3 research outputs found

    Wastewater bacteria remediating the pharmaceutical metformin: Genomes, plasmids and products

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    Metformin is used globally to treat type II diabetes, has demonstrated anti-ageing and COVID mitigation effects and is a major anthropogenic pollutant to be bioremediated by wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Metformin is not adsorbed well by activated carbon and toxic N-chloro derivatives can form in chlorinated water. Most earlier studies on metformin biodegradation have used wastewater consortia and details of the genomes, relevant genes, metabolic products, and potential for horizontal gene transfer are lacking. Here, two metformin-biodegrading bacteria from a WWTP were isolated and their biodegradation characterized. Aminobacter sp. MET metabolized metformin stoichiometrically to guanylurea, an intermediate known to accumulate in some environments including WWTPs. Pseudomonasmendocina MET completely metabolized metformin and utilized all the nitrogen atoms for growth. Pseudomonas mendocina MET also metabolized metformin breakdown products sometimes observed in WWTPs: 1-N-methylbiguanide, biguanide, guanylurea, and guanidine. The genome of each bacterium was obtained. Genes involved in the transport of guanylurea in Aminobacter sp. MET were expressed heterologously and shown to serve as an antiporter to expel the toxic guanidinium compound. A novel guanylurea hydrolase enzyme was identified in Pseudomonas mendocina MET, purified, and characterized. The Aminobacter and Pseudomonas each contained one plasmid of 160 kb and 90 kb, respectively. In total, these studies are significant for the bioremediation of a major pollutant in WWTPs today

    Solving the Conundrum: Widespread Proteins Annotated for Urea Metabolism in Bacteria Are Carboxyguanidine Deiminases Mediating Nitrogen Assimilation from Guanidine

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    Free guanidine is increasingly recognized as a relevant molecule in biological systems. Recently, it was reported that urea carboxylase acts preferentially on guanidine, and consequently, it was considered to participate directly in guanidine biodegradation. Urea carboxylase combines with allophanate hydrolase to comprise the activity of urea amidolyase, an enzyme predominantly found in bacteria and fungi that catalyzes the carboxylation and subsequent hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide. Here, we demonstrate that urea carboxylase and allophanate hydrolase from Pseudomonas syringae are insufficient to catalyze the decomposition of guanidine. Rather, guanidine is decomposed to ammonia through the combined activities of urea carboxylase, allophanate hydrolase, and two additional proteins of the DUF1989 protein family, expansively annotated as urea carboxylase-associated family proteins. These proteins comprise the subunits of a heterodimeric carboxyguanidine deiminase (CgdAB), which hydrolyzes carboxyguanidine to N-carboxyurea (allophanate). The genes encoding CgdAB colocalize with genes encoding urea carboxylase and allophanate hydrolase. However, 25% of urea carboxylase genes, including all fungal urea amidolyases, do not colocalize with cgdAB. This subset of urea carboxylases correlates with a notable Asp to Asn mutation in the carboxyltransferase active site. Consistent with this observation, we demonstrate that fungal urea amidolyase retains a strong substrate preference for urea. The combined activities of urea carboxylase, carboxyguanidine deiminase and allophanate hydrolase represent a newly recognized pathway for the biodegradation of guanidine. These findings reinforce the relevance of guanidine as a biological metabolite and reveal a broadly distributed group of enzymes that act on guanidine in bacteria
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