Dietmar H Pieper (2004)  Difference in kinetic behaviour of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase variants from a polluted environment.   Microbiology 150: Pt 12. 4181-4187 Dec  
Abstract: In a previous environmental survey of a polluted area, the authors identified two catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (C23O) sequences predominant in environmental bacterial isolates mineralizing benzene and/or toluene and also in soil DNA extracts. In the present study, using information of stable operon arrangement and conserved gene sequences, the complete C23O ORFs of these two variants were cloned, sequenced and overexpressed. The variants differ in six nucleotide positions, and the putative protein sequences differ only by a single amino acid, Tyr or His, at position 218. Even though the three-dimensional model does not suggest a significant influence of such an amino acid substitution on enzyme function, the Tyr218 variant differed significantly from the His218 variant in lower turnover number and in lower apparent K(m) for catecholic substrates. These results are evidence of the importance for enzyme function of amino acids not directly influencing active site structure and prove the utility of recovering polymorphisms evolved and selected for special functions in natural ecosystems.
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2003
 
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Tania González, María del del Terrón, Ernesto Zapico, Susana Yagüe, Alejandro Téllez, Howard Junca, Aldo González (2003)  Identification of a new laccase gene and confirmation of genomic predictions by cDNA sequences of Trametes sp. I-62 laccase family.   Mycol Res 107: Pt 6. 727-735 Jun  
Abstract: The strain Trametes sp. I-62 (CECT 20197) is a white-rot fungus with great potential for biotechnological applications in the fields of industrial waste water decolorization and clean up. Three laccase genes: lcc1, lcc2 and lcc3 have been cloned and sequenced from this basidiomycete. In this work, the coding regions of the corresponding cDNAs have been synthesized, cloned, and sequenced. They are 1563, 1563 and 1575 bp in length, respectively. Former putative intron/exon structures from genomic DNA are fully confirmed by match analysis with our cDNA sequences. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction--Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) analysis, an additional laccase cDNA was also identified, corresponding to a new gene, lcc1A, which displayed 99.6% identity with lcc1 at protein level. Such high similarity between lcc1 and lcc1A sequences, and the comparison with reports from other basidiomycete laccases, suggest that in this strain these two genes are allelic variants.
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Howard Junca, Dietmar H Pieper (2003)  Amplified functional DNA restriction analysis to determine catechol 2,3-dioxygenase gene diversity in soil bacteria.   J Microbiol Methods 55: 3. 697-708 Dec  
Abstract: To determine phylogenetic diversity of a functional gene from strain collections or environmental DNA amplifications, new and fast methods are required. Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (C23O) subfamily I.2.A genes, known to be of crucial importance for aromatic degradation, were used as a model to adapt the amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis to functional genes. Sequence data of C23O genes from 13 reference strains, representing the main branches of the C23O family I.2.A phylogeny, were used for simulation of theoretical restriction patterns. Among other restriction enzymes, Sau3A1 theoretically produce characteristic profiles from each subfamily I.2.A member and their similarities reassembled the main divergent branches of C23O gene phylogeny. This enzyme was used to perform an amplified functional DNA restriction analysis (AFDRA) on C23O genes of reference strains and 19 isolates. Cluster analyses of the restriction fragment profiles obtained from isolates showed patterns with distinct similarities to the reference strain profiles, allowing to distinguish four different groups. Sequences of PCR fragments from isolates were in close agreement with the phylogenetic correlations predicted with the AFDRA approach. AFDRA thus provided a quick assessment of C23O diversity in a strain collection and insights of its gene phylogeny affiliation among known family members. It cannot only be easily applied to a vast number of isolates but also to define the predominant polymorphism of a functional gene present in environmental DNA extracts. This approach may be useful to differentiate functional genes also for many other gene families.
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2002
 
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José M Carbajo, Howard Junca, Maria C Terrón, Tania González, Susana Yagüe, Ernesto Zapico, Aldo E González (2002)  Tannic acid induces transcription of laccase gene cglcc1 in the white-rot fungus Coriolopsis gallica.   Can J Microbiol 48: 12. 1041-1047 Dec  
Abstract: Laccase, a phenoloxidase enzyme secreted by white-rot fungi, has a significant role in the degradation of lignin and environmental pollutants. Coriolopsis gallica is a ligninolytic basidiomycete that produces high levels of this extracellular enzyme. A laccase gene cglcc1 from this fungus has been cloned and sequenced. The capacity of C. gallica to efficiently degrade polyphenols has been successfully applied in our laboratory to the biotreatment and decolorization of several industrial wastewaters. This study focused on the effect of tannic acid, a natural compound widely distributed in plants, on the production of laccase activity by C. gallica. Our results showed an evident increase of extracellular laccase levels when C. gallica was grown in the presence of tannic acid. Concentrations of 50 and 100 microM of this compound increased laccase activity when compared with control samples grown without tannic acid. In addition, we found an increase in laccase transcript levels in C. gallica grown in culture media supplemented with tannic acid. The role of tannic acid was shown to be an inductor of laccase activity in this fungus, due to the enhancement of expression of the laccase gene at the transcriptional level.
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