Structural basis of terephthalate recognition by solute binding protein TphC

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Abstract

Biological degradation of Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic and assimilation of the corresponding monomers ethylene glycol and terephthalate (TPA) into central metabolism offers an attractive route for bio-based molecular recycling and bioremediation applications. A key step is the cellular uptake of the non-permeable TPA into bacterial cells which has been shown to be dependent upon the presence of the key tphC gene. However, little is known from a biochemical and structural perspective about the encoded solute binding protein, TphC. Here, we report the biochemical and structural characterisation of TphC in both open and TPA-bound closed conformations. This analysis demonstrates the narrow ligand specificity of TphC towards aromatic para-substituted dicarboxylates, such as TPA and closely related analogues. Further phylogenetic and genomic context analysis of the tph genes reveals homologous operons as a genetic resource for future biotechnological and metabolic engineering efforts towards circular plastic bio-economy solutions.

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Gautom, T., Dheeman, D., Levy, C., Butterfield, T., Alvarez Gonzalez, G., Le Roy, P., … Dixon, N. (2021). Structural basis of terephthalate recognition by solute binding protein TphC. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26508-0

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