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[Preprint]. 2023 Dec 13:2023.12.13.568471. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.12.13.568471

Electron-bifurcation and fluoride efflux systems in Acetobacterium spp. drive defluorination of perfluorinated unsaturated carboxylic acids

Yaochun Yu, Fengjun Xu, Weiyang Zhao, Calvin Thoma, Shun Che, Jack E Richman, Bosen Jin, Yiwen Zhu, Yue Xing, Lawrence Wackett, Yujie Men
PMCID: PMC10760045  PMID: 38168399

Abstract

Enzymatic cleavage of C–F bonds in per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is largely unknown but avidly sought to promote systems biology for PFAS bioremediation. Here, we report the reductive defluorination of α, β-unsaturated per- and polyfluorocarboxylic acids by Acetobacterium spp. Two critical molecular features in Acetobacterium species enabling reductive defluorination are (i) a functional fluoride efflux transporter (CrcB) and (ii) an electron-bifurcating caffeate reduction pathway (CarABCDE). The fluoride transporter was required for detoxification of released fluoride. Car enzymes were implicated in defluorination by the following evidence: (i) only Acetobacterium spp. with car genes catalyzed defluorination; (ii) caffeate and PFAS competed in vivo ; (iii) models from the X-ray structure of the electron-bifurcating reductase (CarC) positioned the PFAS substrate optimally for reductive defluorination; (iv) products identified by 19 F-NMR and high-resolution mass spectrometry were consistent with the model. Defluorination biomarkers identified here were found in wastewater treatment plant metagenomes on six continents.

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