
Production of functionalized oligo‐isoprenoids by enzymatic cleavage of rubber
Author(s) -
Röther Wolf,
Birke Jakob,
Grond Stephanie,
Beltran Jose Manuel,
Jendrossek Dieter
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
microbial biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.287
H-Index - 74
ISSN - 1751-7915
DOI - 10.1111/1751-7915.12748
Subject(s) - natural rubber , isoprene , terpenoid , oxygenase , chemistry , organic chemistry , elastomer , polymer , enzyme , chromatography , stereochemistry , copolymer
Summary In this study, we show the proof of concept for the production of defined oligo‐isoprenoids with terminal functional groups that can be used as starting materials for various purposes including the synthesis of isoprenoid‐based plastics. To this end, we used three types of rubber oxygenases for the enzymatic cleavage of rubber [poly( cis ‐1,4‐isoprene)]. Two enzymes, rubber oxygenase Rox A X sp and rubber oxygenase Rox B X sp , originate from Xanthomonas sp. 35Y; the third rubber oxygenase, latex‐clearing protein (Lcp K30 ), is derived from Gram‐positive rubber degraders such as Streptomyces sp. K30. Emulsions of polyisoprene (latex) were treated with Rox A X sp , Rox B X sp , Lcp K30 or with combinations of the three proteins. The cleavage products were purified by solvent extraction and FPLC separation. All products had the same general structure with terminal functions ( CHO ‐ CH 2 ‐ and ‐ CH 2 ‐ COCH 3 ) but differed in the number of intact isoprene units in between. The composition and m/z values of oligo‐isoprenoid products were determined by HPLC ‐ MS analysis. Our results provide a method for the preparation of reactive oligo‐isoprenoids that can likely be used to convert polyisoprene latex or rubber waste materials into value‐added molecules, biofuels, polyurethanes or other polymers.