4.7 Article

Engineering microbial cells with metal chelating hydroxylated unnatural amino acids for removable of synthetic pollutants from water

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 311, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136756

Keywords

Congener protein; Post -translational modification; 4-Dihydroxy; L -phenylalanine; Lead; Adsorption

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In this study, cells expressing unnatural amino acid encoded proteins were prepared to effectively remove toxic synthetic industrial pollutant lead (Pb2+). The proteins showed high binding efficiency with Pb2+ ions, possibly due to an increased number of functional groups on the protein surface. The bioreactor filled with immobilized protein-containing granules demonstrated over 90% lead removal in contaminated water samples. The proteins could be recycled and about 70% of them showed fluorescence efficiency recovery of over 75%.
Lead (Pb2+) is a well-known heavy metal and toxic synthetic industrial pollutant in the ecosystem and causes severe threats to living organisms. It is paramount to develop a sustainable microbial engineering approach to remove synthetic pollutants from the environment. Genetic code engineering is emerging as an important microbial engineering tool in biosciences to biosynthesis congener protein production beyond the canonical set of natural molecules and expand the chemistries of living cells. Here, we prepare cells expressing unnatural amino acid encoded congener proteins for effectively removable toxic synthetic industrial pollutants (Pb2+) with high binding efficiency. Native and the developed congener proteins expressing cells adapted the Langmuir and Sips adsorption model that recommends uniform adsorption with Pb2+ ions. This could be due to a more significant number of functional groups on the protein surface. Fluorescence spectroscopic, field emission scanning electron microscope, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic analysis, and protein-metal molecular stimulation coordination allowed us to explore the role of hydroxylation on Pb2+ adsorption. The bioreactor filled with immobilized protein-containing active granules showed >90% of lead removal in the contaminated water samples. The desorption of bound Pb2+ from GFP and its variants were studied by varying the pH to reuse the proteins for subsequent usage. We observed that about 70% of the GFP and its variants could be recycled and >75% of fluorescence efficiency could be recovered. Among all the variants, GFPHPDP exhibits high affinity and

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