Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.86, No.2, 743-751, 2010
Two different electron transfer pathways may involve in azoreduction in Shewanella decolorationis S12
Electron transfer pathways for azoreduction by S. decolorationis S12 were studied using a mutant S12-22 which had a transposon insertion in ccmA. The results imply that there are two different pathways for electron transport to azo bonds. The colony of S12-22 was whitish and incapable of producing mature c-type cytochromes whose alpha-peak was at 553 nm in the wild type S12. The mutant S12-22 could not use formate as the sole electron donor for azoreduction either in vivo or in vitro, but intact cells of S12-22 were able to reduce azo dyes of low polarity, such as methyl red, when NADH was served as the sole electron donor. Although the highly polar-sulfonated amaranth could not be reduced by intact cells of S12-22, it could be efficiently reduced by cell extracts of the mutant when NADH was provided as the sole electron donor. These results suggest that the mature c-type cytochromes are essential electron mediators for the extracellular azoreduction of intact cells, while the other pathway without the involvement of mature c-type cytochromes, NADH-dependent oxidoreductase-mediated electron transfer pathway can reduce lowly polar sulfonated azo dyes inside the whole cells or highly polar sulfonated azo dyes in the cell extracts without bacterial membrane barriers.