Characterizing and predicting carboxylic acid reductase activity for diversifying bioaldehyde production

ABSTRACT Chemicals with aldehyde moieties are useful in the synthesis of polymerization reagents, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, flavors, and fragrances because of their high reactivity. However, chemical synthesis of aldehydes from carboxylic acids has unfavorable thermodynamics and limited specifici...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biotechnology and bioengineering 2016-05, Vol.113 (5), p.944-952
Hauptverfasser: Moura, Matthew, Pertusi, Dante, Lenzini, Stephen, Bhan, Namita, Broadbelt, Linda J., Tyo, Keith E.J.
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container_end_page 952
container_issue 5
container_start_page 944
container_title Biotechnology and bioengineering
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creator Moura, Matthew
Pertusi, Dante
Lenzini, Stephen
Bhan, Namita
Broadbelt, Linda J.
Tyo, Keith E.J.
description ABSTRACT Chemicals with aldehyde moieties are useful in the synthesis of polymerization reagents, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, flavors, and fragrances because of their high reactivity. However, chemical synthesis of aldehydes from carboxylic acids has unfavorable thermodynamics and limited specificity. Enzymatically catalyzed reductive bioaldehyde synthesis is an attractive route that overcomes unfavorable thermodynamics by ATP hydrolysis in ambient, aqueous conditions. Carboxylic acid reductases (Cars) are particularly attractive, as only one enzyme is required. We sought to increase the knowledge base of permitted substrates for four Cars. Additionally, the Lys2 enzyme family was found to be mechanistically the same as Cars and two isozymes were also tested. Our results show that Cars prefer molecules where the carboxylic acid is the only polar/charged group. Using this data and other published data, we develop a support vector classifier (SVC) for predicting Car reactivity and make predictions on all carboxylic acid metabolites in iAF1260 and Model SEED. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016;113: 944–952. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Chemicals with aldehydes have many useful applications, but chemical options for the reduction of aldehydes from carboxylic acids are limited. The enzymatically catalyzed option by carboxylic acid reductases (Cars) is an attractive route, albeit with limited experimental information available on enzyme–substrate compatibility. This study expands the known substrate promiscuity of Cars, confirming both high‐ and trace‐level catalyses. Further, the authors apply machine‐learning techniques to our broadened substrate profile to give an expansive predictive set of substrates within native metabolism.
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Chemicals with aldehydes have many useful applications, but chemical options for the reduction of aldehydes from carboxylic acids are limited. The enzymatically catalyzed option by carboxylic acid reductases (Cars) is an attractive route, albeit with limited experimental information available on enzyme–substrate compatibility. This study expands the known substrate promiscuity of Cars, confirming both high‐ and trace‐level catalyses. 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subjects Aldehydes
Aldehydes - metabolism
Bioengineering
Biotechnology
carboxylic acid reductase
Carboxylic acids
Carboxylic Acids - metabolism
Cars
Computer Simulation
enzyme promiscuity
Enzymes
Industrial Microbiology - methods
Mathematical models
Models, Biological
Mycobacterium - enzymology
NADP - metabolism
Nocardia - enzymology
Oxidation-Reduction
Oxidoreductases - metabolism
Reductases
reductive aldehyde synthesis
Substrate Specificity
Substrates
Support Vector Machine
support vector machines
Synthesis
Thermodynamics
title Characterizing and predicting carboxylic acid reductase activity for diversifying bioaldehyde production
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