| Literature DB >> 29515539 |
Holly Stolterfoht1,2, Georg Steinkellner2,3, Daniel Schwendenwein2, Tea Pavkov-Keller2,3, Karl Gruber2,3, Margit Winkler1,2.
Abstract
Carboxylate reductases (CARs, E.C. 1.2.1.30) generate aldehydes from their corresponding carboxylic acid with high selectivity. Little is known about the structure of CARs and their catalytically important amino acid residues. The identification of key residues for carboxylate reduction provides a starting point to gain deeper understanding of enzymatic carboxylate reduction. A multiple sequence alignment of CARs with confirmed activity recently identified in our lab and from the literature revealed a fingerprint of conserved amino acids. We studied the function of conserved residues by multiple sequence alignments and mutational replacements of these residues. In this study, single-site alanine variants of Neurospora crassa CAR were investigated to determine the contribution of conserved residues to the function, expressability or stability of the enzyme. The effect of amino acid replacements was investigated by analyzing enzymatic activity of the variants in vivo and in vitro. Supported by molecular modeling, we interpreted that five of these residues are essential for catalytic activity, or substrate and co-substrate binding. We identified amino acid residues having significant impact on CAR activity. Replacement of His 237, Glu 433, Ser 595, Tyr 844, and Lys 848 by Ala abolish CAR activity, indicating their key role in acid reduction. These results may assist in the functional annotation of CAR coding genes in genomic databases. While some other conserved residues decreased activity or had no significant impact, four residues increased the specific activity of NcCAR variants when replaced by alanine. Finally, we showed that NcCAR wild-type and mutants efficiently reduce aliphatic acids.Entities:
Keywords: aldehyde; biocatalysis; carboxylate reductase; flavor and fragrance; pharmaceutical intermediate; signature sequence
Year: 2018 PMID: 29515539 PMCID: PMC5826065 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Known CAR enzymes that have been characterized to date.
| 1 | type I | Li and Rosazza, | |||
| 2 | type I | Hu, | |||
| 3 | type I | Hu, | |||
| 4 | type I | Behrouzian et al., | |||
| 5 | type I | Akhtar et al., | |||
| 6 | type I | Schaffer et al., | |||
| 7 | type I | Duan et al., | |||
| 8 | type I | Duan et al., | |||
| 9 | type I | Moura et al., | |||
| 10 | type I | Moura et al., | |||
| 11 | type I | Finnigan et al., | |||
| 12 | type I | Finnigan et al., | |||
| 13 | type I | Finnigan et al., | |||
| 14 | type I | Finnigan et al., | |||
| 15 | type I | Gahloth et al., | |||
| 16 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 17 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 18 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 19 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 20 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 21 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 22 | type I | Khusnutdinova et al., | |||
| 23 | type II | Wang and Zhao, | |||
| 24 | type II | Li et al., | |||
| 25 | type III | Gross et al., | |||
| 26 | type IV | Winkler and Winkler, |
Highly conserved signature sequences of CARs and summary of results of alanine scan of NcCAR.
Bold amino acids were exchanged in the mutagenesis study (positions of residues are numbered according to NcCAR).
Figure 1Wild type and alanine mutants of NcCAR Acore- and Asub-domain (A) SDS-PAGE of Ni-affinity chromatography purified wild-type enzyme and 17 NcCAR variants (protein amount loaded: 10 μg). For the full gel see Supporting Information Figure S1 (B) NADPH consumption was followed at 340 nm and 28°C for 10 min. Data are mean values of three separate experiments, each carried out in four technical replicates. (C) Result of whole cell biotransformation after 3 h at 28°C, shown as mean value of triplicates. Cinnamic acid and piperonylic acid reduction was analyzed by HPLC (UV = 254 nm). Green bars represent the sum of cinnamaldehyde and cinnamic alcohol, and violet bars piperonal, respectively. Hexanoic acid reduction was analyzed by GC-FID. Blue bars represent the sum of hexanal and hexanol. For the legend of highlights see Table 2 footnotes.
Figure 2Wild type and alanine mutants of NcCAR Asub-, T-, and R-domain (A) SDS-PAGE of Ni-affinity chromatography purified wild-type enzyme and 17 NcCAR variants (protein amount loaded: 10 μg). For the full gel see Supporting Information Figure S1 (B) NADPH consumption was followed at 340 nm and 28°C for 10 min. Data are mean values of three separate experiments, each carried out in four technical replicates. (C) Result of whole cell biotransformation after 3 h at 28°C, shown as mean value of triplicates. Cinnamic acid and piperonylic acid reduction was analyzed by HPLC (UV = 254 nm). Green bars represent the sum of cinnamaldehyde and cinnamic alcohol, and violet bars piperonal, respectively. Hexanoic acid reduction was analyzed by GC-FID. Blue bars represent the sum of hexanal and hexanol. For the legend of highlights see Table 2 footnotes.
Figure 3Activities of wild-type NcCAR and selected variants for the reduction of aliphatic acids determined by following NADPH consumption at 340 nm for 10 min at 28°C. Data are shown as mean values of three separate experiments, carried out in four technical replicates, respectively. For the wild-type and the variants P234A, and P285A, data from biological duplicates were included.
Figure 4Schematic overview of NcCAR models and templates. Models are colored according to individual domains as in Gahloth et al. (2017). Blue: Acore; orange: Asub; magenta: T-domain; green: R-domain. Gray arrows indicate the parts of the sequence which are covered by the individual templates. (A) NcCAR full length model based on best BLAST templates (mainly PDB codes 5JRH, 4DOW, and 4W4T). 5JRH: Salmonella enterica acetyl-CoA synthetase (Han et al., 2016); 4DOW: Mus musculus ORC1 BAH domain (Kuo et al., 2012); 4W4T: Stigmatella aurantiaca terminal reductase domain from the myxalamid NRPS MxaA (Barajas et al., 2015). (B) NcCAR full length model based on the open SruCAR structures, fused together to a full length SruCAR template. (C) NcCAR A-T-didomain model based on the closed SruCAR A-T-didomain structure (PDB code 5MSS).
Figure 5NcCAR models based on SruCAR templates. (A) NcCAR model (closed) A-domain with selected amino acid exchange locations. Bound AMP is shown as yellow sticks; a transparent red circle indicates the location of two short beta sheets. (B) NcCAR-FL model (open) A-domain with location of “shifted” Glu 433, located at the two short beta sheets. (C) Close-up of R-domain of NcCAR-FL model with selected amino acid exchange locations. Bound NAP is shown as yellow sticks. Red spheres with amino acids as stick representation indicate selected residues which caused activity loss upon replacement by alanine. Amino acids with red line representation indicate variants where little activity was observed and purple spheres indicate locations where replacements with alanine retained activity solely on piperonylic acid. Blue spheres with amino acids as stick representation indicate amino acid exchange locations in the model where expression was abolished and amino acids indicated as blue lines where the expression was very low. Gray spheres indicate locations where, after substitution by alanine, activity was not significantly changed compared to the wild-type CAR. Teal spheres indicate amino acid exchanges where improved activity for hexanoic acid was observed.