Medium-chain alkane biodegradation and its link to some unifying attributes of alkB genes diversity

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Jun 15:877:162951. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162951. Epub 2023 Mar 21.

Abstract

Hydrocarbon footprints in the environment, via biosynthesis, natural seepage, anthropogenic activities and accidents, affect the ecosystem and induce a shift in the healthy biogeochemical equilibrium that drives needed ecological services. In addition, these imbalances cause human diseases and reduce animal and microorganism diversity. Microbial bioremediation, which capitalizes on functional genes, is a sustainable mitigation option for cleaning hydrocarbon-impacted environments. This review focuses on the bacterial alkB functional gene, which codes for a non-heme di‑iron monooxygenase (AlkB) with a di‑iron active site that catalyzes C8-C16 medium-chain alkane metabolism. These enzymes are ubiquitous and share common attributes such as being controlled by global transcriptional regulators, being a component of most super hydrocarbon degraders, and their distributions linked to horizontal gene transfer (HGT) events. The phylogenetic approach used in the HGT detection suggests that AlkB tree topology clusters bacteria functionally and that a preferential gradient dictates gene distribution. The alkB gene also acts as a biomarker for bioremediation, although it is found in pristine environments and absent in some hydrocarbon degraders. For instance, a quantitative molecular method has failed to link alkB copy number to contamination concentration levels. This limitation may be due to AlkB homologues, which have other functions besides n-alkane assimilation. Thus, this review, which focuses on Pseudomonas putida GPo1 alkB, shows that AlkB proteins are diverse but have some unifying trends around hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria; it is erroneous to rely on alkB detection alone as a monitoring parameter for hydrocarbon degradation, alkB gene distribution are preferentially distributed among bacteria, and the plausible explanation for AlkB affiliation to broad-spectrum metabolism of hydrocarbons in super-degraders hitherto reported. Overall, this review provides a broad perspective of the ecology of alkB-carrying bacteria and their directed biodegradation pathways.

Keywords: Alk system; Alkane-1 monooxygenase; Bacteria; Bioremediation; Global and transcriptional regulators; Pseudomonas putida GPo1.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Alkanes* / metabolism
  • Animals
  • Biodegradation, Environmental
  • Ecosystem
  • Genes, Bacterial
  • Humans
  • Hydrocarbons / metabolism
  • Iron
  • Phylogeny
  • Pseudomonas putida* / metabolism

Substances

  • Alkanes
  • Hydrocarbons
  • Iron