Modular enzyme assembly for enhanced cascade biocatalysis and metabolic flux

Enzymatic reactions in living cells are highly dynamic but simultaneously tightly regulated. Enzyme engineers seek to construct multienzyme complexes to prevent intermediate diffusion, to improve product yield, and to control the flux of metabolites. Here we choose a pair of short peptide tags (RIAD...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-09, Vol.10 (1), p.4248-11, Article 4248
Hauptverfasser: Kang, Wei, Ma, Tian, Liu, Min, Qu, Jiale, Liu, Zhenjun, Zhang, Huawei, Shi, Bin, Fu, Shuai, Ma, Juncai, Lai, Louis Tung Faat, He, Sicong, Qu, Jianan, Wing-Ngor Au, Shannon, Ho Kang, Byung, Yu Lau, Wilson Chun, Deng, Zixin, Xia, Jiang, Liu, Tiangang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Enzymatic reactions in living cells are highly dynamic but simultaneously tightly regulated. Enzyme engineers seek to construct multienzyme complexes to prevent intermediate diffusion, to improve product yield, and to control the flux of metabolites. Here we choose a pair of short peptide tags (RIAD and RIDD) to create scaffold-free enzyme assemblies to achieve these goals. In vitro, assembling enzymes in the menaquinone biosynthetic pathway through RIAD–RIDD interaction yields protein nanoparticles with varying stoichiometries, sizes, geometries, and catalytic efficiency. In Escherichia coli , assembling the last enzyme of the upstream mevalonate pathway with the first enzyme of the downstream carotenoid pathway leads to the formation of a pathway node, which increases carotenoid production by 5.7 folds. The same strategy results in a 58% increase in lycopene production in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae . This work presents a simple strategy to impose metabolic control in biosynthetic microbe factories. Metabolic enzymes often form supramolecular complexes to improve product yield. Here the authors use short peptide tags to create scaffold-free assemblies and synthetic metabolic nodes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-12247-w