Structure-Guided Engineering of Molinate Hydrolase for the Degradation of Thiocarbamate Pesticides

Molinate is a recalcitrant thiocarbamate used to control grass weeds in rice fields. The recently described molinate hydrolase, from Gulosibacter molinativorax ON4T, plays a key role in the only known molinate degradation pathway ending in the formation of innocuous compounds. Here we report the cry...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: José P. Leite (author)
Other Authors: Márcia Duarte (author), Ana M. Paiva (author), Frederico Ferreira da Silva (author), Pedro M. Matias (author), Olga C. Nunes (author), Luís Gales (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2015
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10216/103592
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/103592
Description
Summary:Molinate is a recalcitrant thiocarbamate used to control grass weeds in rice fields. The recently described molinate hydrolase, from Gulosibacter molinativorax ON4T, plays a key role in the only known molinate degradation pathway ending in the formation of innocuous compounds. Here we report the crystal structure of recombinant molinate hydrolase at 2.27 angstrom. The structure reveals a homotetramer with a single mononuclear metal-dependent active site per monomer. The active site architecture shows similarities with other amidohydrolases and enables us to propose a general acid-base catalysis mechanism for molinate hydrolysis. Molinate hydrolase is unable to degrade bulkier thiocarbamate pesticides such as thiobencarb which is used mostly in rice crops. Using a structural-based approach, we were able to generate a mutant (Arg187Ala) that efficiently degrades thiobencarb. The engineered enzyme is suitable for the development of a broader thiocarbamate bioremediation system.