| Literature DB >> 25393087 |
Bettina Sommer1, Holger von Moeller, Martina Haack, Farah Qoura, Clemens Langner, Gleb Bourenkov, Daniel Garbe, Bernhard Loll, Thomas Brück.
Abstract
Isobutanol is deemed to be a next-generation biofuel and a renewable platform chemical.1 Non-natural biosynthetic pathways for isobutanol production have been implemented in cell-based and in vitro systems with Bacillus subtilis acetolactate synthase (AlsS) as key biocatalyst.2-6 AlsS catalyzes the condensation of two pyruvate molecules to acetolactate with thiamine diphosphate and Mg(2+) as cofactors. AlsS also catalyzes the conversion of 2-ketoisovalerate into isobutyraldehyde, the immediate precursor of isobutanol. Our phylogenetic analysis suggests that the ALS enzyme family forms a distinct subgroup of ThDP-dependent enzymes. To unravel catalytically relevant structure-function relationships, we solved the AlsS crystal structure at 2.3 Å in the presence of ThDP, Mg(2+) and in a transition state with a 2-lactyl moiety bound to ThDP. We supplemented our structural data by point mutations in the active site to identify catalytically important residues.Entities:
Keywords: biofuels; biosynthesis; biotechnology; enzyme catalysis; isobutanol
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25393087 DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201402541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chembiochem ISSN: 1439-4227 Impact factor: 3.164