A thermophilic-like ene-reductase originating from an acidophilic iron oxidizer

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

Anika Scholtissek (University of Technology Bergakademie Freiberg)

Sophie R. Ullrich (University of Technology Bergakademie Freiberg)

Martin Mühling (University of Technology Bergakademie Freiberg)

Michael Schlömann (University of Technology Bergakademie Freiberg)

C. E. Paul (TU Delft - BT/Biocatalysis)

Dirk Tischler (University of Technology Bergakademie Freiberg)

Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00253-016-7782-3
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Research Group
BT/Biocatalysis
Issue number
2
Volume number
101
Pages (from-to)
609-619

Abstract

Ene-reductases originating from extremophiles are gaining importance in the field of biocatalysis due to higher-stability properties. The genome of the acidophilic iron-oxidizing bacterium “Ferrovum” sp. JA12 was found to harbor a thermophilic-like ene-reductase (FOYE-1). The foye-1 gene was ligated into a pET16bp expression vector system, and the enzyme was produced in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3; pLysS) cells in yields of 10 mg L−1. FOYE-1 showed remarkable activity and rates on N-phenylmaleimide and N-phenyl-2-methylmaleimide (up to 89 U mg−1, >97 % conversion, 95 % (R)-selective) with both nicotinamide cofactors, NADPH and NADH. The catalytic efficiency with NADPH was 27 times higher compared to NADH. At the temperature maximum (50 °C) and pH optimum (6.5), activity was almost doubled to 160 U mg−1. These findings accomplish FOYE-1 for a valuable biocatalyst in the synthesis of succinimides. The appearance of a thermophilic-like ene-reductase in an acidic habitat is discussed with respect to its phylogenetic placement and to the genomic neighborhood of the encoding gene, awarding FOYE-1 a putative involvement in a quorum-sensing process.

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