The enzyme benzylsuccinate
synthase captures and attaches to the hydrocarbon toluene, a major
component in gasoline, to break it down into benzylsuccinate. Shown here
are the enzymatic reaction and chemical structures of toluene (right),
fumarate (center), and benzylsuccinate (left) against the backdrop of an
oil spill. Image: Michael Funk and Catherine Drennan.
Professor
Catherine Drennan and graduate student Michael Funk want energy
production and environmental protection to go hand in hand.
Francesca McCaffrey | MIT Energy Initiative
Catherine
Drennan, a professor of chemistry and biology, likes to wax poetic
about the complex chemistry of microbes. "I think they’re elegant and
beautiful," she says. Of course, she also sees their practical
applications. "I love the fact that these microbes can be used for
bioremediation in hard-to-reach polluted spots," she says. "Normally,
cleaning these delicate environments would upset the balance of living
organisms there, but microbes offer a natural way to clean things
utilizing chemistry."
Drennan and Michael Funk, a graduate student
in chemistry, are part of a team testing the nuances of how microbes
break down hydrocarbons while metabolizing them for growth and survival.
Because hydrocarbons are a natural (and major) molecular component of
crude oil, microbes could be aid cleanup efforts following oil spills
and other instances of pollution — as long as the microbes' hydrocarbon
metabolism process proceeds smoothly. The first step in that process
calls for the microbe to chemically attack the hydrocarbon to generate a
more reactive molecule, but some hydrocarbons are challenging to get a
handle on.
To learn more about how to circumvent the inert nature
of hydrocarbons, Drennan, Funk, and fellow researchers explored the
structural basis by which one microbe — the denitrifying bacterium
Thauera aromatica — activated and broke down the hydrocarbon toluene.
The
details of their findings, which involve the mapping of previously
unknown enzymatic structures, were released in a paper this summer in The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
“When
you’re thinking about how an organism breaks a carbon source down and
then uses that to make energy for itself,” Drennan says, “you think it’s
going to take it and pull it apart, but in this case, it makes a bigger
molecule first. That’s because the thing that it wants to add into its
metabolism and make energy from is so nonreactive that it has to come up
with some way to get a handle on it and make it useful.”
Professor
Catherine Drennan (pictured) says that microbes offer a natural way to
clean up the waste products of energy production. Photo: Len
Rubenstein/MIT Spectrum
Winning combination
The
winning combination that enables the breakdown process is the pairing
of the enzyme benzylsuccinate synthase (naturally occurring within the
microbe) with the substrate molecule fumarate (also present in the
microbe) in the presence of toluene. The benzylsuccinate synthase acts
as a catalyst, encouraging a reaction between the toluene and the
fumarate to generate benzylsuccinate. The conversion of toluene to
benzylsuccinate makes it more reactive — as Drennan described above —
and the first step in the metabolism process is then possible.
Funk
recalls the multi-step process of determining how this enzyme enables
the reaction: “A couple of years ago our research revealed the
structures of the enzyme benzylsuccinate synthase without anything
bound, so that was the first step, to see the overall architecture of
the active site. But we still didn’t know how that enzyme would bind to a
substrate.”
Funk and Drennan were able to get the substrate
fumarate to bind to the enzyme: Fumarate has two carboxyl groups and
fits perfectly with the active site. With those two pieces in place,
they experimented with different forms of the enzyme until they were
able to bind toluene.
Discoveries like this one — which shed light
on how hydrocarbons like toluene can be broken down, despite their
nonpolar (and therefore usually non-binding) nature — are a critical
starting point for more organized efforts in bioremediation (waste
management using organisms), Funk says. He is quick to point out,
however, that we are still far from any kind of panacea.
“One of
the things I didn’t anticipate is how precise the active sites on
molecules are,” Funk says. “This enzyme [benzylsuccinate synthase]
utilizes toluene, and everything is packed very tightly around that
molecule. So it’s not like it can just take anything — it’s very
specific for that particular molecule.”
Graduate student Michael Funk working in an anaerobic chamber in the Drennan Lab. Courtesy of the Drennan Lab
Bioremediation and beyond
This
has larger implications for the practice of bioremediation, Funk says:
“If you’re going to be doing bioremediation, you’re going to need many
different kinds of enzymes that are capable of degrading all different
kinds of substrates.”
It’s not just in labs where microbes thrive
on hydrocarbons. “Some microbes will grow abundantly near oil
refineries, to the point that the oil companies are not happy about it
because it’s clogging up all of their pipes,” Drennan says. “This
actually gives weight to the idea that microbial bioremediation could
work, because it’s evidence that microbes can be very happy and take
care of things in such an environment.”
It’s also evidence that
the discoveries concerning microbial structure that Drennan and Funk
reveal in their paper could have more than one use. "[Pipe erosion] has
been an issue because organisms reduce sulfate to hydrogen sulfide,”
Funk says, “which is a really nasty way to corrode pipes.”
And pipe erosion in an oil refinery can only mean one thing: heightened probability of a spill. With
this issue in mind, Drennan and Funk acknowledge the irony that their
structural discoveries may sooner be used for the inhibition of microbes
than for fostering their growth. “I hope that this work doesn’t just
lead to an inhibitor that kills the organisms so they don’t corrode the
pipes,” Drennan says. "But if it prevents spills, that’s good. You want
the right amount of microbes cleaning up the environment, but not so
much that they actually pollute it.”
Whatever the immediate uses
of their latest discovery, Drennan and Funk’s love affair with microbes
is far from over. The DNA sequencing of microbes in particular presents
an exciting frontier. “If you have these DNA sequences,” Funk says, “you
can turn out a profile of what the microbes are able to degrade in a
particular spill situation, as well as what’s been able to slip through
because it doesn’t have a degradation pathway. Sequence information can
tell you a lot — it can give you a much bigger picture about a whole
community of organisms.”
http://www.theenergycollective.com/energyatmit/2284251/using-microbes-clean-oil-spills
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