• Title of article

    Investigating Terephthalate Biodegradation: Structural Characterization of a Putative Decarboxylating cis-Dihydrodiol Dehydrogenase

  • Author/Authors

    Jasleen Bains، نويسنده , , Jeremy E. Wulff، نويسنده , , Martin J. Boulanger، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    284
  • To page
    293
  • Abstract
    As a highly coveted precursor molecule, terephthalate (Tph) continues to be used extensively for the production of polyethylene Tph bottles, polyester films, and textile fibers worldwide. Based on its detrimental physiological effects, Tph is now recognized as a serious environmental pollutant. While amenable to biodegradation and, in fact, traditionally neutralized by aerobic microbiological processes, our current lack of understanding of the enzymatic degradation of Tph at the molecular level presents a major impediment in the development of robust bioremediation strategies. The biodegradation of Tph proceeds through a single metabolic intermediate (a cis-dihydrodiol), which is subsequently converted to the end product (protocatechuate) by a decarboxylating cis-dihydrodiol dehydrogenase (TphB). Using iodide single‐wavelength anomalous dispersion, we report the first structural characterization of TphB to 1.85 Å resolution. Contrary to prior speculations, a fluorescent scan unambiguously shows that TphB coordinates Zn2 + and not Fe2 +. The molecular architecture of TphB provides a rationale to the primary‐level divergence observed between TphB and other cis-dihydrodiol dehydrogenases while explaining its intriguingly close evolutionary clustering with non-dihydrodiol dehydrogenases belonging to the isocitrate/isopropylmalate family of enzymes. Sequence and structural analyses reveal a putative substrate-binding pocket proximal to the bound Zn2 +. In silico substrate modeling in this putative binding pocket suggests a mechanistic sequence relying on H291, K295, and Zn2 + as core mediators of catalytic turnover. Overall, this study reveals novel structural and mechanistic insights into a decarboxylating cis-dihydrodiol dehydrogenase that mediates one of the two catalytic steps in the biodegradation of the environmental pollutant Tph.
  • Keywords
    Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 , tph pathway , cis-dihydrodiol , TphB , Zinc
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1254863