Affiliation:
1. Institute of Biochemistry, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei
2. Synmax Biochemical Co., Ltd., Hsinchu
3. Department of Life Sciences, National Tsing-Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The deacetoxycephalosporin C synthase (DAOCS) from
Streptomyces clavuligerus
was engineered with the aim of enhancing the conversion of penicillin G into phenylacetyl-7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid, a precursor of 7-aminodeacetoxycephalosporanic acid, for industrial application. A single round of random mutagenesis followed by the screening of 5,500 clones identified three mutants, G79E, V275I, and C281Y, that showed a two- to sixfold increase in the
k
cat
/
K
m
ratio compared to the wild-type enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis to modify residues surrounding the substrate resulted in three mutants, N304K, I305L, and I305M, with 6- to 14-fold-increased
k
cat
/
K
m
values. When mutants containing all possible combinations of these six sites were generated to optimize the ring expansion activity for penicillin G, the double mutant, YS67 (V275I, I305M), showed a significant 32-fold increase in the
k
cat
/
K
m
ratio and a 5-fold increase in relative activity for penicillin G, while the triple mutant, YS81 (V275I, C281Y, I305M), showed an even greater 13-fold increase in relative activity toward penicillin G. Our results demonstrate that this is a robust approach to the modification of DAOCS for an optimized DAOCS-penicillin G reaction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
37 articles.
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