Anaerobic Degradation of Naphthalene and 2-methylnaphthalene by Strains of Marine Sulfate-reducing Bacteria.
The anaerobic biodegradation of naphthalene, an aromatic
hydrocarbon in tar and petroleum, has been
repeatedly observed in environments but scarcely
in pure cultures. To further explore the relationships
and physiology of anaerobic naphthalene-degrading
microorganisms, sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRS)
were enriched from a Mediterranean sediment with
added naphthalene. Two strains (NaphS3, NaphS6)
with oval cells were isolated which showed
naphthalene-dependent sulfate reduction. According
to 16S rRNA gene sequences, both strains were
Deltaproteobacteria and closely related to each other
and to a previously described naphthalene-degrading
sulfate-reducing strain (NaphS2) from a North Sea
habitat. Other close relatives were SRS able to
degrade alkylbenzenes, and phylotypes enriched
anaerobically with benzene. If in adaptation experiments
the three naphthalene-grown strains were
exposed to 2-methylnaphthalene, this compound
was utilized after a pronounced lag phase, indicatingthat naphthalene did not induce the capacity
for 2-methylnaphthalene degradation. Comparative
denaturing gel electrophoresis of cells grown with
naphthalene or 2-methylnaphthalene revealed a striking
protein band which was only present upon growth
with the latter substrate. Peptide sequences from this
band perfectly matched those of a protein predicted
from genomic libraries of the strains. Sequence similarity
(50% identity) of the predicted protein to the
large subunit of the toluene-activating enzyme (benzylsuccinate
synthase) from other anaerobic bacteria
indicated that the detected protein is part of an
analogous 2-methylnaphthalene-activating enzyme.
The absence of this protein in naphthalene-grown
cells together with the adaptation experiments as well
as isotopic metabolite differentiation upon growth
with a mixture of ds-naphthalene and unlabelled
2-methylnaphthalene suggest that the marine strains
do not metabolize naphthalene by initial methylation
via 2-methylnaphthalene, a previously suggested
mechanism. The inability to utilize 1-naphthol or
2-naphthol also excludes these compounds as free
intermediates. Results leave open the possibility of
naphthalene carboxylation, another previously suggested
activation mechanism.