Natural metabolism relies on chemical compartmentalization of two redox cofactors, NAD and NADP, to orchestrate life-essential redox reaction directions. However, in whole cells the reliance on these canonical cofactors limits flexible control of redox reaction direction as these reactions are permanently tied to catabolism or anabolism. In cell-free systems, NADP is too expensive in large scale. We have previously reported the use of nicotinamide mononucleotide, (NMN) as a low-cost, noncanonical redox cofactor capable of specific electron delivery to diverse chemistries. Here, we present Nox Ortho, an NMNH-specific water-forming oxidase, that completes the toolkit to modulate NMNH/NMN ratio. This work uncovers an enzyme design principle that succeeds in parallel engineering of six butanediol dehydrogenases as NMN(H)-orthogonal biocatalysts consistently with a 10 - 10 -fold cofactor specificity switch from NAD(P) to NMN. We combine these to produce chiral-pure 2,3-butanediol (Bdo) isomers without interference from NAD(H) or NADP(H) in vitro and in cells. We establish that NMN(H) can be held at a distinct redox ratio on demand, decoupled from both NAD(H) and NADP(H) redox ratios in vitro and in vivo.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10491207 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.29.555398 | DOI Listing |
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