A short-chain carbonyl reductase mutant is an efficient catalyst in the production of (R)-1,3-butanediol.

Microb Biotechnol

CAS Key Laboratory of Microbial Physiological and Metabolic Engineering, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • R-1,3-butanediol (R-1,3-BDO) is essential for synthesizing certain antibiotics, and improving its production involves enzyme-catalyzed reactions.
  • Through engineering a short-chain carbonyl reductase (LnRCR), researchers identified a mutant enzyme (Ser154Lys) that enhanced catalytic efficiency by 115% and improved enantio-selectivity from 95% to 99%.
  • The engineered enzyme showed better substrate binding and stability, proving to be effective for larger scale production utilizing microbes expressing the mutant.

Article Abstract

R-1,3-butanediol (R-1,3-BDO) is an important chiral intermediate of penem and carbapenem synthesis. Among the different synthesis methods to obtain pure enantiomer R-1,3-BDO, oxidation-reduction cascades catalysed by enzymes are promising strategies for its production. Dehydrogenases have been used for the reduction step, but the enantio-selectivity is not high enough for further organic synthesis efforts. Here, a short-chain carbonyl reductase (LnRCR) was evaluated for the reduction step and developed via protein engineering. After docking result analysis with the substrate 4-hydroxy-2-butanone (4H2B), residues were selected for virtual mutagenesis, their substrate-binding energies were compared, and four sites were selected for saturation mutagenesis. High-throughput screening helped identify a Ser154Lys mutant which increased the catalytic efficiency by 115% compared to the parent enzyme. Computer-aided simulations indicated that after single residue replacement, movements in two flexible areas (VTDPAF and SVGFANK) facilitated the volumetric compression of the 4H2B-binding pocket. The number of hydrogen bonds between the stabilized 4H2B-binding pocket of the mutant enzyme and substrate was higher (from four to six) than the wild-type enzyme, while the substrate-binding energy was decreased (from -17.0 kJ/mol to -29.1 kJ/mol). Consequently, the catalytic efficiency increased by approximately 115% and enantio-selectivity increased from 95% to 99%. Our findings indicate that compact and stable substrate-binding pockets are critical for enzyme catalysis. Lastly, the utilization of a microbe expressing the Ser154Lys mutant enzyme was proven to be a robust process to conduct the oxidation-reduction cascade at larger scales.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10221522PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.14249DOI Listing

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