Khan_2023_Environ.Sci.Technol_57_9762

Reference

Title : Biodegradation of Amphipathic Fluorinated Peptides Reveals a New Bacterial Defluorinating Activity and a New Source of Natural Organofluorine Compounds - Khan_2023_Environ.Sci.Technol_57_9762
Author(s) : Khan MF , Chowdhary S , Koksch B , Murphy CD
Ref : Environ Sci Technol , 57 :9762 , 2023
Abstract :

Three peptides comprising mono-, di-, and tri-fluoroethylglycine (MfeGly, DfeGly, and TfeGly) residues alternating with lysine were digested by readily available proteases (elastase, bromelain, trypsin, and proteinase K). The degree of degradation depended on the enzyme employed and the extent of fluorination. Incubation of the peptides with a microbial consortium from garden soil resulted in degradation, yielding fluoride ions. Further biodegradation studies conducted with the individual fluorinated amino acids demonstrated that the degree of defluorination followed the sequence MfeGly > DfeGly > TfeGly. Enrichment of the soil bacteria employing MfeGly as a sole carbon and energy source resulted in the isolation of a bacterium, which was identified as Serratia liquefaciens. Cell-free extracts of this bacterium enzymatically defluorinated MfeGly, yielding fluoride ion and homoserine. In silico analysis of the genome revealed the presence of a gene that putatively codes for a dehalogenase. However, the low overall homology to known enzymes suggests a potentially new hydrolase that can degrade monofluorinated compounds. (19)F NMR analysis of aqueous soil extracts revealed the unexpected presence of trifluoroacetate, fluoride ion, and fluoroacetate. Growth of the soil consortium in tryptone soya broth supplemented with fluoride ions resulted in fluoroacetate production; thus, bacteria in the soil produce and degrade organofluorine compounds.

PubMedSearch : Khan_2023_Environ.Sci.Technol_57_9762
PubMedID: 37341426
Gene_locus related to this paper: serli-s5ep96

Related information

Gene_locus serli-s5ep96

Citations formats

Khan MF, Chowdhary S, Koksch B, Murphy CD (2023)
Biodegradation of Amphipathic Fluorinated Peptides Reveals a New Bacterial Defluorinating Activity and a New Source of Natural Organofluorine Compounds
Environ Sci Technol 57 :9762

Khan MF, Chowdhary S, Koksch B, Murphy CD (2023)
Environ Sci Technol 57 :9762