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Biotechnology and Biological Transformations
A novel method for L-methionine production catalyzed by the aminotransferase ARO8 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae Yiping Wu, Musu ZHA, Sheng Yin, Huaqing Yang, Julien Boutet, Robert Huet, Chengtao Wang, and Baoguo Sun J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b01451 • Publication Date (Web): 28 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 28, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
A novel method for L-methionine production catalyzed by the aminotransferase ARO8 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Yiping Wu†§⊥, Musu Zha†§⊥, Sheng Yin†§*, Huaqing Yang†§, Julien Boutet‡, Robert Huet‡, Chengtao Wang†§*, Baoguo Sun†§
†
Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Food Nutrition and Human Health, Beijing
Technology & Business University, Beijing 100048, China. §
Beijing Engineering and Technology Research Center of Food Additives, Beijing
Technology & Business University, Beijing 100048, China. ‡
Adisseo France SAS, Antony Parc 2, 10 Place du Général de Gaulle, F-92160
Antony, France; Bluestar Adisseo Nanjing Co., LTD, 389 Changfenghe Road, Nanjing Chemical Industry Park, Jiangsu Province, Nanjing 210047, China.
*Corresponding Author Phone: 86-10-68985252. Fax: 86-10-68985252. E-mail:
[email protected] (Sheng Yin);
[email protected] (Chengtao Wang)
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ABSTRACT
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The aminotransferase ARO8 was proved to play an efficient role in conversion of
3
L-methionine into methionol via the Ehrlich pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae in
4
our previous work. In this work, the reversible transamination activity of ARO8 for
5
conversion of α-keto-γ-(methylthio) butyric acid (KMBA) into methionine was
6
confirmed in vitro. ARO8 was cloned from S. cerevisiae S288c and over-expressed
7
in Escherichia coli BL21. A 2-fold higher aminotransferase activity was detected in
8
the recombinant strain ARO8-BL21 and ARO8 was detected in the supernatant of
9
ARO8-BL21 lysate with IPTG induction by SDS-PAGE analysis. The recombinant
10
ARO8 was then purified and used for transforming KMBA into methionine. An
11
approximately 100% conversion rate of KMBA into methionine was achieved by
12
optimized enzymatic reaction catalyzed by ARO8. This work fulfilled L-methionine
13
biosynthesis catalyzed by the aminotransferase ARO8 using glutamate and KMBA,
14
which provided a novel method for L-methionine production by enzymatic catalysis
15
with the potential application prospect in industry.
16 17
KEYWORDS: Methionine, Aminotransferase, ARO8, Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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INTRODUCTION
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Methionine is an important amino acid widely used in animal nutrition, food and
25
medicine industry
26
2016 and is expected to grow by 6% each year in the future. Currently, methionine is
27
mainly produced by chemical synthesis 5, which normally generates the racemic
28
mixture of L-methionine and undesirable D-methionine 6. In contrast, enzymatic
29
catalysis can produce optical pure L-methionine. A well-known industrial-operated
30
process for methionine production is the enzymatic conversion of N-acetyl
31
DL-methionine to the pure L-form 4, and L-methionine could also be produced by
32
microbial fermentation. But the main drawback is the very complex biosynthesis
33
pathway of methionine with manifold feedback inhibitions 4. Hence, more efforts
34
have been taken in developing new simple and efficient approaches for L-methionine
35
production using cheap raw materials.
1-4
. The market demand of methionine exceed 1 million tons in
36
In yeast, methionine can be transformed into the fusel alcohol methionol via the
37
Ehrlich pathway 7. The main steps involves transamination of methionine into
38
4-methylthio-2-oxobutyric acid (KMBA), decarboxylation of KMBA into methional,
39
and dehydrogenation of methional into methionol (Fig. 1) 7. If the aforesaid
40
transamination and decarboxylation reactions were reversible, the industrial bulk
41
chemical methional would be an alternative source for high-value L-methionine
42
biosynthesis via enzymatic catalysis.
43
Though dozens of transaminases and decarboxylases were reported to get
44
involved in the Ehrlich pathway 8, in our previous work, over-expression of the 3
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transaminase ARO8 and decarboxylase ARO10 were proved to significantly enhance
46
conversion of methionine into methional and methionol in S. cerevisiae S288c 9.
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Moreover, it’s noteworthy that the transaminase reaction catalyzed by ARO8 seems
48
to be bidirectional as the aminotransferase could act on not only the aromatic amino
49
acids but also their oxo-acid analogues when the eligible amino donor is present 10.
50
Therefore, in this work, the aminotransferase ARO8 was cloned from S. cerevisiae
51
and over-expressed in E. coli. The recombinant ARO8 protein was purified for the
52
reversible transamination activity assay, by which KMBA was transformed into
53
L-methionine. An approximately 100% conversion rate of KMBA into L-methionine
54
was achieved by optimizing the enzymatic reaction condition. The work provided a
55
novel L-methionine production method by enzymatic catalysis with the potential
56
application prospect in industry.
57 58
MATERIALS AND METHODS
59
Strains, plasmids and culture conditions
60
Strains and plasmids used in this work are listed in Table 1. E. coli strains were
61
cultured in Luria-Bertain (LB) medium at 37℃ with vigorous shaking. S. cerevisiae
62
strains were grown in yeast extract peptone dextrose (YPD) medium at 30℃ with
63
vigorous shaking. When needed, antibiotics were added at the following
64
concentration: 200 µg/mL ampicillin for E. coli, 200 µg/mL G418 for S. cerevisiae.
65 66
Aminotransferase activity assay for methionine biosynthesis 4
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For aminotransferase activity assay, the fresh cultures of S. cerevisiae and E. coli
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were grown in YPD and LB media with vigorous shaking at 200 rpm for 24 h,
69
respectively. Cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4℃ for 5 min at 1000 g. The
70
cell pellet was resuspended in 2 mL of cold lysis buffer (50 mM potassium
71
phosphate, 2 mM EDTA, 2 mM DTT, and 0.1 mM PLP, pH 7.5)
72
were prepared by sonication at 0℃ for 10 min at 2 s intervals in a horn-type
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sonicator (225 W output, SL-650D, Nanjing, China) 12. Cell debris were removed by
74
centrifugation at 4℃ for 5 min at 1000 g. The clear supernatant was used for
75
enzymatic activity assay immediately.
11
. Cell extracts
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The reaction system containing 100 µL of the clear supernatant, 700 µL of lysis
77
buffer, 100 µL of KMBA (10 mM, CAS 51828-97-8, SIGMA, Saint Louis, USA)
78
and 100 µL of glutamate (10 mM ) was incubated at 30℃ for 20 min. The protein
79
concentration of each clear supernatant sample was determined using the BCA
80
Protein Assay Kit (TIANGEN, Beijing, China). The amount of methionine was
81
determined
82
derivatization with 2, 4-dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) as described by Li et al. 13 and
83
one unit of aminotransferase activity was defined as formation of 1 µM methionine
84
in 20 min. HPLC analysis conditions were as follows: Inertsil ODS-3 column
85
(4.6×250 mm, 5 µm, SHIMADZU, Shanghai, China); injection volume 20 µL; oven
86
temperature 23℃; flow rate 1 mL/min; the eluate was monitored at 360 nm. Mobile
87
phase A (50 mM sodium acetate buffer containing 0.1% triethylamine, pH 6.4) and
88
phase B (50% acetonitrile / 50% water solution) ran on an gradient elution program.
by
HPLC
(SHIMADZU,
Shanghai,
China)
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pre-column
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DNA manipulation techniques
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Standard DNA manipulation techniques were performed as described by Sambrook
92
& Russell (2001)
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genomic DNA Kit following the manufacturer's instructions (TIANGEN, Beijing,
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China). Plasmid DNA from E. coli was isolated using the High-purity Plasmid
95
Miniprep Kit according to the manufacturer's instructions (TIANGEN, Beijing,
96
China). Construction of recombinant DNA using restriction enzymes and ligase was
97
conducted according to the supplier's instructions (TRANSGEN, Beijing, China).
98
Standard heat shock transformation method was used to introduce plasmids DNA to
99
E. coli BL21 (DE3) 14.
14
. Genomic DNA from yeast was extracted using the Yeast
100 101
Construction of the ARO8 expression vector
102
Based on the ARO8 gene (GenBank accession no. NM_001181067.1), specific
103
primers (F-ARO8: 5’-ATGACTTTACCTGAATCAAAAGAC-3’; R-ARO8: 5’-
104
CTATTTGGAAATACCAAATTCTTC-3’) were designed for PCR. The ARO8 gene
105
was amplified by PCR from the genomic DNA of S. cerevisiae S288c. Amplification
106
reaction was performed using Takara PrimerSRTAR® MAX DNA Polymerase
107
following the manufacture's recommendations (TAKARA, China). The amplicon
108
was purified and recovered using the TaKaRa MiniBEST DNA Fragment
109
Purification Kit following the manufacture's recommendations (TAKARA, China).
110
The purified amplicon was linked to the expression vector pEASY-Blunt E1 using 6
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pEASY-Blunt E1 Expression Kit following the manufacture's recommendations
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(TRANSGEN, China), generating the recombinant vector pEASY-ARO8. The DNA
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ligation mixture was transformed into E. coli Trans-T1 and transformants were
114
screened on LB agar plates containing 200 µg/mL ampicillin. The positive
115
recombinant plasmid was then sequenced and further analyzed with DNAMAN
116
software package and BLAST Program at NCBI against the GenBank database.
117 118
Induced expression of the recombinant ARO8 in E. coli
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The recombinant plasmid pEASY-ARO8 was transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3)
120
(TIANGEN, Beijing, China) and transformants were screened on LB agar plates
121
containing 200 µg/mL ampicillin. The recombinant strain BL21-ARO8 was
122
cultivated in LB media containing ampicillin at 37℃ with vigorous shaking at 200
123
rpm for overnight. 1% of the fresh culture was then inoculated into 20 mL of fresh
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LB media containing ampicillin and cultivated at 37℃ with vigorous shaking at 200
125
rpm. When OD600 reached 0.5, isopropyl-β-d-thiogalactoside (IPTG) was added into
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the culture at the final concentration of 0.5 mM. The culture was then cultivated at
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20℃ with vigorous shaking at 200 rpm for 7 h. Cell extracts were prepared by
128
sonication and cell debris were removed by centrifugation as described previously.
129
The protein samples were then prepared for SDS-PAGE analysis in a 12%
130
polyacrylamide gel 14. The gel was scanned by BioSpectrum Imaging System (USA).
131
The content of the recombinant protein (CRP) was calculated according to O.D.
132
value 15 analyzed by BioSpectrum Imaging System software. 7
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Optimization of induced expression of the recombinant ARO8 in E. coli
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In order to obtain high-level expression of ARO8 in E.coli, culture conditions
136
including incubation temperature (16℃, 20℃, 25℃, 30℃, and 35℃), incubation
137
time (3 h, 5 h, 7 h, 9 h, and 11 h), and IPTG concentration (0 mM, 0.2 mM, 0.4 mM,
138
0.6 mM, 0.8 mM, and 1.0 mM) were firstly selected by the single-factor test 16. The
139
effects of three significant factors on protein expression were further evaluated using
140
the orthogonal experimental design L9 (33) 17, resulting in the optimal conditions for
141
expression of the recombinant ARO8.
142 143
Purification of the recombinant ARO8
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The clear supernatant of cell debris were firstly filtered through a 0.22 µm pore
145
membrane. The filtered supernatant was then added to Ni column containing
146
Ni-NTA Resin (TRANSGEN, Beijing, China). Maltose was added to suppress
147
nonspecific binding 18. The column was washed with lysis buffer to remove unbound
148
proteins. The recombinant ARO8 attached to Ni2+-chelated beads in the Ni column
149
via the 6×His tag was eluted from the column using the washing buffer (50 mM
150
potassium phosphate solution, 2 mM EDTA, 2 mM DTT, 0.1 mM PLP, 200 mM
151
imidazole, pH 7.5). The eluate was collected for SDS-PAGE analysis 15, 19, 20.
152 153
Methionine production catalyzed by purified recombinant ARO8
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100 µL of purified recombinant ARO8, 700 µL of lysis buffer, 100 µL of 10 mM 8
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KMBA, and 100 µL of 10 mM amino donor were mixed and incubated at 30℃ for
156
20 min. The enzymatic reaction solution was then diluted 10 times and used for
157
reversed phase HPLC (SHIMADZU, Shanghai, China) determination of D- and
158
L-methionine. HPLC analysis conditions were as follows: Inertsil ODS-SP column
159
(4.6×250 mm, 5 µm, SHIMADZU, Shanghai, China); injection volume 20 µL; oven
160
temperature 35℃; flow rate 0.5 mL/min; the eluate was monitored at 254 nm.
161
Mobile phase A (2 mM sodium acetate buffer containing 1 mM CuSO4, pH 4.0) and
162
phase B (acetonitrile) ran on an isocratic elution program (95% phase A buffer, 5%
163
phase B buffer).
164
The optimal amino donor was screened from 19 different amino acids by adding
165
them into the enzymatic reaction system, respectively, and evaluate their effects on
166
methionine production. The amount of methionine was determined by HPLC as
167
described previously and one unit of aminotransferase activity was defined as
168
formation of 1 µM methionine in 20 min. The molar ratio of the optimal amino
169
donor to KMBA was further optimized to improve the yield of methionine.
170 171
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
172 173
Methionine biosynthesis in the S. cerevisiae strain with ARO8 expression
174
The wild type strain S288c, the recombinant strains S0 harboring the empty vector
175
and S8 harboring the ARO8 expression vector pYES-pgk-ARO8 were cultivated for
176
24 h to determine the aminotransferase activity for methionine biosynthesis. As 9
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shown in Fig. 2, S8 exhibited the strongest aminotransferase activity, which was
178
more than 2-fold higher compared to S0 and S288c, indicating that expression of
179
ARO8 significantly increased the enzymatic activity and correspondingly enhanced
180
the generation of methionine using the substrate KMBA. As our previous work
181
proved that ARO8 played an effective role in methionine transamination 9, it
182
revealed that the aminotransferase ARO8 not only transformed methionine into the
183
corresponding α-keto acids via the Ehrlich pathway 9, but also reversibly acted on
184
KMBA to generate methionine when glutamate served as the amino donor.
185
Obviously, the transamination reaction between amino acids and α-keto acids
186
catalyzed by ARO8 was reversible. Karsten et al.
187
α-aminoadipate
188
dicarboxylic acid substrates such as L-tyrosine, L-phenylalanine, α-ketoadipate, and
189
L-α-aminoadipate. And it’s demonstrated that ARO8 could transform α-ketoglutarate,
190
α-ketoadipate, α-aminoadipate, phenylpyruvate, and 2-oxoglutarate into the
191
corresponding amino acids
192
seem to have been well characterized and investigated, this work gives evidences for
193
the reversible catalysis of ARO8 in transformation between L-methionine and
194
KMBA for the first time, contributing to comprehensive understanding of the
195
important aminotransferase ARO8 from yeast.
aminotransferase, which could
21
utilize both aromatic and
10, 21, 22
. Though ARO8 and its broad substrates range
196 197
categorized ARO8 as a
Induced expression of recombinant ARO8 in E. coli
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Sequence analysis showed that the 1503-bp ARO8 amplified from S. cerevisiae
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S288c shared a 100% identity with the 2-aminoadipate transaminase gene (GenBank
200
accession no. NM_001181067.1). The recombinant expression vector pEASY-ARO8
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constructed by inserting ARO8 into pEASY Blunt E1 was transformed into E. coli
202
BL21 (DE3), generating the recombinant strain BL21-ARO8. The protein samples of
203
BL21-ARO8 and BL21 cultivated with and without IPTG induction were analyzed
204
by SDS-PAGE. As shown in Fig. 3, a large number of the recombinant ARO8
205
proteins with the molecular mass of 57 kDa were observed in the supernatant of
206
ARO8-BL21 lysate with IPTG induction (Lane 1). In sharp contrast, the
207
recombinant ARO8 was almost hardly detected in the precipitate of ARO8-BL21
208
lysate with IPTG induction (Lane 2), the empty control strain BL-21 lysate with
209
IPTG induction (Lane 5, 6), and all the strains lysate without induction (Lane 3, 4, 7,
210
8). Furthermore, aminotransferase activity assay indicated that the supernatant of
211
BL21-ARO8 with IPTG induction exhibited the strongest activity, which was more
212
than 2-fold higher than that of all the strains without induction (Fig. 4). Heterologous
213
expression of eukaryotic genes in E. coli commonly generates inclusion body
214
formation and proteolytic degradation issues
215
recombinant protein without activity. However, in this work, the recombinant ARO8
216
was almost all expressed in the soluble form and showed a strong activity for
217
methionine biosynthesis, revealing that the recombinant ARO8 was efficiently
218
expressed and correctly folded in E. coli BL21. And obviously it’s much more
23
, and consequently leads to the
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convenient to purify the soluble recombinant ARO8 from the supernatant of cell
220
lysate.
221 222
Optimization of induced expression and purification of recombinant ARO8 in E.
223
coli
224
In order to obtain a high yield of ARO8, the single-factor test and orthogonal
225
experimental design were performed to optimize the induced protein expression.
226
According to the single-factor test results (Fig. S1-S3), incubation temperature (20℃,
227
25℃, and 30℃), incubation time (5 h, 7 h, and 9 h), and IPTG concentration (0.5
228
mM, 0.6 mM, and 0.7 mM) were selected as the significant effect factors and further
229
evaluated using the orthogonal experimental design L9 (33) (Table 2 & 3).
230
Expression of ARO8 under 9 combined conditions were quantitatively analyzed and
231
shown in Table 3. Based on the range analysis result, the optimal condition for
232
protein expression was determined as the combination of A2B2C3, under which the
233
content of the recombinant protein (CRP) ARO8 reached 15.81%. Consequently, the
234
recombinant ARO8 was prepared by cell culture at 25℃ for 9 h with 0.7 mM IPTG
235
induction.
236
The recombinant ARO8 was eluted from the Ni column with the washing buffer
237
containing 200 mM imidazole and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The electrophoresis
238
result showed that the highly concentrated 57 kDa ARO8 was detected in the eluted
239
sample and nonspecific protein was hardly observed in the same lane (Fig. 5). The
240
protein content measurement indicated that the concentration of ARO8 in the eluted 12
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sample reached 6.16 g/L, which was 6-fold higher than that in the sample without
242
purification, demonstrating the recombinant ARO8 was successfully purified. The
243
purified ARO8 was then used for methionine production.
244 245
Methionine production catalyzed by purified recombinant ARO8
246
The purified ARO8, KMBA, and amino donor were mixed and incubated for
247
methionine production assay. HPLC analysis results showed that the isomers D- and
248
L-methionine in the standard sample were detected and successfully separated, the
249
retention times of which were 11.9 min and 13.0 min (Fig. 6A) , respectively. In
250
sharp contrast, only L-methionine was detected in the sample of the reaction solution
251
catalyzed by ARO8 (Fig. 6B), indicating the distinct advantage of enzymatic
252
catalysis in L-methionine production.
253
Nineteen proteinogenic amino acids were selected as the amino donors to test their
254
influence on L-methionine production catalyzed by ARO8 using KMBA as the
255
amino receptor. A significant difference was observed among 19 amino acids. As is
256
shown in Fig. 7, higher yields of L-methionine were achieved when leucine,
257
glutamate, tryptophan, phenylalanine, aspartate, and tyrosine were used as amino
258
donor, respectively, demonstrating the broad-substrate transaminase activity of
259
ARO8 7. But other amino acids such as threonine, proline, glycine, serine, lysine,
260
and arginine as amino donor hardly resulted in methionine production, revealing the
261
substrate selectivity of ARO8. Considering the availability and market price, the
262
industrial bulk chemical glutamate was chosen as the optimal amino donor for 13
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L-methionine production. Furthermore, the molar ratio of glutamate to KMBA was
264
further optimized for higher L-methionine yield. It’s indicated that more
265
L-methionine was produced as the molar ratio of glutamate to KMBA increased (Fig.
266
8). When the molar ratio of glutamate to KMBA reached 3:1, 0.99 mM L-methionine
267
was detected in the reaction system using 1 mM KMBA as the substrate. And
268
approximatively 100% KMBA was transformed into L-methionine when the molar
269
ratio of glutamate to KMBA was higher than 3:1 (Fig. 8). Consequently, an
270
approximatively 100% conversion rate of KMBA into L-methionine was achieved
271
under the optimal condition that a 3:1 molar ratio of glutamate / KMBA were
272
catalyzed by ARO8.
273
Continuous attempts have been made to produce biologically active L-methionine
274
by enzymatic catalysis. Tokuyama and Hatano
275
DL-methionine could be converted into L-methionine by catalysis of N-acylamino
276
acid racemase and L-aminoacylase with a conversion rate of 90%. Though the
277
conversion rate is not extremely high, the price advantage of the substrate N-acetyl
278
DL-methionine makes it easier to fulfill the industrial-operated process for
279
L-methionine production. Ishikawa et al. 25 reported a remarkable conversion rate of
280
98% from DL-5-(2-methylthioethyl)-hydantoin into L-methionine. However, the
281
high market price of the substrate DL-5-(2-methylthioethyl)-hydantoin and the
282
complex reaction process catalyzed by multiple enzymes including hydantoin
283
racemase, hydantoinase, and N-carbamyl-L-amino acid amidohydrolase bring
284
challenges for industrialized production. In contrast, the L-methionine production
24
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methods using KMBA and glutamate by ARO8 catalysis reported in this work has its
286
unique strength that it is a highly efficient production method without complex
287
reaction process. And this is an asymmetric synthesis mode to produce the
288
L-methionine, as one reaction mode for transaminases.
289
In conclusion, the aminotransferase ARO8 involved in fusel alcohol
290
biosynthesis via the Ehrlich pathway was cloned from S. cerevisiae and
291
over-expressed in E. coli. The recombinant 57 kDa ARO8 protein was successfully
292
purifed and its reversible transamination activity for conversion of KMBA into
293
L-methionine was confirmed by enzymatic catalysis assay in vitro for the first time.
294
The conversion rate of KMBA into L-methionine reached approximately 100% by
295
screening the amino donor and optimizing the molar ratio of the amino donor and
296
receptor, providing a new highly efficient method for L-methionine production. The
297
substrate KMBA for L-methionine production used in this work is not easily
298
accessible, which seems to be a barrier for industrial process. However, van der
299
Heijden et al. 26 developed an efficient one-pot oxidation/Passerini/hydrolysis
300
sequence procedure for the formal α-carboxylation of primary alcohols, by which
301
methional possibly could be converted into KMBA by enzymatic catalysis or
302
chemical synthesis, providing the precursor for L-methionine biosynthesis by
303
transamination. Consequently, it might be reasonable to propose a possible novel
304
route for industrial production of L-methionine using methional as the substrate by a
305
combination of chemical synthesis and enzymatic catalysis.
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AUTHOR INFORMATION ⊥
Yiping Wu and Musu Zha contribute to this work equally.
309
*Corresponding Author. Phone: 86-10-68985252.
310
[email protected] (Sheng Yin);
[email protected] (Chengtao Wang)
Fax: 86-10-68985252.
Email:
311 312
FUNDING SOURCES
313
This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC
314
31401669 & 31571801), Beijing Natural Science Foundation (5154027), National
315
Key Research and Development Program of China (2016YFD0400802), Beijing
316
Municipal Science and Technology Project (Z171100002217019), Support Project of
317
High-level Teachers in Beijing Municipal Universities (IDHT20180506), and
318
Science
319
(PXM2018-014213-000033).
and
Technology
Achievement
Transformation
Upgrade
Project
320 321
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
322
Figure S1. Effect of different incubation temperature on the content of the
323
recombinant ARO8 in the strain BL21-ARO8
324
Figure S2. Effect of different incubation time on the content of the recombinant
325
ARO8 in the strain BL21-ARO8
326
Figure S3. Effect of different IPTG concentrations on the content of the recombinant
327
ARO8 in the strain BL21-ARO8
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1. Amin, K.A.; Hashem, K.S.; Almuzafar, H.M.; Taha, E.M. Oxidative
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S-adenosyl methionine and vitamin E. J. Complement Integr. Med. 2014,
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11(1):35-41.
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2. Kukowska, M.; Kukowska-kaszuba, M.; Dzierzbicka, K. A study on the protection
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of methionine and the reduction of methionine sulfoxide in methionine-containing
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analogues of the growth-modeling factor Gly-His-Lys. Tetrahedron Lett. 2015, 56(3):
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525-528.
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Figure captions
Figure 1. The metabolism of methionine via the Ehrlich pathway in S. cerevisiae (black arrow) and the route for methionine production proposed in this work (red arrow)
Figure 2. Aminotransferase activity assay in S. cerevisiae strains
Figure 3. SDS-PAGE analysis of protein samples from E. coli strains M, protein marker; Lane 1, supernatant of ARO8-BL21 lysate with IPTG induction; Lane 2, precipitate of ARO8-BL21 lysate with IPTG induction; Lane 3, supernatant of ARO8-BL21 lysate without induction; Lane 4, precipitate of ARO8-BL21 lysate without induction; Lane 5, supernatant of BL21 lysate with IPTG induction; Lane 6, precipitate of BL21 lysate with IPTG induction; Lane 7, supernatant of BL21 lysate without induction; Lane 8, precipitate of BL21 lysate without induction; recombinant ARO8 was indicated by red arrow.
Figure 4. Aminotransferase activity assay in E. coli strains
Figure 5. SDS-PAGE analysis of purified recombinant ARO8 M, protein marker; Lane 1, the protein sample containing ARO8 without purification; 21
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Lane 2, the protein sample of purified ARO8
Figure 6. Reversed phase HPLC analysis of the mixed standard sample of Dand L-methionine (A) and the sample of methionine catalyzed by purified recombinant ARO8 (B)
Figure 7. Effect of different amino acid donors on L-methionine production catalyzed by purified recombinant ARO8
Figure 8. Effect of different molar ratios of KMBA to glutamate on L-methionine production catalyzed by purified recombinant ARO8
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Tables
Table 1 Strains and plasmids used in this work Strains or plasmids
Relevant features
Reference or source
Vector for protein expression, Amp R
TRANSGEN Inc., Beijing, China
Plasmids
pEASY-Blunt E1 Strains
E. coli Trans-T1
Host for cloning
TRANSGEN Inc., Beijing, China
E. coli BL21 (DE3)
Host for protein expression
TIANGEN Inc., Beijing, China
MATα SUC2 gal2 mal mel flo1 flo8-1 hap1 ho bio1 bio6; donor of ARO8
Laboratory collection
S. cerevisiae S288c harboring empty expression vector pYES-pgk, G418 R
Yin S et al., 2014
S. cerevisiae S288c (ATCC 204508)
S. cerevisiae S0
S. cerevisiae S288c harboring pYES-pgk-ARO8, G418 R
S. cerevisiae S8
Yin S et al., 2014
Table 2 Factors and levels for L9 (33) orthogonal experimental design Levels
Factors A (℃)
a
B (h) b
C (mM) c
1
20
7
0.5
2
25
9
0.6
3
30
11
0.7
a, incubation temperature; b, incubation time; c, IPTG concentration.
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Table 3 The design matrix and experimental data for optimizing induced expression of ARO8 Run A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 K1 a K2 a K3 a Rb Qc
CRP( (%) )
Factors d
1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 11.21 14.47 7.96 6.52 A2
B
e
1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 10.71 11.78 11.15 1.07 B2
C
f
1 2 3 2 3 1 3 1 2 10.01 11.25 12.38 2.38 C3
9.10 10.94 13.60 15.29 15.81 12.32 7.74 8.60 7.53
a, the average value of each level; b, the range value for each factor; c, the best group; d, incubation temperature; e, incubation time; f, IPTG concentration.
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Figures
Aminotransferase activity (U/mg)
Figure 1
1.8 1.5 1.2 0.9 0.6 0.3 0 S8
S0 S288c S. cerevisiae strains
Figure 2 25
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Figure 3
Aminotransferase activity (U/mg)
15 12 9 6 3 0 ARO8-BL21(induction)
ARO8-BL21 E.coli strains
Figure 4
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Figure 5
Figure 6
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Aminotransferase activity (U/mg)
120 100
80 60
40
20 0 Lys Trp Phe Leu Ile Thr Val Asn Gly Ala Pro Ser Tyr Cys Gln His Asp Glu Arg Amino acid
Figure 7
Figure 8
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