Advances in Dehalogenase Biocatalysis: Mechanisms, Engineering, and Industrial Perspectives.
Wang J, Zhang Y, Li M, Zhao Y, Wan T
Phytoremediation
PubMedHalogenated pollutants like old pesticides and industrial chemicals contaminate the soil in gardens, farms, and parks, threatening the plants growing there and the food we eat — better enzyme tools mean cleaner ground for everything that grows in it.
Some industrial and agricultural chemicals are incredibly hard to break down and end up stuck in soil and water for years. Certain naturally occurring enzymes can snip apart these harmful molecules, and scientists are now using computer AI and lab techniques to make those enzymes work faster and on a wider range of pollutants. The goal is to eventually deploy these upgraded enzymes to clean up contaminated land and replace harsh chemicals used in manufacturing.
Key Findings
The enzyme LinB can break down beta-HCH, a persistent pesticide-related pollutant, converting it to pentachlorocyclohexanol — demonstrating direct bioremediation potential for legacy soil contaminants.
The enzyme HHDH can synthesize multiple types of useful chemical compounds (beta-substituted alcohols) using different molecular building blocks, showing value beyond cleanup in green industrial chemistry.
AI-assisted protein design is now actively being used to engineer dehalogenases with improved stability, broader pollutant targets, and entirely new catalytic abilities not found in nature.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists are engineering special enzymes called dehalogenases to break down stubborn chemical pollutants — the kind that linger in soil and water for decades. By combining advances in AI-assisted design and molecular biology, researchers are making these enzymes faster, more versatile, and ready for real-world cleanup and greener industrial chemistry.
Abstract Preview
Halogenated organic compounds represent a significant environmental hazard due to their persistence and resistance to degradation. Dehalogenases, enzymes that efficiently remove halogens, offer ver...
open_in_new Read full abstract on PubMedAbstract copyright held by the original publisher.
Was this useful?
Ancient DNA Reveals Pre-Columbian Amazonian Forest Management at Scale
Forests and fruits we romanticize as wild — including many plants now in our kitchens and gardens — may exist in their current abundance precisely because an...