Microbial oxidation of amines. Partial purification of a trimethylamine mono-oxygenase from Pseudomonas aminovorans and its role in growth on trimethylamine

Abstract
1. A mono-oxygenase, which oxidizes trimethylamine and other tertiary amines bearing methyl or ethyl groups, was partially purified sixfold from Pseudomonas aminovorans grown on trimethylamine as sole carbon source. 2. The preferred electron donor was NADPH. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 8.0-9.4 for trimethylamine oxidation, and 8.8-9.2 for dimethylamine oxidation. 3. The oxidation product of trimethylamine was shown to be trimethylamine N-oxide. Other tertiary amines were probably also converted into N-oxides. 4. The enzyme also oxidized secondary amines. 5. The oxidation of trimethylamine was only slightly inhibited by CO and not at all by KCN or proadifen hydrochloride (SKF 525-A), but was inhibited by trimethylsulphonium chloride, tetramethylammonium chloride, 2,4-dichloro-6-phenylphenoxyethylamine (Lilly 53325) and its NN-diethyl derivative (Lilly 18947). 6. The oxidation of dimethylamine showed a similar response to inhibitors and a parallel loss in activity on heating at 35 degrees C. 7. The activities of the trimethylamine mono-oxygenase, trimethylamine N-oxide demethylase and the secondary-amine mono-oxygenase increased severalfold during adaptation of succinate-grown bacteria to growth on trimethylamine, and the trimethylamine mono-oxygenase was the first enzyme to show an increase in activity. It is concluded that all three enzymes are involved in growth on trimethylamine by this organism.