Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis

Side chain-containing steroids are ubiquitous constituents of biological membranes that are persistent to biodegradation. Aerobic, steroid-degrading bacteria employ oxygenases for isoprenoid side chain and tetracyclic steran ring cleavage. In contrast, a Mo-containing steroid C-25 dehydrogenase (S25...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christian Jacoby, Jens Eipper, Markus Warnke, Oliver Tiedt, Mario Mergelsberg, Hans-Joachim Stärk, Birgit Daus, Zaira Martín-Moldes, María Teresa Zamarro, Eduardo Díaz, Matthias Boll
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2018-06-01
Series:mBio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00694-18
id doaj-c0b1516ef48646118f3ae19e7471a36a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c0b1516ef48646118f3ae19e7471a36a2021-07-02T15:16:40ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112018-06-0193e00694-1810.1128/mBio.00694-18Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 SynthesisChristian JacobyJens EipperMarkus WarnkeOliver TiedtMario MergelsbergHans-Joachim StärkBirgit DausZaira Martín-MoldesMaría Teresa ZamarroEduardo DíazMatthias BollSide chain-containing steroids are ubiquitous constituents of biological membranes that are persistent to biodegradation. Aerobic, steroid-degrading bacteria employ oxygenases for isoprenoid side chain and tetracyclic steran ring cleavage. In contrast, a Mo-containing steroid C-25 dehydrogenase (S25DH) of the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reductase family catalyzes the oxygen-independent hydroxylation of tertiary C-25 in the anaerobic, cholesterol-degrading bacterium Sterolibacterium denitrificans. Its genome contains eight paralogous genes encoding active site α-subunits of putative S25DH-like proteins. The difficult enrichment of labile, oxygen-sensitive S25DH from the wild-type bacteria and the inability of its active heterologous production have largely hampered the study of S25DH-like gene products. Here we established a heterologous expression platform for the three structural genes of S25DH subunits together with an essential chaperone in the denitrifying betaproteobacterium Thauera aromatica K172. Using this system, S25DH1 and three isoenzymes (S25DH2, S25DH3, and S25DH4) were overproduced in a soluble, active form allowing a straightforward purification of nontagged αβγ complexes. All S25DHs contained molybdenum, four [4Fe-4S] clusters, one [3Fe-4S] cluster, and heme B and catalyzed the specific, water-dependent C-25 hydroxylations of various 4-en-3-one forms of phytosterols and zoosterols. Crude extracts from T. aromatica expressing genes encoding S25DH1 catalyzed the hydroxylation of vitamin D3 (VD3) to the clinically relevant 25-OH-VD3 with >95% yield at a rate 6.5-fold higher than that of wild-type bacterial extracts; the specific activity of recombinant S25DH1 was twofold higher than that of wild-type enzyme. These results demonstrate the potential application of the established expression platform for 25-OH-VD3 synthesis and pave the way for the characterization of previously genetically inaccessible S25DH-like Mo enzymes of the DMSO reductase family.Steroids are ubiquitous bioactive compounds, some of which are considered an emerging class of micropollutants. Their degradation by microorganisms is the major process of steroid elimination from the environment. While oxygenase-dependent steroid degradation in aerobes has been studied for more than 40 years, initial insights into the anoxic steroid degradation have only recently been obtained. Molybdenum-dependent steroid C-25 dehydrogenases (S25DHs) have been proposed to catalyze oxygen-independent side chain hydroxylations of globally abundant zoo-, phyto-, and mycosterols; however, so far, their lability has allowed only the initial characterization of a single S25DH. Here we report on a heterologous gene expression platform that allowed for easy isolation and characterization of four highly active S25DH isoenzymes. The results obtained demonstrate the key role of S25DHs during anoxic degradation of various steroids. Moreover, the platform is valuable for the efficient enzymatic hydroxylation of vitamin D3 to its clinically relevant C-25-OH form.https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00694-18alkyl hydroxylasesanaerobic catabolic pathwaysmolybdenum enzymessterolsvitamin D3 biosynthesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Jacoby
Jens Eipper
Markus Warnke
Oliver Tiedt
Mario Mergelsberg
Hans-Joachim Stärk
Birgit Daus
Zaira Martín-Moldes
María Teresa Zamarro
Eduardo Díaz
Matthias Boll
spellingShingle Christian Jacoby
Jens Eipper
Markus Warnke
Oliver Tiedt
Mario Mergelsberg
Hans-Joachim Stärk
Birgit Daus
Zaira Martín-Moldes
María Teresa Zamarro
Eduardo Díaz
Matthias Boll
Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
mBio
alkyl hydroxylases
anaerobic catabolic pathways
molybdenum enzymes
sterols
vitamin D3 biosynthesis
author_facet Christian Jacoby
Jens Eipper
Markus Warnke
Oliver Tiedt
Mario Mergelsberg
Hans-Joachim Stärk
Birgit Daus
Zaira Martín-Moldes
María Teresa Zamarro
Eduardo Díaz
Matthias Boll
author_sort Christian Jacoby
title Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
title_short Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
title_full Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
title_fullStr Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Four Molybdenum-Dependent Steroid C-25 Hydroxylases: Heterologous Overproduction, Role in Steroid Degradation, and Application for 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 Synthesis
title_sort four molybdenum-dependent steroid c-25 hydroxylases: heterologous overproduction, role in steroid degradation, and application for 25-hydroxyvitamin d3 synthesis
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Side chain-containing steroids are ubiquitous constituents of biological membranes that are persistent to biodegradation. Aerobic, steroid-degrading bacteria employ oxygenases for isoprenoid side chain and tetracyclic steran ring cleavage. In contrast, a Mo-containing steroid C-25 dehydrogenase (S25DH) of the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reductase family catalyzes the oxygen-independent hydroxylation of tertiary C-25 in the anaerobic, cholesterol-degrading bacterium Sterolibacterium denitrificans. Its genome contains eight paralogous genes encoding active site α-subunits of putative S25DH-like proteins. The difficult enrichment of labile, oxygen-sensitive S25DH from the wild-type bacteria and the inability of its active heterologous production have largely hampered the study of S25DH-like gene products. Here we established a heterologous expression platform for the three structural genes of S25DH subunits together with an essential chaperone in the denitrifying betaproteobacterium Thauera aromatica K172. Using this system, S25DH1 and three isoenzymes (S25DH2, S25DH3, and S25DH4) were overproduced in a soluble, active form allowing a straightforward purification of nontagged αβγ complexes. All S25DHs contained molybdenum, four [4Fe-4S] clusters, one [3Fe-4S] cluster, and heme B and catalyzed the specific, water-dependent C-25 hydroxylations of various 4-en-3-one forms of phytosterols and zoosterols. Crude extracts from T. aromatica expressing genes encoding S25DH1 catalyzed the hydroxylation of vitamin D3 (VD3) to the clinically relevant 25-OH-VD3 with >95% yield at a rate 6.5-fold higher than that of wild-type bacterial extracts; the specific activity of recombinant S25DH1 was twofold higher than that of wild-type enzyme. These results demonstrate the potential application of the established expression platform for 25-OH-VD3 synthesis and pave the way for the characterization of previously genetically inaccessible S25DH-like Mo enzymes of the DMSO reductase family.Steroids are ubiquitous bioactive compounds, some of which are considered an emerging class of micropollutants. Their degradation by microorganisms is the major process of steroid elimination from the environment. While oxygenase-dependent steroid degradation in aerobes has been studied for more than 40 years, initial insights into the anoxic steroid degradation have only recently been obtained. Molybdenum-dependent steroid C-25 dehydrogenases (S25DHs) have been proposed to catalyze oxygen-independent side chain hydroxylations of globally abundant zoo-, phyto-, and mycosterols; however, so far, their lability has allowed only the initial characterization of a single S25DH. Here we report on a heterologous gene expression platform that allowed for easy isolation and characterization of four highly active S25DH isoenzymes. The results obtained demonstrate the key role of S25DHs during anoxic degradation of various steroids. Moreover, the platform is valuable for the efficient enzymatic hydroxylation of vitamin D3 to its clinically relevant C-25-OH form.
topic alkyl hydroxylases
anaerobic catabolic pathways
molybdenum enzymes
sterols
vitamin D3 biosynthesis
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00694-18
work_keys_str_mv AT christianjacoby fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT jenseipper fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT markuswarnke fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT olivertiedt fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT mariomergelsberg fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT hansjoachimstark fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT birgitdaus fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT zairamartinmoldes fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT mariateresazamarro fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT eduardodiaz fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
AT matthiasboll fourmolybdenumdependentsteroidc25hydroxylasesheterologousoverproductionroleinsteroiddegradationandapplicationfor25hydroxyvitamind3synthesis
_version_ 1721327393721810944