4.8 Article

Utilization of diverse organophosphorus pollutants by marine bacteria

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2203604119

Keywords

anthropogenic organophosphorus compounds; marine bacteria; phosphotriesterases; bioremediation

Funding

  1. Defense Threat Reduction Agency of the US Department of Defense [HDTRA1-17-0057]
  2. Israeli Science Foundation [ISF 947/18]
  3. Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation
  4. Minerva Foundation
  5. Federal German Ministry for Education and Research
  6. Angel Faivovich Foundation for Ecological Research
  7. Estate of Emile Mimran
  8. Maurice and Vivienne Wohl Biology Endowment

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Anthropogenic organophosphorus compounds (AOPCs) are widely used synthetic organic phosphorus compounds. Only a few bacteria have been found to possess the key enzyme for AOPC degradation. This study reveals the utilization of diverse AOPCs by marine bacteria, indicating their capability to adapt to phosphorus limitation and pollution. The discovery offers potential for the bioremediation of anthropogenic pollutants.
Anthropogenic organophosphorus compounds (AOPCs), such as phosphotriesters, are used extensively as plasticizers, flame retardants, nerve agents, and pesticides. To date, only a handful of soil bacteria bearing a phosphotriesterase (PTE), the key enzyme in the AOPC degradation pathway, have been identified. Therefore, the extent to which bacteria are capable of utilizing AOPCs as a phosphorus source, and how widespread this adaptation may be, remains unclear. Marine environments with phosphorus limitation and increasing levels of pollution by AOPCs may drive the emergence of PTE activity. Here, we report the utilization of diverse AOPCs by four model marine bacteria and 17 bacterial isolates from the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea. To unravel the details of AOPC utilization, two PTEs from marine bacteria were isolated and characterized, with one of the enzymes belonging to a protein family that, to our knowledge, has never before been associated with PTE activity. When expressed in Escherichia coli with a phosphodiesterase, a PTE isolated from a marine bacterium enabled growth on a pesticide analog as the sole phosphorus source. Utilization of AOPCs may provide bacteria a source of phosphorus in depleted environments and offers a prospect for the bioremediation of a pervasive class of anthropogenic pollutants.

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