Semi-rational Engineering of a Promiscuous Fatty Acid Hydratase for Alteration of Regioselectivity |
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Authors: | Yan Zhang Niels Mikkel Dyrby Breum Sune Schubert Negin Hashemi Rikke Kyhnau Marius Sandholt Knauf Masuthan Mathialakan Michiki Takeuchi Shigenobu Kishino Jun Ogawa Peter Kristensen Zheng Guo Bekir Engin Eser |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biological and Chemical Engineering, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark;2. Division of Applied Life Sciences, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606-8502 Japan;3. Faculty of Engineering and Science, Department of Chemistry and Bioscience, Aalborg University, 9220 Aalborg, Denmark |
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Abstract: | Fatty acid hydratases (FAHs) catalyze regio- and stereo-selective hydration of unsaturated fatty acids to produce hydroxy fatty acids. Fatty acid hydratase-1 (FA-HY1) from Lactobacillus Acidophilus is the most promiscuous and regiodiverse FAH identified so far. Here, we engineered binding site residues of FA-HY1 (S393, S395, S218 and P380) by semi-rational protein engineering to alter regioselectivity. Although it was not possible to obtain a completely new type of regioselectivity with our mutant libraries, a significant shift of regioselectivity was observed towards cis-5, cis-8, cis-11, cis-14, cis-17-eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). We identified mutants (S393/S395 mutants) with excellent regioselectivity, generating a single hydroxy fatty acid product from EPA (15-OH product), which is advantageous from application perspective. This result is impressive given that wild-type FA-HY1 produces a mixture of 12-OH and 15-OH products at 63 : 37 ratio (12-OH : 15-OH). Moreover, our results indicate that native FA-HY1 is at its limit in terms of promiscuity and regiospecificity, thus it may not be possible to diversify its product portfolio with active site engineering. This behavior of FA-HY1 is unlike its orthologue, fatty acid hydratase-2 (FA-HY2; 58 % sequence identity to FA-HY1), which has been shown earlier to exhibit significant promiscuity and regioselectivity changes by a few active site mutations. Our reverse engineering from FA-HY1 to FA-HY2 further demonstrates this conclusion. |
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Keywords: | Biocatalysis enzyme engineering fatty acid hydratases hydroxy fatty acids regioselectivity |
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