Lanthanides in methylotrophy

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Abstract

Lanthanides were previously thought to be biologically inert owing to their low solubility; however, they have recently been shown to strongly impact the metabolism of methylotrophic bacteria. Leading efforts in this emergent field have demonstrated far-reaching impacts of lanthanide metabolism in biology; from the identification of novel roles of enzymes and pathways dependent on lantha-nide-chemistry to the control of transcriptional regulatory networks to the modification of microbial community interactions. Even further, the recent discovery of lanthanide-dependent enzymes associated with multi-carbon metabolism in both methylotrophs and non-methylotrophs alike suggests that lanthanide biochemistry may be more widespread than initially thought. Current efforts aim to understand how lanthanide chemistry and lanthanide-dependent enzymes affect numerous ecosystems and metabolic functions. These efforts are likely to have a profound impact on biotech-nological processes involving methylotrophic communities and the biologically mediated recov-ery of these critical metals from a variety of waste streams while redefining our understanding of a fundamental set of metals in biology.

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Skovran, E., Raghuraman, C., & Martinez-Gomez, N. C. (2019). Lanthanides in methylotrophy. Current Issues in Molecular Biology, 33, 101–115. https://doi.org/10.21775/CIMB.033.101

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