Tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine oxidase reaction in Azotobacter vinelandii.

  • 1 December 1975
    • journal article
    • Vol. 30 (6), 951-8
Abstract
It was possible to quantitate the tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) oxidase reaction in Azotobacter vinelandii strain O using turbidimetrically standarized resting cell suspensions. The Q(O2) value obtained for whole cell oxidation of ascorbate-TMPD appeared to reflect the full measure of the high respiratory oxidative capability usually exhibited by this genera of organisms. The Q(O2) value for the TMPD oxidase reaction ranged from 1,700 to 2,000 and this value was equivalent to that obtained for the oxidation of the growth substrate, e.g., acetate. The kinetic analyses for TMPD oxidation by whole cells was similar to that obtained for the "particulate" A. vinelandii electron transport particle, that fraction which TMPD oxidase activity is exclusively associated with. Under the conditions used, there appeared to be no permeability problems; TMPD (reduced by ascorbate) readily penetrated the cell and oxidized at a rate comparable to that of the growth substrate. This, however, was not true for the oxidation of another electron donor, 2,6-dichloroindophenol, whose whole cell Q(O2) values, under comparable conditions, were twofold lower. The TMPD oxidase activity in A. vinelandii whole cells was found to be affected by the physiological growth conditions, and resting cells obtained from cells grown on sucrose, either under nitrogen-fixing conditions or on nitrate as the combined nitrogen source, exhibited low TMPD oxidase rates. Such low TMPD oxidase rates were also noted for chemically induced pleomorphic A. vinelandii cells, which suggests that modified growth conditions can (i) alter the nature of the intracellular terminal oxidase formed (or induced), or (ii) alter surface permeability, depending upon the growth conditions used. Preliminary studies on the quantitative TMPD oxidation reaction in mutant whole cells of both Azotobacter and a well-known Mucor bacilliformis strain AY1, deficient in cytochrome oxidase activity, showed this assay can be very useful for detecting respiratory deficiencies in the metabolism of whole cells.