Database Retrieval System V1.0

Name soeA
Function
Part of the SoeABC complex that catalyzes the oxidation of sulfite to sulfate. a quinone + H2O + sulfite = a quinol + sulfate
Definition sulfite dehydrogenase (quinone) subunit SoeA [EC:1.8.5.6]
AA seq
MEHHARTQDERLEIKTTTCYMCACRCGIRVHLREGEVRYIDGNPEHPLNQGVICAKGASG IMKQYSPARLTQPLMRRADAERGSAQFEPVSWEVAFDILEKRLAGIRATDPKKFALFTGR DQMQALTGLFAKQFGTPNYAAHGGFCSANMAAGMIYTIGGSFWEFGGPDLDSAKLFFMIG TAEDHHSNPLKIAISKFKRGGGRFIAINPIRTGYAAIADEWVPIKPGTDGALFMAFLHEL IAADAWDHEFVQRYTNAADLVDLNEESENFGLFVSDPDTPAGNPLFPQNHAWWDTEAARA VPHHSPGVTPALDGRYTLGDGTPVAPSFTLLRERVADCTPEWAADITGIPAATIRRLAQE MIQTSRDHRITLPIRWTDAWGETHETVTGNPVAFHAMRGLAAHSNGFQSIRALAVLMSLL GTIDRPGGFRHKSPFPRAVPPSAKPPNSPDAVKPNTPLATGPLGWPAAPEDLFIDENGGP VRIDKAFSWEYPLAVHGVMHSVITNAWRGDPYPIDTLMIFMANMAWNSSMNTTKVREMLV DKHANGDYKIPFLVVCDAFQSEMTAFADLILPDTTYLERHDAMSMLDRPISEFDGPADSV RVPVVPPSGECKPFQEVLIELASRLKFPAFTTAEGTRRYRDYPDFVVNFTTTPDSGVGFL IGWRGKDGDKALVGEPNPKQWEQYAKNNCVFHYVMPEDLQYMRNCNGPYLDWAVKNGFRK FREPIVIQLYSDVMQKFRLAAQGRTKGRQPPDHLRERVEKYFDPLPFWYAPLESNSTDLE RFPLAAVTQRPMAMYHSWDSQNAWLRQIHGENYLYMNPLMAAEKGIADGGWIYVESQWGR VRCMARFSETVEPGTVWTWNAIGKASGAWSLGPDANESQRGFLLNHLITDELPGTDEADQ AAGRVSNSDPVTGQAAWYDVRVRIYPAEADAQHTLPQFDAMRALPGSNGVISRIVQTYFA GQGEFAARLRGAVGRK992
Structure
Reference
PMIDTitle & AuthorAbstractYear
024030319Sulfite oxidation in the purple sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum: identification of SoeABC as a major player and relevance of SoxYZ in the process. Dahl C, Franz B, Hensen D, Kesselheim A, Zigann R. In phototrophic sulfur bacteria, sulfite is a well-established intermediate during reduced sulfur compound oxidation. Sulfite is generated in the cytoplasm by the reverse-acting dissimilatory sulfite reductase DsrAB. Many purple sulfur bacteria can even use externally available sulfite as a photosynthetic electron donor. Nevertheless, the exact mode of sulfite oxidation in these organisms is a long-standing enigma. Indirect oxidation in the cytoplasm via adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (APS) catalysed by APS reductase and ATP sulfurylase is neither generally present nor essential. The inhibition of sulfite oxidation by tungstate in the model organism Allochromatium vinosum indicated the involvement of a molybdoenzyme, but homologues of the periplasmic molybdopterin-containing SorAB or SorT sulfite dehydrogenases are not encoded in genome-sequenced purple or green sulfur bacteria. However, genes for a membrane-bound polysulfide reductase-like iron-sulfur molybdoprotein (SoeABC) are universally present. The catalytic subunit of the protein is predicted to be oriented towards the cytoplasm. We compared the sulfide- and sulfite-oxidizing capabilities of A. vinosum WT with single mutants deficient in SoeABC or APS reductase and the respective double mutant, and were thus able to prove that SoeABC is the major sulfite-oxidizing enzyme in A. vinosum and probably also in other phototrophic sulfur bacteria. The genes also occur in a large number of chemotrophs, indicating a general importance of SoeABC for sulfite oxidation in the cytoplasm. Furthermore, we showed that the periplasmic sulfur substrate-binding protein SoxYZ is needed in parallel to the cytoplasmic enzymes for effective sulfite oxidation in A. vinosum and provided a model for the interplay between these systems despite their localization in different cellular compartments. 2013
130858836Genomes of Neutrophilic Sulfur-Oxidizing Chemolithoautotrophs Representing 9 Proteobacterial Species From 8 Genera. Watanabe T, Kojima H, Umezawa K, Hori C, Takasuka TE, Kato Y, Fukui M. Even in the current era of metagenomics, the interpretation of nucleotide sequence data is primarily dependent on knowledge obtained from a limited number of microbes isolated in pure culture. Thus, it is of fundamental importance to expand the variety of strains available in pure culture, to make reliable connections between physiological characteristics and genomic information. In this study, two sulfur oxidizers that potentially represent two novel species were isolated and characterized. They were subjected to whole-genome sequencing together with 7 neutrophilic and chemolithoautotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. The genes for sulfur oxidation in the obtained genomes were identified and compared with those of isolated sulfur oxidizers in the classes Betaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria. Although the combinations of these genes in the respective genomes are diverse, typical combinations corresponding to three types of core sulfur oxidation pathways were identified. Each pathway involves one of three specific sets of proteins, SoxCD, DsrABEFHCMKJOP, and HdrCBAHypHdrCB. All three core pathways contain the SoxXYZAB proteins, and a cytoplasmic sulfite oxidase encoded by soeABC is a conserved component in the core pathways lacking SoxCD. Phylogenetically close organisms share same core sulfur oxidation pathway, but a notable exception was observed in the family 'Sulfuricellaceae'. In this family, some strains have either core pathway involving DsrABEFHCMKJOP or HdrCBAHypHdrCB, while others have both pathways. A proteomics analysis showed that proteins constituting the core pathways were produced at high levels. While hypothesized function of HdrCBAHypHdrCB is similar to that of Dsr system, both sets of proteins were detected with high relative abundances in the proteome of a strain possessing genes for these proteins. In addition to the genes for sulfur oxidation, those for arsenic metabolism were searched for in the sequenced genomes. As a result, two strains belonging to the families Thiobacillaceae and Sterolibacteriaceae were observed to harbor genes encoding ArxAB, a type of arsenite oxidase that has been identified in a limited number of bacteria. These findings were made with the newly obtained genomes, including those from 6 genera from which no genome sequence of an isolated organism was previously available. These genomes will serve as valuable references to interpret nucleotide sequences. 2019
232735861Sulfite oxidation by the quinone-reducing molybdenum sulfite dehydrogenase SoeABC from the bacterium Aquifex aeolicus. Boughanemi S, Infossi P, Giudici-Orticoni MT, Schoepp-Cothenet B, Guiral M. The microaerophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus is a chemolitoautotroph that uses sulfur compounds as electron sources. The model of oxidation of the energetic sulfur compounds in this bacterium predicts that sulfite would probably be a metabolic intermediate released in the cytoplasm. In this work, we purified and characterized a membrane-bound sulfite dehydrogenase, identified as an SoeABC enzyme, that was previously described as a sulfur reductase. It is a member of the DMSO-reductase family of molybdenum enzymes. This type of enzyme was identified a few years ago but never purified, and biochemical data and kinetic properties were completely lacking. An enzyme catalyzing sulfite oxidation using Nitro-blue tetrazolium as artificial electron acceptor was extracted from the membrane fraction of Aquifex aeolicus. The purified enzyme is a dimer of trimer (αβγ)2 of about 390 kDa. The KM for sulfite and kcat values were 34 μM and 567 s-1 respectively, at pH 8.3 and 55 °C. We furthermore showed that SoeABC reduces a UQ10 analogue, the decyl-ubiquinone, as well, with a KM of 2.6 μM and a kcat of 52.9 s-1. It seems to specifically oxidize sulfite but can work in the reverse direction, reduction of sulfur or tetrathionate, using reduced methyl viologen as electron donor. The close phylogenetic relationship of Soe with sulfur and tetrathionate reductases that we established, perfectly explains this enzymatic ability, although its bidirectionality in vivo still needs to be clarified. Oxygen-consumption measurements confirmed that electrons generated by sulfite oxidation in the cytoplasm enter the respiratory chain at the level of quinones. 2020
325017294Complete genomes of freshwater sulfur oxidizers Sulfuricella denitrificans skB26 and Sulfuritalea hydrogenivorans sk43H: genetic insights into the sulfur oxidation pathway of betaproteobacteria. Watanabe T, Kojima H, Fukui M.Despite detailed studies of marine sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, our knowledge concerning their counterparts in freshwater lake ecosystems is limited. Genome sequencing of the freshwater sulfur-oxidizing betaproteobacteria Sulfuricella denitrificans skB26 and Sulfuritalea hydrogenivorans sk43H have been completed. Strain skB26 possessed a circular plasmid of 86.6-kbp in addition to its chromosome, and an approximate 18-kbp region of the plasmid was occupied by an arxA-like operon, encoding a new clade of anaerobic arsenite oxidase. Multilocus sequence analysis showed that strain skB26 could not be assigned to any existing order; thus a novel order, Sulfuricellales, is proposed. The genomes of strains skB26 and sk43H were examined, focusing on the composition and the phylogeny of genes involved in the oxidation of inorganic sulfur compounds. Strains skB26 and sk43H shared a common pathway, which consisted of Sqr, SoxEF, SoxXYZAB, Dsr proteins, AprBA, Sat, and SoeABC. Comparative genomics of betaproteobacterial sulfur oxidizers showed that this pathway was also shared by the freshwater sulfur oxidizers Thiobacillus denitrificans and Sideroxydans lithotrophicus. It also revealed the presence of a conserved gene cluster, which was located immediately upstream of the betaproteobacterial dsr operon. 2014
422739490Roseobacter clade bacteria are abundant in coastal sediments and encode a novel combination of sulfur oxidation genes. Lenk S, Moraru C, Hahnke S, Arnds J, Richter M, Kube M, Reinhardt R, Brinkhoff T, Harder J, Amann R, Mußmann M. Roseobacter clade bacteria (RCB) are abundant in marine bacterioplankton worldwide and central to pelagic sulfur cycling. Very little is known about their abundance and function in marine sediments. We investigated the abundance, diversity and sulfur oxidation potential of RCB in surface sediments of two tidal flats. Here, RCB accounted for up to 9.6% of all cells and exceeded abundances commonly known for pelagic RCB by 1000-fold as revealed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA and sulfate thiohydrolase (SoxB) genes indicated diverse, possibly sulfur-oxidizing RCB related to sequences known from bacterioplankton and marine biofilms. To investigate the sulfur oxidation potential of RCB in sediments in more detail, we analyzed a metagenomic fragment from a RCB. This fragment encoded the reverse dissimilatory sulfite reductase (rDSR) pathway, which was not yet found in RCB, a novel type of sulfite dehydrogenase (SoeABC) and the Sox multi-enzyme complex including the SoxCD subunits. This was unexpected as soxCD and dsr genes were presumed to be mutually exclusive in sulfur-oxidizing prokaryotes. This unique gene arrangement would allow a metabolic flexibility beyond known sulfur-oxidizing pathways. We confirmed the presence of dsrA by geneFISH in closely related RCB from an enrichment culture. Our results show that RCB are an integral part of the microbial community in marine sediments, where they possibly oxidize inorganic and organic sulfur compounds in oxic and suboxic sediment layers. 2012

Dahl C , Franz B , Hensen D , et al. Sulfite oxidation in the purple sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum: Identification of SoeABC as a major player and relevance of SoxYZ in the process[J]. Microbiology, 2013, 159(Pt_12):2626-2638.