| Literature DB >> 21906270 |
Rio Yamanaka1, Kaoru Nakamura, Akio Murakami.
Abstract
Effective utilization of photosynthetic microorganisms as potential biocatalysts is favorable for the production of useful biomaterials and the reduction of atmospheric CO2. For example, biocatalytic transformations are used in the synthesis of optically active alcohols. We previously found that ketone reduction in cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 is highly enantioselective and remarkably enhanced under light illumination. In this study, the mechanism of light-enhanced ketone reduction was investigated in detail using several inhibitors of photosynthetic electron transport and of enzymes of the Calvin cycle. It is demonstrated that light intensity and photosynthesis inhibitors significantly affect the ketone reduction activity in Synechococcus. This indicates that the reduction correlates well with photosynthetic activity. Moreover, ketone reduction in Synechococcus specifically depends upon NADPH and not NADH. These results also suggest that cyanobacteria have the potential to be utilized as biocatalytic systems for direct usage of light energy in various applications such as syntheses of useful compounds and remediation of environmental pollutants.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21906270 PMCID: PMC3222321 DOI: 10.1186/2191-0855-1-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Figure 1Time course of the reduction of TFA by . TFA: 2 mg, Cell suspension of Synechococcus: 20 mL, 13.4 μmol photons m-2·s-1, 25°C.
Figure 2Dependence of light intensity on the reduction of TFA by . TFA: 2 mg, Cell suspension of Synechococcus: 20 mL, 25°C, 12 h.
Suppression of ketone reduction in Synechococcus by inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport
| DCMU (μM) | Photosynthetic activity (relative) | Yield of ketone reduction (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1.0 | 43 |
| 0.1 | 0.42 | 44 |
| 1 | 0.16 | 36 |
| 10 | 0.038 | 15 |
TFA: 2 mg, Cell suspension of Synechococcus: 20 mL, 13.4 μmol photons m-2·s-1, 25°C, 12 h
DCMU was added at the beginning of the incubation period.
Figure 3Correlation of photosynthetic activity and reduction of TFA. The data are from Table 1 and Figure 2.
Figure 4Proposed scheme of the reduction of exogenous ketones by photosynthetically generated NADPH. PGA: phosphoglycerate, PGald: phosphoglyceraldehyde, RuBp: ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate.
Enhancement of ketone reduction in Synechococcus by inhibition of the Calvin cycle
| Inhibitor | Concentration (mM) | Yield of ketone reduction (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experiment 1 | None | - | 34 (1.00)* |
| IAM | 0.1 | 43 (1.26)* | |
| IAM | 1 | 52 (1.53)* | |
| IAA | 0.1 | 39 (1.15)* | |
| IAA | 1 | 61 (1.49)* | |
| Experiment 2 | None | - | 40 (1.00)* |
| 10 | 57 (1.43)* | ||
| 5'-AMP | 5 | 59 (1.48)* | |
TFA: 2 mg, Cell suspension of Synechococcus: 20 mL, 13.4 μmol photons m-2·s-1, 25°C, 12 h
Inhibitors were added at the beginning of the incubation period.
*Values in parentheses are relative to the yield without inhibitor.
Coenzyme (NADH/NADPH) dependency on ketone reduction using cell-free extracts of Synechococcus
| Substrate | Coenzyme | Yield of ketone reduction (%) |
|---|---|---|
| TFA | NADPH | 16 (1.00)* |
| NADH | 3.5 (0.22)* | |
| PF | NADPH | 12 (1.00)* |
| NADH | 0.8 (0.07)* |
Substrate: 2 mg, 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH7): 2 mL,
Acetone-dried powder of Synechococcus: 10 mg, NADH or NADPH: 5 mg, 25°C, 44 h
*Values in parentheses are the relative to the yields in the presence of NADPH.