Abstract

BackgroundThe nitrile compounds are produced either naturally or synthetically and are highly used in many manufacturing industries such as pharmaceuticals, pesticides, chemicals, and polymers. However, the extensive use and accumulation of these nitrile compounds have caused severe environmental pollution. Nitrilated herbicides are one such toxic substance that will persist in the soil for a long time. Therefore, effective measures must be taken to avoid its pollution to the environment. A variety of nitrile-converting bacterial species have the ability to convert these toxic substances into less toxic ones by using enzymatic processes. Among the bacterial groups, actinobacteria family members show good degradation capacity on these pollutants. The soil-dwelling Gram-positive industrial microbe Corynebacterium glutamicum is one such family member and its nitrile-degradation pathway is not well studied yet. In order to understand the effectiveness of using C. glutamicum for the degradation of such nitrile herbicides, an in silico approach has been done. In this perspective, this work focus on the structural analysis and molecular docking studies of C. glutamicum with nitrilated herbicides such as dichlobenil, bromoxynil, and chloroxynil. ResultsThe bioinformatics analysis using different tools and software helped to confirm that the genome of C. glutamicum ATCC 13032 species have genes (cg 3093) codes for carbon-nitrogen hydrolase enzyme, which specifically act on non-peptide bond present in the nitrile compounds. The conserved domain analysis indicated that this protein sequence was nitrilase-3 and comes under the nitrilase superfamily. The multiple sequence alignment analysis confirmed that the conserved catalytic triad residues were 40E, 115K, and 151C, and the existence of nitrilase-3 protein in the genome of Corynebacterium sp. was evaluated by a phylogenetic tree. The analysis of physico-chemical properties revealed that alanine is the most abounded amino acid (10.20%) in the nitrilase-3 protein, and these properties influence the substrate specificity of aliphatic and aromatic nitrile compounds. The homology modelled protein showed better affinity towards nitrile herbicides such as 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM) and 3,5-dichloro-4-hydroxy-benzamide (CIAM) with the affinity value of − 5.8 and − 5.7 kcal/mol respectively. ConclusionsThe in silico studies manifested that C. glutamicum ATCC 13032 is one of the promising strains for the bioremediation of nitrilated herbicides contaminated soil.

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