Affiliation:
1. Singapore-MIT Alliance, National University of Singapore, Singapore
2. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore
3. Department of Industrial Microbiology, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
4. Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The glucose dehydrogenase (GDH) from
Bacillus subtilis
BGSC 1A1 was cloned and functionally expressed in
Escherichia coli
BL21(pGDH1) and XL-1 Blue(pGDH1). Controlled permeabilization of recombinant
E. coli
BL21 and XL-1 Blue with EDTA-toluene under optimized conditions resulted in permeabilized cells with specific activities of 61 and 14 U/g (dry weight) of cells, respectively, for the conversion of NADP
+
to NADPH upon oxidation of glucose. The permeabilized recombinant strains were more active than permeabilized
B. subtilis
BGSC 1A1, did not exhibit NADPH/NADH oxidase activity, and were useful for regeneration of both NADH and NADPH. Coupling of permeabilized cells of
Bacillus pumilus
Phe-C3 containing an NADPH-dependent ketoreductase and an
E. coli
recombinant expressing GDH as a novel biocatalytic system allowed enantioselective reduction of ethyl 3-keto-4,4,4-trifluorobutyrate with efficient recycling of NADPH; a total turnover number (TTN) of 4,200 mol/mol was obtained by using
E. coli
BL21(pGDH1) as the cofactor-regenerating microorganism with initial addition of 0.005 mM NADP
+
. The high TTN obtained is in the practical range for producing fine chemicals. Long-term stability of the permeabilized cell couple and a higher product concentration were demonstrated by 68 h of bioreduction of ethyl 3-keto-4,4,4-trifluorobutyrate with addition of 0.005 mM NADP
+
three times; 50.5 mM (
R
)-ethyl 3-hydroxy-4,4,4-trifluorobutyrate was obtained with 95% enantiomeric excess, 84% conversion, and an overall TTN of 3,400 mol/mol. Our method results in practical synthesis of (
R
)-ethyl 3-hydroxy-4,4,4-trifluorobutyrate, and the principle described here is generally applicable to other microbial reductions with cofactor recycling.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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