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Engineering an Artificial Pathway to Improve the Bioconversion of Lysine into Chiral Amino Alcohol 2-Hydroxycadaverine Using a Semi-Rational Design.

Authors :
Cheng, Jie
Xiao, Shujian
Luo, Qing
Wang, Bangxu
Zeng, Rumei
Zhao, Liming
Zhang, Jiamin
Source :
Fermentation (Basel); Jan2024, Vol. 10 Issue 1, p56, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Amino alcohols are important compounds that are widely used in the polymer and pharmaceutical industry, particularly when used as chiral scaffolds in organic synthesis. The hydroxylation of polyamide polymers may allow crosslinking between molecular chains through the esterification reactions of hydroxyl and carboxyl groups. Therefore, this may alter the functional properties of polyamide polymers. 2-hydroxycadaverine (2HyC), as a new type of chiral amino alcohol, has potential applications in the pharmaceutical, chemical, and polymer industries. Currently, 2HyC production has only been realized via pure enzyme catalysis or two-stage whole-cell biocatalysis, which faces great challenges for scale-up production. However, the use of a cell factory is very promising for the production of 2HyC in industrial applications. Here, we designed and constructed a promising artificial pathway in Escherichia coli for producing 2HyC from biomass-derived lysine. This biosynthesis route expands the lysine catabolism pathway and employs two enzymes to sequentially convert lysine into 2HyC. However, the catalytic activity of wild-type pyridoxal phosphate-dependent decarboxylase from Chitinophage pinensis (DC<subscript>Cp</subscript>) toward 3-hydroxylysine is lower, resulting in the lower production of 2HyC. Thus, the higher catalytic activity of DC<subscript>Cp</subscript> is desired for low-cost and expanded industrial applications of 2HyC. To improve the catalytic activity of DC<subscript>Cp</subscript>, a mutant library of DC<subscript>Cp</subscript> was first built using a semi-rational design. The K<subscript>cat</subscript>/K<subscript>m</subscript> of mutant DC<subscript>Cp</subscript> (R53D/V94I) increased by 63%. A titer of 359 mg/L 2HyC was produced in shake flasks, with a 2HyC titer increase of 54% compared to control strain ML101. The results show that the production of 2HyC was effectively increased through a semi-rational design strategy. These findings lay the foundation for the development and utilization of renewable resources to produce 2HyC in microorganisms via an efficient, green, and sustainable biosynthetic strategy for further industrial application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23115637
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Fermentation (Basel)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175052554
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation10010056