Engineering Streptomyces coelicolor Carbonyl Reductase for Efficient Atorvastatin Precursor Synthesis
Author(s) -
Min Li,
ZhiJun Zhang,
XuDong Kong,
HuiLei Yu,
Jiahai Zhou,
JianHe Xu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.00603-17
Subject(s) - thermostability , streptomyces coelicolor , enantiomeric excess , biocatalysis , protein engineering , chemistry , specific activity , enzyme , reductase , stereochemistry , cofactor , combinatorial chemistry , mutant , catalysis , enantioselective synthesis , biochemistry , reaction mechanism , gene
Streptomyces coelicolor CR1 (Sc CR1) has been shown to be a promising biocatalyst for the synthesis of an atorvastatin precursor, ethyl-(S )-4-chloro-3-hydroxybutyrate [(S )-CHBE]. However, limitations ofSc CR1 observed for practical application include low activity and poor stability. In this work, protein engineering was employed to improve the catalytic efficiency and stability ofSc CR1. First, the crystal structure ofSc CR1 complexed with NADH and cosubstrate 2-propanol was solved, and the specific activity ofSc CR1 was increased from 38.8 U/mg to 168 U/mg (Sc CR1I158V/P168S ) by structure-guided engineering. Second, directed evolution was performed to improve the stability usingSc CR1I158V/P168S as a template, affording a triple mutant,Sc CR1A60T/I158V/P168S , whose thermostability (T 50 15 , defined as the temperature at which 50% of initial enzyme activity is lost following a heat treatment for 15 min) and substrate tolerance (C 50 15 , defined as the concentration at which 50% of initial enzyme activity is lost following incubation for 15 min) were 6.2°C and 4.7-fold higher than those of the wild-type enzyme. Interestingly, the specific activity of the triple mutant was further increased to 260 U/mg. Protein modeling and docking analysis shed light on the origin of the improved activity and stability. In the asymmetric reduction of ethyl-4-chloro-3-oxobutyrate (COBE) on a 300-ml scale, 100 g/liter COBE could be completely converted by only 2 g/liter of lyophilizedSc CR1A60T/I158V/P168S within 9 h, affording an excellent enantiomeric excess (ee ) of >99% and a space-time yield of 255 g liter−1 day−1 . These results suggest high efficiency of the protein engineering strategy and good potential of the resulting variant for efficient synthesis of the atorvastatin precursor.IMPORTANCE Application of the carbonyl reductaseSc CR1 in asymmetrically synthesizing (S )-CHBE, a key precursor for the blockbuster drug Lipitor, from COBE has been hindered by its low catalytic activity and poor thermostability and substrate tolerance. In this work, protein engineering was employed to improve the catalytic efficiency and stability ofSc CR1. The catalytic efficiency, thermostability, and substrate tolerance ofSc CR1 were significantly improved by structure-guided engineering and directed evolution. The engineeredSc CR1 may serve as a promising biocatalyst for the biosynthesis of (S )-CHBE, and the protein engineering strategy adopted in this work would serve as a useful approach for future engineering of other reductases toward potential application in organic synthesis.
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