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Title: Microbial metabolism of pyridinium compounds. Metabolism of 4-carboxy-1-methylpyridinium chloride, a photolytic product of paraquat. Author: Wright KA, Cain RB. Journal: Biochem J; 1972 Jul; 128(3):543-59. PubMed ID: 4404506. Abstract: 1. A bacterium, Achromobacter D, isolated from garden soil by elective culture, utilized N-methylisonicotinic acid (4-carboxy-1-methylpyridinium chloride) as sole carbon source. 2. Extracts of N-methylisonicotinate-grown cells oxidized this substrate only after supplementation with a source of nicotinamide nucleotides and then consumed 1 mol of O(2) and released 1 mol of CO(2)/mol of N-methylisonicotinate supplied. 3. The N-methyl group of the substrate was released as methylamine whereas the five C atoms of the pyridine ring were accounted for as succinate and formate. The CO(2) evolved by extracts was believed to derive from the carboxyl group on C-4 of the heterocyclic ring. 4. The immediate precursor of the succinate end-product was succinic semialdehyde; the inducible nature of succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase in N-methylisonicotinate-grown cells supported this finding. 5. There was no evidence for monohydroxylation of the ring, but the time sequence of the appearance of the end-products indicated that the oxygen-requiring, NADH-requiring and decarboxylation steps clearly preceded the formation of methylamine and succinate. 6. The results are consistent with the oxidative cleavage of a partially reduced heterocyclic ring followed by several hydrolytic and dehydrogenase steps resulting in the appearance of the end-products.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]