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Abstract
Olive mill wastewater (OMWW) is produced annually during olive oil extraction and contains most of the health‐promoting 3‐hydroxytyrosol of the olive fruit. To facilitate its recovery, enzymatic transesterification of hydroxytyrosol (HT) was directly performed in an aqueous system in the presence of ethyl acetate, yielding a 3‐hydroxytyrosol acetate rich extract. For this, the promiscuous acyltransferase from Pyrobaculum calidifontis VA1 (PestE) was engineered by rational design. The best mutant for the acetylation of hydroxytyrosol (PestE_I208A_L209F_N288A) was immobilized on EziG2 beads, resulting in hydroxytyrosol conversions between 82 and 89 % in one hour, for at least ten reaction cycles in a buffered hydroxytyrosol solution. Due to inhibition by other phenols in OMWW the conversions of hydroxytyrosol from this source were between 51 and 62 %. In a preparative scale reaction, 13.8 mg (57 %) of 3‐hydroxytyrosol acetate was extracted from 60 mL OMWW.
Unter promiskuitiver Acyltransferase-Aktivität versteht man die Eigenschaft bestimmter Hydrolasen, in wässriger Lösung bevorzugt Acyltransfer statt Hydrolyse zu katalysieren. Bis vor Kurzem waren nur wenige promiskuitive Acyltransferasen literaturbekannt. Dies führte zu der allgemeinen Annahme, dass diese Aktivität ein seltenes Phänomen in Hydrolasen ist. Diese Arbeit zeigt jedoch, dass promiskuitive Acyltransferase-Aktivität in der Familie der bakteriellen hormonsensitiven Lipasen und Carboxylesterasen der Familie VIII weit verbreitet ist. Detaillierte Struktur-Funktions-Analysen ermöglichen die sequenzbasierte Vorhersage und Optimierung der Acyltransferase-Aktivität in beiden Enzymfamilien. Insbesondere die Carboxylesterasen der Familie VIII überschreiten die Grenzen des bisher für möglich Gehaltenen, indem sie gute Enantioselektivität bei der kinetischen Racematspaltung sekundärer Alkohole zeigen und darüber hinaus die irreversible Bildung von Amiden und Carbamaten in Wasser katalysieren können. Die biokatalytische Acylierung von Zuckern in Wasser galt lange Zeit als unerreichtes Ziel der Biokatalyse. In dieser Arbeit wurde jedoch gezeigt, dass natürlich vorkommende und modifizierte Carboxylesterasen der Familie VIII die regioselektive Acetylierung von Glucose, Maltose und Maltotriose in Wasser mit hoher Effizienz katalysieren können.
Entdeckung und Design promiskuitiver Acyltransferase‐Aktivität in Carboxylesterasen der Familie VIII
(2021)
Abstract
Promiscuous acyltransferase activity is the ability of certain hydrolases to preferentially catalyze acyl transfer over hydrolysis, even in bulk water. However, poor enantioselectivity, low transfer efficiency, significant product hydrolysis, and limited substrate scope represent considerable drawbacks for their application. By activity‐based screening of several hydrolases, we identified the family VIII carboxylesterase, EstCE1, as an unprecedentedly efficient acyltransferase. EstCE1 catalyzes the irreversible amidation and carbamoylation of amines in water, which enabled the synthesis of the drug moclobemide from methyl 4‐chlorobenzoate and 4‐(2‐aminoethyl)morpholine (ca. 20 % conversion). We solved the crystal structure of EstCE1 and detailed structure–function analysis revealed a three‐amino acid motif important for promiscuous acyltransferase activity. Introducing this motif into an esterase without acetyltransferase activity transformed a “hydrolase” into an “acyltransferase”.
Abstract
Certain hydrolases preferentially catalyze acyl transfer over hydrolysis in an aqueous environment. However, the molecular and structural reasons for this phenomenon are still unclear. Herein, we provide evidence that acyltransferase activity in esterases highly correlates with the hydrophobicity of the substrate‐binding pocket. A hydrophobicity scoring system developed in this work allows accurate prediction of promiscuous acyltransferase activity solely from the amino acid sequence of the cap domain. This concept was experimentally verified by systematic investigation of several homologous esterases, leading to the discovery of five novel promiscuous acyltransferases. We also developed a simple yet versatile colorimetric assay for rapid characterization of novel acyltransferases. This study demonstrates that promiscuous acyltransferase activity is not as rare as previously thought and provides access to a vast number of novel acyltransferases with diverse substrate specificity and potential applications.