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Highly Active Mutants of Carbonyl Reductase S1 with Inverted Coenzyme Specificity and Production of Optically Active Alcohols
Author(s) -
Souichi Morikawa,
Takahisa Nakai,
Yoshihiko Yasohara,
Hirokazu Nanba,
Noriyuki Kizaki,
Junzo Hasegawa
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
bioscience biotechnology and biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.509
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1347-6947
pISSN - 0916-8451
DOI - 10.1271/bbb.69.544
Subject(s) - cofactor , formate dehydrogenase , reductase , biochemistry , mutant , enzyme , mutagenesis , active site , chemistry , nad+ kinase , stereochemistry , coenzyme a , in silico , gene
A wild type NADPH-dependent carbonyl reductase from Candida magnoliae (reductase S1) has been found not to utilize NADH as a coenzyme. A mutation to exchange the coenzyme specificity in reductase S1 has been designed by computer-aided methods, including three-dimensional structure modeling and in silico screening of enzyme mutants. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to introduce systematic substitutions of seven or eight amino acid residues onto the adenosine-binding pocket of the enzyme according to rational computational design. The resulting S1 mutants show NADH-dependency and have lost their ability to utilize NADPH as a coenzyme, but retain those catalytic activities. Kinetic parameter V(max) and K(m) values of those mutants for NADH are 1/3- to 1/10-fold those of the wild type enzyme for NADPH. As a model system for industrial production of optically active alcohols, the S1 mutants can be applied to an asymmetric reduction of ketones, cooperating with a coenzyme-regeneration system that uses an NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase.

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