is the lactic acid bacterial species most frequently found in plant-food fermentations where hydroxycinnamic acids are abundant. efficiently decarboxylates these compounds and also reduces them, yielding substituted phenylpropionic acids. Although the reduction step is known to be induced by a hydroxycinnamic acid, the enzymatic machinery responsible for this reduction pathway has not been yet identified and characterized. A previous study on the transcriptomic response of to -coumaric acid revealed a marked induction of two contiguous genes, and , encoding putative reductases. In this work, the disruption of these genes abolished the hydroxycinnamate reductase activity of , supporting their involvement in such chemical activity. Functional studies revealed that Lp_1425 (HcrB) exhibits hydroxycinnamate reductase activity but was unstable in solution. In contrast, Lp_1424 (HcrA) was inactive but showed high stability. When the genes were co-overexpressed, the formation of an active heterodimer (HcrAB) was observed. Since reductase activity was only observed on hydroxycinnamic acids (-coumaric, -coumaric, -coumaric, caffeic, ferulic, and sinapic acids), the presence of a hydroxyl group substituent on the benzene ring appears to be required for activity. In addition, hydroxycinnamate reductase activity was not widely present among lactic acid bacteria, and it was associated with the presence of genes. This study revealed that hydroxycinnamate reductase is a heterodimeric NADH-dependent coumarate reductase acting on a carbon-carbon double bond. is a bacterial species frequently found in the fermentation of vegetables where hydroxycinnamic acids are present. The bacterial metabolism on these compounds during fermentation plays a fundamental role in the biological activity of hydroxycinnamates. strains exhibit an as yet unknown reducing activity, transforming hydroxycinnamates to substituted phenylpropionic acids, which possess higher antioxidant activity than their precursors. The protein machinery involved in hydroxycinnamate reduction, HcrAB, was genetically identified and characterized. The heterodimeric NADH-dependent coumarate reductase HcrAB described in this work provides new insights on the metabolic response to counteract the stressful conditions generated by food phenolics.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6052270 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01123-18 | DOI Listing |
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