Organophosphorus insecticides account
for approximately 28% of
the global commercial insecticide market, while 40% of them are chiral
enantiomers. Chiral enantiomers differ largely in their toxicities.
Enantiomers that are less active or inactive do not offer the needed
efficacy but pollute the environment and cause toxicities to non-target
species. Cupriavidus nantongensis X1T, a recently isolated bacterial strain, could degrade S-profenofos 2.3-fold faster than R-profenofos,
while the latter is the active enantiomer potently against pest insects
and has greater mammalian safety. The degradation enzyme encoded by opdB was expressed via Escherichia coli and purified. The degradation kinetics of R- and S-profenofos showed that both the purified OpdB and crude
enzyme extracts had no enantiomer degradation selectivity, which strongly
indicated that the degradation selectivity occurred in the uptake
process. Metabolite analyses suggested a novel dealkylation pathway.
This is the first report of bacterial selective uptake of organophosphates.
Selective degradation of S-profenofos over R-profenofos by the strain X1T suggests a concept
of co-application of racemic pesticides and degradation-selective
bacteria to minimize contamination and non-target toxicity problems.
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