Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Life Sciences Institute, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ethylene glycol (EG) is a widely used industrial chemical with manifold applications and also generated in the degradation of plastics such as polyethylene terephthalate.
Rhodococcus jostii
RHA1 (RHA1), a potential biocatalytic chassis, grows on EG. Transcriptomic analyses revealed four clusters of genes potentially involved in EG catabolism: the
mad
locus, predicted to encode
m
ycofactocin-dependent
a
lcohol
d
egradation, including the catabolism of EG to glycolate; two GCL clusters, predicted to encode glycolate and glyoxylate catabolism; and the
mft
genes, predicted to specify mycofactocin biosynthesis. Bioinformatic analyses further revealed that the
mad
and
mft
genes are widely distributed in mycolic acid-producing bacteria such as RHA1. Neither Δ
madA
nor Δ
mftC
RHA1 mutant strains grew on EG but grew on acetate. In resting cell assays, the Δ
madA
mutant depleted glycolaldehyde but not EG from culture media. These results indicate that
madA
encodes a mycofactocin-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase that initiates EG catabolism. In contrast to some mycobacterial strains, the
mad
genes did not appear to enable RHA1 to grow on methanol as sole substrate. Finally, a strain of RHA1 adapted to grow ~3× faster on EG contained an overexpressed gene,
aldA2
, predicted to encode an aldehyde dehydrogenase. When incubated with EG, this strain accumulated lower concentrations of glycolaldehyde than RHA1. Moreover, ecotopically expressed
aldA2
increased RHA1’s tolerance for EG further suggesting that glycolaldehyde accumulation limits growth of RHA1 on EG. Overall, this study provides insights into the bacterial catabolism of small alcohols and aldehydes and facilitates the engineering of
Rhodococcus
for the upgrading of plastic waste streams.
IMPORTANCE
Ethylene glycol (EG), a two-carbon (C2) alcohol, is produced in high volumes for use in a wide variety of applications. There is burgeoning interest in understanding and engineering the bacterial catabolism of EG, in part to establish circular economic routes for its use. This study identifies an EG catabolic pathway in
Rhodococcus
, a genus of bacteria well suited for biocatalysis. This pathway is responsible for the catabolism of methanol, a C1 feedstock, in related bacteria. Finally, we describe strategies to increase the rate of degradation of EG by increasing the transformation of glycolaldehyde, a toxic metabolic intermediate. This work advances the development of biocatalytic strategies to transform C2 feedstocks.
Funder
Canadian Government | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
1 articles.
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