RESUMO
Borneol is a bicyclic plant monoterpene. It can be degraded by soil microorganisms through the conversion of borneol dehydrogenase (BDH) and a known camphor degradation pathway. Recombinant BDH from Pseudomonas sp. TCU-HL1 was produced in the form of inclusion body. The refolded BDH1 tends to precipitate. Insoluble recombinant BDH1 was converted into a soluble form by adding glycerol in LB medium. The kcat and kcat/Km values of soluble form BDH1 for (+)-borneol turned out to be about 34-fold and 45-fold higher, respectively, than those of the refolded enzyme. On the other hand, a gene knockout mutant, TCU-HL1Δbdh, was constructed to investigate the possible presence of a second copy of the bdh gene in TCU-HL1 genome. A new gene, bdh2, encoding a BDH isozyme, was identified, and the recombinant BDH2 protein was produced in a soluble form. Both bdh1 and bdh2 genes are expressed in the crude extract of wild type TCU-HL1, as shown by RT-qPCR results. Both BDH isozymes prefer to degrade (+)-borneol, rather than (-)-borneol, probably because (+)-camphor is the main form present in nature.