Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.362, No.2, 449-453, 2007
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase in mycobacteria possesses a nitric oxide dehydrogenase activity
CO dehydrogenase (CO-DH) catalyzes the oxidation Of CO to CO2 in carboxydobacteria. Cell-free extracts prepared from several mycobacteria, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra, showed NO dehydrogenase (NO-.DH) activity in a reaction mixture containing sodium nitroprusside (SNP) as the source of NO. The association of the NO-DH activity with CO-DH was revealed by activity staining and confirmed by enzyme assay with purified CO-DH from Mycobacterium sp. strain JC1, a carboxydotrophic mycobacterium. SNP stimulated the production of CO-DH with a coincidental increase in NO-DH activity in the bacterium, further supporting this association and implying the existence of a possible SNP-induced CO-DH gene expression. The addition of purified CO-DH to cultures of Escherichia coli revealed that the enzyme protected E coli from SNP-induced killing in a dose-dependant way. The present results indicate that mycobacterial CO-DH also acts as a NO-DH, which may function in the protection of mycobacterial pathogens from nitrosative stress during infection. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:CO dehydrogenase;NO dehydrogenase;carboxydobacteria;mycobacteria;Mycobacterium sp strain JCI