Modeling-Assisted Design of Thermostable Benzaldehyde Lyases from Rhodococcus erythropolis for Continuous Production of α-Hydroxy Ketones
Journal article, 2022

Enantiopure α-hydroxy ketones are important building blocks of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), which can be produced by thiamine-diphosphate-dependent lyases, such as benzaldehyde lyase. Here we report the discovery of a novel thermostable benzaldehyde lyase from Rhodococcus erythropolis R138 (ReBAL). While the overall sequence identity to the only experimentally confirmed benzaldehyde lyase from Pseudomonas fluorescens Biovar I (PfBAL) was only 65 %, comparison of a structural model of ReBAL with the crystal structure of PfBAL revealed only four divergent amino acids in the substrate binding cavity. Based on rational design, we generated two ReBAL variants, which were characterized along with the wild-type enzyme in terms of their substrate spectrum, thermostability and biocatalytic performance in the presence of different co-solvents. We found that the new enzyme variants have a significantly higher thermostability (up to 22 °C increase in T50) and a different co-solvent-dependent activity. Using the most stable variant immobilized in packed-bed reactors via the SpyCatcher/SpyTag system, (R)-benzoin was synthesized from benzaldehyde over a period of seven days with a stable space-time-yield of 9.3 mmol ⋅ L-1 ⋅ d−1. Our work expands the important class of benzaldehyde lyases and therefore contributes to the development of continuous biocatalytic processes for the production of α-hydroxy ketones and APIs.

immobilization

C−C coupling

enzyme catalysis

lyases

protein engineering

Author

Martin Peng

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Dominik L. Siebert

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Martin Engqvist

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Christof M. Niemeyer

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Kersten S. Rabe

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

ChemBioChem

1439-4227 (ISSN) 1439-7633 (eISSN)

Vol. 23 7 e202100468

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Biocatalysis and Enzyme Technology

Organic Chemistry

DOI

10.1002/cbic.202100468

PubMed

34558792

More information

Latest update

8/8/2022 1