Pollution from ethylene glycol, and plastics containing this monomer, represent a significant environmental problem. The investigation of its microbial metabolism therefore provides insights into the environmental fate of this pollutant, but also enables its utilization as a carbon source for microbial biotechnology. Here, we reveal the genomic and metabolic basis of ethylene glycol metabolism in <
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Pseudomonas putida<
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KT2440. Although this strain cannot grow on ethylene glycol as sole carbon source, it can be used to generate growth-enhancing reducing equivalents upon co-feeding with acetate. Mutants that utilize ethylene glycol as sole carbon source were isolated through adaptive laboratory evolution. Genomic analysis of these mutants revealed a central role of the transcriptional regulator GclR, which represses the glyoxylate carboligase pathway as part of a larger metabolic context of purine and allantoin metabolism. Secondary mutations in a transcriptional regulator encoded by PP_2046 and a porin encoded by PP_2662 further improved growth on ethylene glycol in evolved strains, likely by balancing fluxes through the initial oxidations of ethylene glycol to glyoxylate. With this knowledge we reverse engineered an ethylene glycol utilizing strain and thus, revealed the metabolic and regulatory basis that are essential for efficient ethylene glycol metabolism in <
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P. putida<
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KT2440.