Title : Pseudomonad cyclopentadecanone monooxygenase displaying an uncommon spectrum of Baeyer-Villiger oxidations of cyclic ketones - Iwaki_2006_Appl.Environ.Microbiol_72_2707 |
Author(s) : Iwaki H , Wang S , Grosse S , Bergeron H , Nagahashi A , Lertvorachon J , Yang J , Konishi Y , Hasegawa Y , Lau PC |
Ref : Applied Environmental Microbiology , 72 :2707 , 2006 |
Abstract :
Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs) are biocatalysts that offer the prospect of high chemo-, regio-, and enantioselectivity in the organic synthesis of lactones or esters from a variety of ketones. In this study, we have cloned, sequenced, and overexpressed in Escherichia coli a new BVMO, cyclopentadecanone monooxygenase (CpdB or CPDMO), originally derived from Pseudomonas sp. strain HI-70. The 601-residue primary structure of CpdB revealed only 29% to 50% sequence identity to those of known BVMOs. A new sequence motif, characterized by a cluster of charged residues, was identified in a subset of BVMO sequences that contain an N-terminal extension of approximately 60 to 147 amino acids. The 64-kDa CPDMO enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity, providing a specific activity of 3.94 micromol/min/mg protein and a 20% yield. CPDMO is monomeric and NADPH dependent and contains approximately 1 mol flavin adenine dinucleotide per mole of protein. A deletion mutant suggested the importance of the N-terminal 54 amino acids to CPDMO activity. In addition, a Ser261Ala substitution in a Rossmann fold motif resulted in an improved stability and increased affinity of the enzyme towards NADPH compared to the wild-type enzyme (K(m) = 8 microM versus K(m) = 24 microM). Substrate profiling indicated that CPDMO is unusual among known BVMOs in being able to accommodate and oxidize both large and small ring substrates that include C(11) to C(15) ketones, methyl-substituted C(5) and C(6) ketones, and bicyclic ketones, such as decalone and beta-tetralone. CPDMO has the highest affinity (K(m) = 5.8 microM) and the highest catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m) ratio of 7.2 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) toward cyclopentadecanone, hence the Cpd designation. A number of whole-cell biotransformations were carried out, and as a result, CPDMO was found to have an excellent enantioselectivity (E > 200) as well as 99% S-selectivity toward 2-methylcyclohexanone for the production of 7-methyl-2-oxepanone, a potentially valuable chiral building block. Although showing a modest selectivity (E = 5.8), macrolactone formation of 15-hexadecanolide from the kinetic resolution of 2-methylcyclopentadecanone using CPDMO was also demonstrated. |
PubMedSearch : Iwaki_2006_Appl.Environ.Microbiol_72_2707 |
PubMedID: 16597975 |
Iwaki H, Wang S, Grosse S, Bergeron H, Nagahashi A, Lertvorachon J, Yang J, Konishi Y, Hasegawa Y, Lau PC (2006)
Pseudomonad cyclopentadecanone monooxygenase displaying an uncommon spectrum of Baeyer-Villiger oxidations of cyclic ketones
Applied Environmental Microbiology
72 :2707
Iwaki H, Wang S, Grosse S, Bergeron H, Nagahashi A, Lertvorachon J, Yang J, Konishi Y, Hasegawa Y, Lau PC (2006)
Applied Environmental Microbiology
72 :2707