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  • 7β-Hydroxysteroid dehydratase Hsh3 eliminates the 7-hydroxy group of the bile salt ursodeoxycholate during degradation by <i>Sphingobium</i> sp. strain Chol11 and other <i>Sphingomonadaceae</i> APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY Richtsmeier, P., Nedielkov, R., Haring, M., Yuecel, O., Elsner, L., Luelf, R., Woehlbrand, L., Rabus, R., Moeller, H., Philipp, B., Mueller, F. 2025: e0018525

    Abstract

    Bile salts are steroids with distinctive hydroxylation patterns that are produced and excreted by vertebrates. In contrast to common human bile salts, ursodeoxycholate (UDCA) has a 7-hydroxy group in β-configuration and is used in large amounts for the treatment of diverse gastrointestinal diseases. We isolated the 7β-hydroxysteroid dehydratase Hsh3 that is involved in UDCA degradation by Sphingobium sp. strain Chol11. Hsh3 eliminates the 7β-hydroxy group as water, leading to a double bond in the B-ring. This is similar to 7α-hydroxysteroid dehydratases in this and other strains, but Hsh3 is evolutionarily different from these. Purified Hsh3 accepted steroids with and without side chains as substrates and had minor activity with 7α-hydroxy groups. The deletion mutant strain Chol11 Δhsh3 had impacted growth with UDCA and accumulated a novel compound. The compound was identified as 3',5-dihydroxy-H-methyl-hexahydro-5-indene-1-one-propanoate, consisting of steroid rings C and D with a C3-side chain carrying the former 7β-hydroxy group, indicating that Hsh3 activity is important especially for the later stages of bile salt degradation. Hsh3 homologs were found in other sphingomonads that were also able to degrade UDCA as well as in environmental metagenomes. Thus, Hsh3 adds to the bacterial enzyme repertoire for degrading a variety of differently hydroxylated bile salts.IMPORTANCEThe bacterial degradation of different bile salts is not only important for the removal of these steroidal compounds from the environment but also harbors interesting enzymes for steroid biotechnology. The 7β-hydroxy bile salt ursodeoxycholate (UDCA) naturally occurs in high concentration in the feces of black bears and has important pharmaceutical relevance for the treatment of different liver-related diseases, for which it is administered in high and increasing amounts. Additionally, it is present in the bile salt pool of humans in trace amounts. While UDCA degradation is environmentally important, the enzyme Hsh3 modifies the hydroxy group that confers the medically relevant properties and thus might be interesting for microbiome analyses and biotechnological applications.

    View details for DOI 10.1128/aem.00185-25

    View details for Web of Science ID 001484356900001

    View details for PubMedID 40340444