COFACTOR SPECIFICITY ENGINEERING OF STREPTOCOCCUS MUTANS NADH OXIDASE 2 FOR NAD(P)+ REGENERATION IN BIOCATALYTIC OXIDATIONS

Soluble water-forming NAD(P)H oxidases constitute a promising NAD(P)+ regeneration method as they only need oxygen as cosubstrate and produce water as sole byproduct. Moreover, the thermodynamic equilibrium of O2 reduction is a valuable driving force for mostly energetically unfavorable biocatalytic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barbara Petschacher, Nicole Staunig, Monika Müller, Martin Schürmann, Daniel Mink, Stefaan De Wildeman, Karl Gruber, Anton Glieder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-02-01
Series:Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2001037014600088
Description
Summary:Soluble water-forming NAD(P)H oxidases constitute a promising NAD(P)+ regeneration method as they only need oxygen as cosubstrate and produce water as sole byproduct. Moreover, the thermodynamic equilibrium of O2 reduction is a valuable driving force for mostly energetically unfavorable biocatalytic oxidations. Here, we present the generation of an NAD(P)H oxidase with high activity for both cofactors, NADH and NADPH. Starting from the strictly NADH specific water-forming Streptococcus mutans NADH oxidase 2 several rationally designed cofactor binding site mutants were created and kinetic values for NADH and NADPH conversion were determined. Double mutant 93R94H showed comparable high rates and low Km values for NADPH (kcat 20 s−1, Km 6 μM) and NADH (kcat 25 s−1, Km 9 μM) with retention of 70 % of wild type activity towards NADH. Moreover, by screening of a SeSaM library S. mutans NADH oxidase 2 variants showing predominantly NADPH activity were found, giving further insight into cofactor binding site architecture. Applicability for cofactor regeneration is shown for coupling with alcohol dehydrogenase from Sphyngobium yanoikuyae for 2-heptanone production.
ISSN:2001-0370