Organophosphate flame retardants have been widely used in plastic products since the early 2000s. Unfortunately, these compounds leach out of the plastics over time and are carcinogenic, developmental toxins, and endocrine disruptors. Due to the high usage levels and stable nature of the compounds, widespread contamination of the environment has now been observed. Despite their recent introduction into the environment, bacteria from the Sphingomonadaceae family have evolved a three-step hydrolytic pathway to utilize these compounds. The second step in this pathway in Sphingobium sp. TCM1 is catalyzed by Sb-PDE, which is a member of the polymerase and histidinol phosphatase (PHP) family of phosphatases. This enzyme is only the second case of a PHP-family enzyme capable of hydrolyzing phosphodiesters. Bioinformatics analysis has now been used to identify a second PHP diesterase from Novosphingobium sp. EMRT-2 (No-PDE). Kinetic characterization of Sb-PDE and No-PDE with authentic organophosphate flame-retardant diesters demonstrates that these enzymes are true diesterases with more than 1000-fold selectivity for the diesterase activity seen in some cases. Synthesis of a wide array of authentic flame-retardant diesters has allowed the substrate specificity of these enzymes to be determined, and mutagenic analysis of the active site residues has identified key residues that give rise to the high levels of diesterase activity. Despite high sequence identity, No-PDE is found to have a broader substrate specificity against flame-retardant derived diesters, and kcat/Km values greater than 104 M-1 s-1 are seen with the best substrates.
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