Regioselective aromatic hydroxylation of quinaldine by water using quinaldine 4-oxidase in recombinant Pseudomonas putida

Journal Article (2011)
Author(s)

S.S. Gaykawad (TU Delft - BT/Bioprocess Engineering)

B Bühler (External organisation)

A Schmid (External organisation)

Research Group
BT/Bioprocess Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10295-010-0883-6
More Info
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Publication Year
2011
Language
English
Research Group
BT/Bioprocess Engineering
Issue number
8
Volume number
38
Pages (from-to)
1067-1077

Abstract

Biocatalytic hydrocarbon oxyfunctionalizations are typically accomplished using oxygenases in living bacteria as biocatalysts. These processes are often limited by either oxygen mass transfer, cofactor regeneration, and/or enzyme instabilities due to the formation of reactive oxygen species. Here, we discuss an alternative approach based on molybdenum (Mo)-containing dehydrogenases, which produce, rather than consume, reducing equivalents in the course of substrate hydroxylation and use water as the oxygen donor. Mo-containing dehydrogenases have a high potential for overcoming limitations encountered with oxygenases. In order to evaluate the suitability and efficiency of a Mo-containing dehydrogenase-based biocatalyst, we investigated quinaldine 4-oxidase (Qox)-containing Pseudomonas strains and the conversion of quinaldine to 4-hydroxyquinaldine. Host strain and carbon source selection proved to be crucial factors influencing biocatalyst efficiency. Resting P. putida KT2440 (pKP1) cells, grown on and induced with benzoate, showed the highest Qox activity and were used for process development. To circumvent substrate and product toxicity/inhibition, a two-liquid phase approach was chosen. Without active aeration and with 1-dodecanol as organic carrier solvent a productivity of 0.4 g ltot−1 h−1 was achieved, leading to the accumulation of 2.1 g ltot−1 4-hydroxyquinaldine in 6 h. The process efficiency compares well with values reported for academic and industrially applied biocatalytic oxyfunctionalization processes emphasizing the potential and feasibility of the Qox-containing recombinant cells for heteroaromatic carbon oxyfunctionalizations without the necessity for active aeration.

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