Per- and polyfluorinated chemicals (PFAS) are of rising concern due to environmental persistence and emerging evidence of health risks to humans. Environmental persistence is largely attributed to a failure of microbes to degrade PFAS. PFAS recalcitrance has been proposed to result from chemistry, specifically C-F bond strength, or biology, largely negative selection from fluoride toxicity. Given natural evolution has many hurdles, this review advocates for a strategy of laboratory engineering and evolution. Enzymes identified to participate in defluorination reactions have been discovered in all Enzyme Commission classes, providing a palette for metabolic engineering. In vivo PFAS biodegradation will require multiple types of reactions and powerful fluoride mitigation mechanisms to act in concert. The necessary steps are to: (1) engineer bacteria that survive very high, unnatural levels of fluoride, (2) design, evolve, and screen for enzymes that cleave C–F bonds in a broader array of substrates, and (3) create overall physiological conditions that make for positive selective pressure with PFAS substrates.
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Carbon–fluorine bond cleavage mediated by metalloenzymes
Fluorochemicals are a widely distributed class of compounds and have been utilized across a wide range of industries for decades. Given the environmental toxicity and adverse health threats of some fluorochemicals, the development of new methods for their decomposition is significant to public health. However, the carbon–fluorine (C–F) bond is among the most chemically robust bonds; consequently, the degradation of fluorinated hydrocarbons is exceptionally difficult. Here, metalloenzymes that catalyze the cleavage of this chemically challenging bond are reviewed. These enzymes include histidine-ligated heme-dependent dehaloperoxidase and tyrosine hydroxylase, thiolate-ligated heme-dependent cytochrome P450, and four nonheme oxygenases, namely, tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent aromatic amino acid hydroxylase, 2-oxoglutarate-dependent hydroxylase, Rieske dioxygenase, and thiol dioxygenase. While much of the literature regarding the aforementioned enzymes highlights their ability to catalyze C–H bond activation and functionalization, in many cases, the C–F bond cleavage has been shown to occur on fluorinated substrates. A copper-dependent laccase-mediated system representing an unnatural radical defluorination approach is also described. Detailed discussions on the structure–function relationships and catalytic mechanisms provide insights into biocatalytic defluorination, which may inspire drug design considerations and environmental remediation of halogenated contaminants.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1808637
- PAR ID:
- 10172424
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Chemical Society Reviews
- ISSN:
- 0306-0012
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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