In plant secondary metabolite biosynthesis, acylation is a diverse physiological process, with BAHD acyltransferases playing an essential role. Borneol acetyltransferase (BAT) is an alcohol acetyltransferase, which catalyzes borneol and acetyl-CoA to synthesize bornyl acetate (BA). However, the enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of BA have so far only been characterized in , the studies on the WvBATs have only been conducted , and the catalytic activity was relatively low. In this research, three genes (, , and ) have been identified to encode BATs that are capable of acetylating borneol to synthesize BA . We also determined that WlBAT1 has the highest catalytic efficiency for borneol-type substrates, including (+)-borneol, (-)-borneol, and isoborneol. Furthermore, we found that BATs could catalyze a wide range of substrate types , but , they exclusively catalyzed borneol-type substrates. Through molecular simulations and site-directed mutagenesis, it was revealed that residues D32, N36, H168, N297, N355, and H384 are crucial for the catalytic activity of WlBAT1, while the R382I-D385R double mutant of WlBAT1 exhibited an increasing acylation efficiency for borneol-type substrates and . These findings offer key genetic elements for the metabolic engineering of plants and synthetic biology to produce BA.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.4c02915 | DOI Listing |
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