Publication | Open Access
Discovery of a novel (R)-selective bacterial hydroxynitrile lyase from Acidobacterium capsulatum
25
Citations
11
References
2014
Year
EngineeringEscherichia ColiAcidobacterium CapsulatumChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationBiosynthesisBiochemical EngineeringNatural Product BiosynthesisHydroxynitrile LyasesDatabase MiningBiotransformationBiochemistryBacterial Hydroxynitrile LyaseBiocatalysisAntimicrobial CompoundMolecular MicrobiologyNatural SciencesBiotechnologyMicrobiology
Hydroxynitrile lyases (HNLs) are powerful carbon-carbon bond forming enzymes. The reverse of their natural reaction - the stereoselective addition of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) to carbonyls - yields chiral cyanohydrins, versatile building blocks for the pharmaceutical and chemical industry. Recently, bacterial HNLs have been discovered, which represent a completely new type: HNLs with a cupin fold. Due to various benefits of cupins (e.g. high yield recombinant expression in Escherichia coli), the class of cupin HNLs provides a new source for interesting, powerful hydroxynitrile lyases in the ongoing search for HNLs with improved activity, enantioselectivity, stability and substrate scope. In this study, database mining revealed a novel cupin HNL from Acidobacterium capsulatum ATCC 51196 (AcHNL), which was able to catalyse the (R)-selective synthesis of mandelonitrile with significantly better conversion (97%) and enantioselectivity (96.7%) than other cupin HNLs.
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