Menu
September 22, 2019  |  

Discovery of enzymes for toluene synthesis from anoxic microbial communities.

Authors: Beller, Harry R and Rodrigues, Andria V and Zargar, Kamrun and Wu, Yu-Wei and Saini, Avneesh K and Saville, Renee M and Pereira, Jose H and Adams, Paul D and Tringe, Susannah G and Petzold, Christopher J and Keasling, Jay D

Microbial toluene biosynthesis was reported in anoxic lake sediments more than three decades ago, but the enzyme catalyzing this biochemically challenging reaction has never been identified. Here we report the toluene-producing enzyme PhdB, a glycyl radical enzyme of bacterial origin that catalyzes phenylacetate decarboxylation, and its cognate activating enzyme PhdA, a radical S-adenosylmethionine enzyme, discovered in two distinct anoxic microbial communities that produce toluene. The unconventional process of enzyme discovery from a complex microbial community (>300,000 genes), rather than from a microbial isolate, involved metagenomics- and metaproteomics-enabled biochemistry, as well as in vitro confirmation of activity with recombinant enzymes. This work expands the known catalytic range of glycyl radical enzymes (only seven reaction types had been characterized previously) and aromatic-hydrocarbon-producing enzymes, and will enable first-time biochemical synthesis of an aromatic fuel hydrocarbon from renewable resources, such as lignocellulosic biomass, rather than from petroleum.

Journal: Nature chemical biology
DOI: 10.1038/s41589-018-0017-4
Year: 2018

Read publication

Talk with an expert

If you have a question, need to check the status of an order, or are interested in purchasing an instrument, we're here to help.