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Leloir Glycosyltransferases as Biocatalysts for Chemical Production Bernd Nidetzky, Alexander Gutmann, and Chao Zhong ACS Catal., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 17 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 17, 2018
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ACS Catalysis
Leloir Glycosyltransferases as Biocatalysts for Chemical Production †, §, *
Bernd Nidetzky, †
Alexander Gutmann† and Chao Zhong
†
Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, Graz University of Technology,
NAWI Graz, Petersgasse 12, A-8010 Graz, Austria §
Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology (acib), Petersgasse 14, A-8010 Graz, Austria
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ABSTRACT
Glycosylation is a chemical transformation centrally important in all glycoscience and the related technologies. Catalysts offering good control over reactivity and selectivity in synthetic glycosylations are much sought after. The enzymes responsible for glycosylations in natural biosynthesis are sugar nucleotide-dependent (Leloir) glycosyltransferases. Discovery-oriented synthesis and pilot batch production of oligosaccharides and glycosylated natural products have previously relied on Leloir glycosyltransferases. However, despite their perceived synthetic utility, Leloir glycosyltransferases are yet to see widespread application in industrial biocatalysis. Here, we show progress and limitations in the development of Leloir glycosyltransferases into robust biocatalytic systems for use in glycosylations for chemical production. To obtain highly active and stable (whole cell) catalysts, able to promote the desired glycosylation(s) coupled to in situ sugar nucleotide supply, remains a difficult problem. To optimize glycosyltransferase cascade reactions for high process efficiency is another. Glycosylations of some natural products (e.g., flavonoids, terpenoids) involve acceptor substrate solubility as a special challenge for biocatalytic process design. Strategies to overcome these problems are illustrated from examples of integrated biocatalytic process development with this class of enzymes.
KEYWORDS: Leloir glycosyltransferases; sugar nucleotide; oligosaccharides; glycans; natural products; biocatalysis
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1.
GLYCOSYLATION:
KEY
TO
CARBOHYDRATE
STRUCTURAL
AND
FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY Glycosylation is the covalent coupling of sugar residues via glycosidic linkages. Glycosylation is 1
mainly responsible for the vast structural diversity of carbohydrates in nature. Glycosides, the products of glycosylation reaction(s), are molecules fundamentally important in biology, chemistry and the related technologies. Biologically, they include glycosylated natural products, 1-
oligo- and polysaccharides in free form or linked to other biomolecules like proteins and lipids. 4
Besides affecting the chemical properties (e.g., water solubility) of the product, glycosylation
gives rise to biological specificity and influences the mechanism of action.
5-7
A broad variety of
medicinally relevant molecules, including protein biopharmaceuticals, involve glycosylation(s) 8-10
in their (bio)synthesis.
In addition, glycosylated natural products and oligosaccharides have 5, 11
interesting uses as food and feed ingredients.
Furthermore, there is interest in small-molecule
glycosides as active components of cosmetic products and in flavor and fragrance 12-14
applications.
Scheme 1 shows selected examples of glycosylated products with promising
industrial applications. Development of robust methods of glycosylation is therefore a centrally important objective in the field. OH
OH
HO O HO
O
O
O
O HO
HO
O HO
OH O
O
HO HO
O
O
OH
HO
HO OH
geranyl O-β-D-glucoside
HN
2'-O-α-L-fucosyl-lactose
O
OH
HO OH
HO
O
O
O HO
HO
OH
OH
HO HO
OH
3'-O-α-sialyl-lactose
OH O OH
OH
HO HO
HO H
O HO OH
H
OH HO
O
O OH
HO
OH
OH
O
H
OH ginsenoside Rh2 protopanaxadiol 3-O-β-D-glucoside
HO HO
O O
HO HO
H O O
OH
O
O
OH O
HO O
OH OH
H HO
O
OH
quercetin 3-O-β-D-galactoside
HO HO
H
O O
rebaudioside A
Scheme 1. Industrially relevant oligosaccharides and glycosides referred to in this review.
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15-19
Chemical methods,
2-3, 20-21
biocatalytic approaches
Page 4 of 45
4, 22-23
and combinations thereof
have
been considered for glycosylation. Controlling selectivity and reactivity is a difficult problem for glycosylation. For production-scale glycoside synthesis, green chemistry characteristics of the 24
process require particular attention.
Prevention of waste (e.g., through avoiding protection
group chemistry) and use of catalysis are important principles to be considered. Enzymes are promising as catalysts for glycoside synthesis. However, there exists a significant gap in scope between the glycosides in demand and the enzyme-catalyzed transformations available for their synthesis. Development of new enzymes for glycosylation applications is therefore important.
2. LELOIR GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASES 3-4, 25
The natural principle of glycoside synthesis is represented by Leloir glycosyltransferases.
These enzymes utilize activated sugar donors, typically sugar nucleotides, as substrates. Chemically, glycosyltransferase reactions are nucleophilic substitutions at the glycosyl anomeric carbon and proceed with inversion or retention of configuration,
1-2, 25
as shown in Scheme 2.
Scheme 2. Inverting (A) and retaining (B) glycosyltransferase reactions are shown. Net proton release occurs in glycoside synthesis at pH conditions (pH ≥ ∼7), in which the nucleoside diphosphate is unprotonated.
1, 26-27
Glycosyltransferases are stereoselective enzymes. In reactions with acceptors offering several 4, 11,
glycosylation sites (see Scheme 1), glycosyltransferases usually show good site selectivity. 13-14, 25, 28
Glycosyltransferases have therefore been considered potential "game changing"
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catalysts of glycosylation, enabling high-precision glycoside synthesis in single-step conversions.
11, 13, 28
Iterative glycosylations are possible without the need of intermediary
28-32
product purification.
However, despite these advantages, glycosyltransferases are yet to play
a significant role in industrial glycoside production. For synthesis of fine or specialty chemicals, glycosyltransferases are often considered rather difficult to use.
11
There are excellent reviews on glycosyltransferases, focusing on their structure, function and mechanism
3-4, 25, 28, 33-39
11, 13-14, 30, 40-41
6,
as well as on the principles and scope of their synthetic applications.
However, glycosyltransferases in biocatalytic processes have received little
attention. This has motivated the current study.
2.1 Basic attributes of Leloir glycosyltransferases. Glycosyltransferases have been classified based on sequence similarity. There are currently 105 glycosyltransferase families, comprising about 400,000 enzyme modules categorized in the CAZY (carbohydrate-active enzymes) 25, 42
database.
Contrasting their diversity in function, glycosyltransferases adopt only a few basic
structural folds, of which the GT-A and the GT-B fold are most common (Figure 1). GT-A type 2+
2+
glycosyltransferases often require a divalent metal ion (Mg , Mn ) for activity. These features of glycosyltransferases have been reviewed elsewhere.
25, 37, 43-44
Figure 1. Structures of glycosyltransferases of GT-A (A, galactosyltransferase LgtC from Neisseria meningitidis, PDB code: 1G9R) and GT-B fold (B, flavonoid glucosyltransferase from Vitis vinifera, PDB: code: 2C9Z; C, macrolide glycosyltransferase OleD from Streptomyces antibioticus, PDB code: 2IYF) used in biocatalysis and referred to in this review.
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25, 33,
Leloir glycosyltransferases catalyze glycosylation at O, N, S and aromatic C acceptor sites. 37-38, 45 37-38, 46
33,
They usually do so with good discrimination between different chemical sites present.
Mechanistically, as shown in Scheme 3, the inverting glycosyltransferases employ a 25, 33, 36
single displacement-like reaction, usually under catalytic assistance from a general base.
Aromatic C-glycosylation with inversion requires a slightly different mechanism (Scheme 3). Deprotonation of a suitably positioned, ortho or para hydroxy group may be used to generate 38, 46-50
nucleophilic character in the reactive carbon of the acceptor substrate.
Glycosyl transfer 25,
with retention appears to proceed in a single step without formation of a covalent intermediate. 36
However, covalent catalysis may be utilized by certain glycosyltransferases.
36
In terms of substrate selectivity, Leloir glycosyltransferases cover a broad range of donors and 11, 13, 33, 40
acceptors.
Individual enzymes can be anything from highly specific for a single pair of
donor and acceptor substrates to showing broad tolerance to structural variations in both. Some 51-52
glycosyltransferases promote multiple glycosylations on a single acceptor molecule 31-32
elongate a growing glycan chain.
or
These enzymes have proven useful for synthesis of
diglycosylated natural products and glycosaminoglycan oligosaccharides.
11, 31-32
2.2 Characteristics of the glycosyltransferase reaction. In glycosyltransferase reactions, both 25, 36
substrates must bind to the enzyme to form a ternary complex before conversion takes place.
Substrate binding and product release may involve a certain order, as for example in human α1,4-galactosyltransferase, in which binding of the sugar nucleotide is required for binding of 53
the acceptor.
However, in various other cases, substrate binding was random.
54
Binding of one
substrate usually enhances the affinity of the other substrate. For practicality of the enzyme, its specific activity, expressed in the catalytic constant (kcat), is important. Compared with glycoside hydrolases/transglycosidases (e.g., esterases/lipases,
57
55-56
and other enzymes having established biocatalytic applications 58
alcohol dehydrogenases ), glycosyltransferases often exhibit a rather 59
low kcat. Exceptions notwithstanding,
-1
typical kcat values are in the range 1 - 20 s or less.
60-63
For practical considerations, the Km value should be low relative to the substrate concentration used in synthesis. However, substrate inhibition is often connected to a low Km.
64
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Scheme 3. Proposed mechanisms for glycosyltransferases.
25, 33, 36, 34
glycosyltransferase; B, inverting aromatic C-glycosyltransferase;
A, inverting O, N or S-
38, 46 41-45
C, retaining
glycosyltransferase acting through a concerted (top) or ion-pair intermediate (bottom) front-face mechanism; D, retaining glycosyltransferase forming a transient covalent intermediate.
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61, 65-69
The nucleoside diphosphate released in the reaction may cause product inhibition.
Binding of acceptor to the enzyme-nucleoside diphosphate complex potentially augments the inhibition. The nucleoside diphosphate also affects the conversion by mass action. 70
Glycosyltransferase reactions are not practically irreversible,
contrary to what was long
thought. The nucleoside diphosphate may be hydrolyzed in situ using phosphatase.
30, 71
This
eliminates the inhibition and pulls the reaction to the product side. In situ recycling of sugar nucleotide from nucleoside diphosphate presents an alternative strategy to cope with issues of inhibition and reaction equilibrium (see later). The reaction equilibrium, with common Keq values of 10 or higher, typically favors glycoside synthesis.
1, 25
Depending on the difference in pKa between the glycosyl acceptor group (e.g., ∼12
- 14 for a sugar hydroxy group) and the terminal phosphate of the nucleoside diphosphate (∼ 6 7), the reaction equilibrium is pH dependent (Scheme 2). The Keq increases with increasing pH 1, 26, 72
in the relevant pH range (e.g., 6 - 12).
The glycosyltransferase reaction will thus involve a
net proton release (pH ≥ pKa of nucleoside diphosphate), which has previously been exploited for development of enzyme assays suitable for high-throughput experiments. Glycosyltransferase reactions may require pH control.
27, 73-74
26
Stability problems confront glycosyltransferase synthesis in different ways. Enzymes often show half-lives of just a few hours under reaction conditions.
61, 75-77
The total turnover number
(TTN) for the enzyme thus becomes an issue. For a small-molecule glycoside, therefore, a TTN 6
of 10 enables production of several kg product/g enzyme used. TTN values are not widely 4
5 75, 78-79
available for glycosyltransferases, but seem to be relatively low (10 - 10 ) to industrially used enzymes for carbohydrates transformations.
80-81
in comparison
More research into stability
and stabilization of glycosyltransferases is needed. Sugar nucleotides can decompose spontaneously within times (24 - 48 h) relevant for the 82-86
2+
2+
enzymatic synthesis.
Besides pH and temperature, metal ions (e.g., Mg , Mn ) also affect
82-83, 86
For example, uridine 5'-diphosphate α-D-glucose decomposes by releasing
their stability.
83,
uridine 5'-monophosphate under formation of α-D-glucose 1,2-cyclic phosphate.
86
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Establishing conditions that prevent donor substrate degradation thus becomes a relevant task in reaction optimization.
2.3 The glycosyltransferase reaction in synthetic context. Glycosyltransferase synthesis is a field in which biocatalysis becomes strongly intertwined with synthetic biology and metabolic 2, 6, 30, 87-91
engineering.
The donor and acceptor substrates for the enzymatic reactions are often
not available as reagents. Their preparation from expedient precursors involves multistep 30, 89, 92
(chemo)-enzymatic reaction cascades.
These cascades are realized as "self-sufficient"
bio-synthetic pathways in vitro or through integration with cellular metabolism. For in vitro synthesis, isolated enzymes or whole cell(s) might be used. Live cell factories enable glycosides to be synthesized from nutrients. Enzyme- and cell-based glycosylations represent complementary strategies of glycoside production. Their comparison as to the limits of efficiency is of interest, but not available to our knowledge. Here, we focus mainly on enzymatic cascades uncoupled from metabolism. However, the points discussed are in the main also applicable to glycosylation by live cells. The main, and by far most important, strategy of applying glycosyltransferases in biocatalysis is synthesis of glycosides as final products. Installing glycosyl residues as biochemical protecting groups, which are removable on demand, is an alternative application of glycosyltransferases (Scheme 4). Indeed, glycosylation is used naturally for detoxification
93-94
and as "self-
7
resistance" mechanism.
Scheme 4. Glycosylation as a protecting group strategy for biotechnological production (left, middle) and for chiral resolution applications (right) is shown.
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The toxicity of vanillin to yeast cells is decreased through β-D-glucoside formation during in 95
vivo production. Indoxyl, which is a highly reactive precursor of the common blue dye indigo, was glucosylated by a dedicated β-glucosyltransferase to form the comparably unreactive and much
better
soluble
derivative,
96
called
indican.
Another
possible
application
of
glycosyltransferases is resolution of racemic substrates through enantioselective glycosylation. The enzyme UGT71B6 from Arabidopsis thaliana was highly selective for reaction with (+)abscisic acid to form the corresponding β-glucosyl ester, thus enabling the natural (+) form to be 40
resolved from the (±) substrate (Scheme 4).
The reader may note that biocatalysis offers 97
various strategies for chiral resolution and also for introducing protecting groups. Glycosylation presents only one among a number of possibilities.
3. GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASES AS BIOCATALYSTS Glycosyltransferases are notorious for their difficult preparation as biocatalysts. The problem requires attention, because efficiency in biocatalyst preparation could compensate deficiencies of a glycosyltransferase as regards specific activity and stability. Besides selection of host and genetic systems, design of the protein for soluble expression proved important with many glycosyltransferases (e.g., targeted truncation to remove membrane-anchoring parts; fusion to 98-100
solubility enhancer modules; removal or substitution of aggregation prone elements).
Overall, microbial glycosyltransferases are more easily produced recombinantly than their relatives from higher organisms. They are therefore considered most promising for biocatalytic 28, 30, 37, 101
applications.
It is difficult to give a general account and we use representative
examples instead. Tables S1 and S2 (Supporting Information) summarize expression data for bacterial sialyltransferases and fucosyltransferases produced in E. coli. Large variation in protein and activity yield is noted depending on the enzyme and expression strategy used. Volumetric 3
-1
activities for the best expressing sialyltransferases are at around 1 × 10 units L . This is significantly less than activities reached with other enzymes (e.g., transglycosidases, glycoside phosphorylases) used for glycosylation. To give an example, recombinant production of sucrose 3
-1
phosphorylase (from Leuconostoc mesenteroides) in E. coli yielded about 600 × 10 units L of
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81
bioreactor culture.
This emphasizes the important leverage for the biocatalytic applications of
glycosyltransferases that would be achievable through efficiency-enhanced production of the enzymes. Besides boosting the volumetric activity, the specific activity (based on cell mass) might be enhanced. This in turn would immediately benefit the use of glycosyltransferases as whole cell biocatalysts, rendering enzyme isolation a process step no longer necessary. In addition to microbial glycosyltransferases, glycosyltransferases from higher organisms are of interest for synthesis. For example, protein glycan remodeling may be achieved effectively 102
using mammalian glycosyltransferases (e.g., sialyltransferase
). Plant glycosyltransferases
have unique specificities for glycosylating "their own" natural products, including a broad diversity of flavonoid and terpenoid acceptor molecules.
13-14, 34, 40, 60
Besides E. coli, which is
nearly always considered as expression host, platform systems for high-throughput expression of mammalian glycosyltransferases are mammalian cells (e.g., HEK293) and insect cells. 104
free systems seem to be gaining in importance.
103
Cell-
Yeast systems may not be more suitable than 105-
E. coli for the functional overexpression of either mammalian or plant glycosyltransferases. 106
4.
GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASE-CATALYZED
SYNTHESIS:
SYSTEMS
AND
PARAMETERS FOR PRACTICAL USE Large-scale synthesis of oligosaccharides and glycoconjugates was performed directly from the sugar nucleotide (e.g., UDP-Gal, UDP-GlcNAc) and the corresponding acceptor.
107-109
However, sugar nucleotides should be supplied more efficiently than by simply adding them. Sugar nucleotide formation in situ is therefore useful.
6, 21, 30, 110
52, 111-112
supply apply similarly to the acceptor molecule.
Consideration of in situ substrate
This was however outside of the scope
of the current review. 4.1 Enzymatic cascades for sugar nucleotide supply. Scheme 5 summarizes strategies to prepare sugar nucleotides from intermediary sugar phosphates. Phosphorylation at the anomeric center provides the greatest flexibility as result of discovery and engineering of anomeric kinases with 21, 30, 113-114
different substrate specificities.
Stereoselective anomeric phosphorylation of sugars
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was also achieved by a phosphatase-catalyzed transphosphorylation using α-glucose 1-phosphate as phosphate donor. 113
activity.
115
There is paucity of anomeric kinases phosphorylating Glc with high
Besides hexokinase and phosphoglucomutase, glycoside phosphorylases can be used
to release α-glucose 1-phosphate. Sucrose is the most convenient phosphorylase donor substrate.
116
Sugar-1-phosphate synthesis α-Glc-1P
NDP-sugar synthesis Glc
IPP
Pase
O HO
O
HO
OH
AK
sugar
OH
OPO32-
ATP
ADP
ATP
ADP HK
HO
HO OPO 32-
OPO32-
HO
OH
OH O
HO HO
PGM
f ru
HO HO
Pi
O
a SP
HO
HO HO
OPO3
se
O sucrose
O
+ HO OH
2-
HO
HO
α-Glc-1-phosphate
O HO
HO
OPO32-
O UDP UDP-Gal
α-Gal-1-phosphate
OH
HO
GalT
OH O
HO
OPO32-
α-Glc-1-phosphate
+
O
HO
O UDP
UDP-Glc
OH
O
HO HO
HO
Glc-6-phosphate
OH
O NDP NDP-sugar
OH
O
Glc
se cto
O
NTase
sugar-1-phosphate
HO HO
OH
PPi
HO
sugar-1-phosphate
O
HO HO
NTP
O
2 Pi
ase
OH OH
Glycosylation
OH
O
NTP regeneration
+
HO
pyruvate
HR
PEP
R = O, N, C, S
acceptor
O NDP NDP-sugar
PK
GT PolyPn NTP
PolyPn+1 NDP
PolyPK
O acetate
acetylphosphate
NDP
AcetateK
+
O
HO glycosylated acceptor
Scheme 5. Cascade reactions for sugar nucleotide supply to glycosyltransferase conversions. AK, anomeric kinase; Pase, phosphatase; HK, hexokinase; SPase, sucrose phosphorylase; Pi, inorganic phosphate; NTase, pyrophosphorylase; PPi, pyrophosphate; IPPase, inorganic
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pyrophosphatase; GalT, hexose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferase; GT, glycosyltransferase; PK, pyruvate kinase; PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; PolyPK, polyphosphate kinase; PolyPn, polyphosphate with n phosphate groups; AcetateK, acetate kinase.
Various sugar nucleotide pyrophosphorylases have been used for conversion of sugar 16, 30
phosphate into the corresponding sugar nucleotide.
Pyrophosphatase is added to drive the
reaction and to remove product inhibition by the pyrophosphate released. UDP-Glc hexose 1phosphate uridylyltransferase catalyzes the interchange between UDP-Glc and sugar 1phosphates (e.g., α-galactose 1-phosphate). Lacking a suitable pyrophosphorylase, this enzyme can be used to form UDP-Gal.
4, 117
The nucleoside triphosphates required in these reactions are
normally regenerated. The pyruvate kinase/phosphoenolpyruvate system is well established. Polyphosphate kinase was considered as an alternative, for polyphosphate would be a highly expedient phosphate donor. However, polyphosphate reactions (e.g., complexation, precipitation) with divalent metals are difficult to control and removal of residual polyphosphate from reaction product is an issue.
118
Acetate kinase/acetylphosphate has also been proposed for nucleoside 51
triphosphate recycling.
Stability of acetylphosphate over longer reaction times might be a
problem. The donor substrate of sialyltransferases, CMP-Neu5Ac, requires a unique enzymatic cascade for its in situ formation.
4, 30, 89, 119-120
This is shown in Scheme 6. NH2
O
OH HO HO
GlcNAc
NH O
pyruvate
OH
O
HN
AGE OH
HO HO
NAL
O
OH HO HN
OH O
ManNAc
O
O OH
NH
CTP
OH
OH
CSS
O
Neu5Ac
HO PPi
O N O P O O OH O OH O OH OH O HN O OH O
CMP-Neu5Ac
Scheme 6. Cascade reactions for sialic acid donor supply to sialyltransferase conversions. AGE, GlcNAc 2-epimerase; NAL, sialic acid aldolase; CSS, CMP Neu5Ac synthetase
2-Epimerisation of GlcNAc is an interesting extension of the cascade originally established from ManNAc or Neu5Ac.
119-121
Additional routes towards Neu5Ac (e.g., sialic acid
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122
synthase
123
; hydrolyzing UDP-GlcNAc epimerase
Page 14 of 45
) might be employed in live cell factories
and the reader is referred to the cited literature for their in-depth discussion. 4.2 Glycosyltransferase reactions run in reverse direction for sugar nucleotide supply. The fundamental insight that, through proper choice of reaction conditions 125
activated, non-natural glycosidic substrate,
70, 124
or use of a highly
glycosyltransferase reactions can be driven in their
reverse direction has found immediate practical interest. Sucrose synthase is a rare example of a Leloir glycosyltransferase whose natural reaction, sucrose + nucleoside diphosphate (NDP) ↔ NDP-glucose + fructose, has an equilibrium lying 126
plainly in the middle.
The reaction presents a powerful method of glucose nucleotide 61
synthesis using just a single enzyme.
Its utility for sugar nucleotide supply was extended
through coupling to further enzymatic step(s). UDP-Gal, UDP-GlcA and dTDP-rhamnose were thus prepared from UDP-glucose and utilized immediately in coupled glycosyltransferase 61
reactions.
synthesis.
Like sucrose synthase, trehalose synthase was used for glucose nucleotide
127
However, the glycosidic bond in α,α-trehalose is of much lower free energy than 128-129
that of sucrose.
This renders α,α-trehalose less attractive than sucrose as donor substrate 127
for NDP-glucose production. Although some efforts were made,
coupling of trehalose
synthase with other glycosyltransferase requires further study to demonstrate its synthetic utility. Seminal studies of Thorson
125
and Withers
130
revealed that simple glycosides having aromatic
leaving groups can function as donor substrates for the reverse reaction of glycosyltransferases. 125
Gantt et al.
showed that through structural variation in the aromatic leaving group of the β-
glycosidic substrate, glycosyltransferase conversions into sugar nucleotide product could be shifted from a process disfavored thermodynamically to one strongly favored. Examining a quadruple variant (TDP-16) of the macrolide-inactivating glycosyltransferase OleD (from Streptomyces antibioticus) in the presence of 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl glycoside donors (Scheme 7A), a panel of 22 sugar nucleotides was synthesized. This panel featured broad diversity in both the sugar and the nucleoside diphosphate part of the molecule. Ability of the OleD variant to synthesize different sugar nucleotides was exploited in one-pot transglycosylations wherein the sugar nucleotide released from the activated glycoside served as donor for the subsequent
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ACS Catalysis
glycoside-forming reaction. The generic principles revealed by Gantt et al. have since been applied in many studies of glycosyltransferase specificity and small-scale glycoside synthesis by 131-138
They have also proven extremely useful in enzyme discovery and in
these enzymes.
diversifying the glycosylation pattern of natural products, applying glycosyltransferases as isolated enzymes
139
or as whole-cell catalysts.
140
A NO2
O HO HO
O
O
Cl
O
OH
XH
OH
NDP
OH
HO HO
OH
NO2
HO HO
OH O NDP
X
OH
NDP X = O, N, S, C
HO
Cl Recycle
B OH HO
OH O-GT
OH
OH
O HO HO
O
O
OH
HO
OH
OH
phlorizin
UDP
HO HO
O OH
HO O
OH
UDP
O phloretin
OH HO O HO HO
HO
OH C-GT OH
O
nothofagin
Scheme 7. Glycosyltransferase (aglycon) exchange reaction pushed by an activated sugar donor (A) and O-C glycosidic bond rearrangement pulled by the relatively higher stability of the Cglycosidic product (B). Both reactions require only catalytic amounts of NDP. They involve two complementary glycosyltransferase activities from a suitable pair of enzymes or from a single promiscuous enzyme. The reaction in A can be adapted for exchange of sugar instead of aglycon.
Based on Thorson's work of glycosyltransferase reversibility,
64
Liu and colleagues used kinetic 141
simulations to analyze sugar/aglycon exchange reactions by coupled glycosyltransferases.
They concluded that Keq of the individual transfer reactions governs the outcome of the overall
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Page 16 of 45
transglycosylation. The equilibria of sugar/aglycone exchange reactions and their role for practicable synthesis thus require more detailed attention. The additional importance of kinetic characteristics of the enzyme(s) used was revealed in a study of O- to C-glycoside rearrangement 72
by coupled glycosyltransferases (Scheme 7B).
Although strongly favored thermodynamically,
conversion of phloretin 2'-O-β-D-glucoside (phloridzin) into phloretin 3'-C-β-D-glucoside (nothofagin) proceeded efficiently only in the case that kinetic fluxes to and from UDP-glucose 72
were suitably balanced.
Certain C-glycosyltransferases catalyze (reversible) O-glycosylation 50, 134, 142
on surrogate substrates in vitro.
This ability might be exploited in further applications
of O- to C-glycoside rearrangement using only a single enzyme.
142
4.3 Synthetic applications of glycosyltransferases using sugar nucleotide formation in situ. Representative examples of synthetic applications of glycosyltransferases in biocatalytic cascades are given. Besides conceptual relevance, demonstrated scalability was especially taken into account. The different glycosylation systems used are paramount examples of cascade biocatalysis applied to chemical synthesis. However, with exceptions,
143
the almost complete
lack of engineering principles (e.g., kinetic model-based optimization; reaction/reactor design) involved in their development is noted. 4.3.1
Oligosaccharides.
The
synthetic
scope
of
oligosaccharide
synthesis
by
glycosyltransferases and biocatalytic glycosylations by one-pot multienzyme systems are 11, 21, 30
covered well in earlier reviews. 144
sialyllactose,
147-148
3-lactose)
Large-scale synthesis of oligosaccharides, like 3'144-146
globotriose (Gal-α1-4-lactose)
and the α-galactosyl trisaccharide (Gal-α1-
, by engineered whole cell catalysts remain important points of reference. -1
Although product titers of up to 188 g L (372 mM; 2.5 L scale) were obtained in often excellent yields, the cell loading applied to these conversions was huge, typically in the range 100 - 250 g -1
144
L . Biocatalysts were multiple bacterial species
or a single "superbug".
91, 145-149
A large
benefit is expected from improved overexpression of the enzymes, the glycosyltransferases in particular, in the respective host organism. Balanced co-expression of enzymes could be an additional problem. It might be addressed with modern methods of synthetic biology.
91, 150-151
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ACS Catalysis
Living cell factories, often constructed in E. coli strain background, present alternative -1
production systems for oligosaccharides, including 2'-fucosyllactose (23 g L ), 3'-sialyllactose -1
-1 87-88, 90, 152
(25 g L ) and 6'-sialyllactose (34 g L ).
Intracellular accumulation of a significant
portion of product (30 - 40%) is a problem for downstream processing. However, the synthesis of 2'-L-fucosyllactose is now moving towards full-scale commercialized production in industrial processes.
87
This occurs under product approval for application as food ingredient from the
relevant regulatory agencies in the U.S. and the EU. Their inherently flexible use renders cell-free enzyme preparations the preferred choice for diversity-oriented synthesis, typically for production of up to the gram scale. Here, the 100-g scale production of 3'-sialyllactose (Scheme 1) from Neu5Ac and lactose by a fusion protein between CMP-sialic acid synthetase and α2-3 sialyltransferase (both from Neisseria 153
meningitidis) is a key point of reference. 30
nucleotide regeneration (Scheme 5),
By applying one-pot multienzyme cascades for sugar
more recent studies demonstrated impressively the use of
sequential glycosylations for the production of all 15 naturally occurring human ABH antigens;
154
a large panel of complex human milk oligosaccharides;
Lewis X antigens; sphingolipids;
158
157
and 159-160
oligosaccharides.
155-156
O-sulfated sialyl
a pentasaccharyl ceramide representing a class of complex structurally
well-defined
chondroitin
sulfate
and
heparosan
The efficiency of sugar nucleotide regeneration (UDP-Gal, UDP-
GalNAc, GDP-Fuc, CMP-Neu5Ac) was evaluated in detail for gram scale syntheses of the cancer-associated antigens globopentaose (Gb5), fucosyl-Gb5 and sialyl-Gb5, which were 78
assembled from allyl-lactose (55 mM) through sequential enzymatic glycosylations.
The mole-
based TTN for the enzymes used in a single batch reaction (2 - 10 days; 150 - 200 mL) without 4
6
enzyme recycling was in the range 10 - 10 . For nucleoside triphosphates, TTN values were between 200 (ATP) and 20 (CTP, GTP). Isolated yields for intermediary and final products were high (94 - 99%), except for sialyl-Gb5 (54%). To enhance the TTN for the enzymes, their coimmobilization on beads could be useful, as was shown for UDP-Gal regeneration cascades. 162
161-
Enzymes were immobilized via their His-tags on nickel-nitrilotriacetate beads with excellent
retention of activity on solid as compared to solution. Reuse of the beads for UDP-Gal
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Page 18 of 45
production (10 mM; 48 h; 50% yield) was possible at least four times. Oligosaccharide syntheses with α1-3 or α1-4 galactosyltransferase, or both enzymes, immobilized on beads that additionally contained the UDP-Gal regeneration cascade gave product yields of between 76 and 95%, based on 60 mM substrates used. In a gram scale production of a β-benzyl derivative of the α-Gal trisaccharide, 3-fold reuse of the beads was demonstrated with only small losses of product yield in each round of conversion (72%, 71%, 69%, 66%).
162
Protein engineering was used to adapt glycosyltransferases to requirements of oligosaccharide 163
synthesis. Bacterial sialyltransferases showing reduced hydrolytic activity 164-165
acceptor site-selectivity
and changed
proved useful. Ultra-high-throughput screening combined with
directed evolution was used to develop variants of Campylobacter jejunii sialyltransferase CstII 166
with enhanced efficiency.
The α1-3 fucosyltransferase (from Helicobacter pylori) was -1
systematically truncated at the C-terminus to improve solubility (150 - 200 mg of ∆52 variant L
E. coli culture). Structure-guided iterative saturation mutagenesis was used to enhance activity (15.5-fold compared to wildtype enzyme).
99
4.3.2 Natural product glycosides. Glycosyltransferase biocatalysis for natural product glycosylation has attracted significant interest. Microbial enzymes and enzymes from plants have been studied extensively, with a strong focus on enzyme discovery and mining for new enzyme 13-14, 34, 37, 40, 167-171
specificities.
Due to the huge diversity of aglycon structures in natural
product glycosides, a broad-scope toolbox of versatile glycosylation catalysts is desired. Several of these glycosyltransferases are unexpectedly promiscuous, particularly regarding the acceptor 40, 131-135
molecules utilized.
This property is potentially very useful for biocatalytic synthesis.
Despite progress in elucidating structures of natural product glycosyltransferases, correlating sequence and structure to function is still difficult.
25, 33, 37
Bioprospecting from genomes of 33
glycosyltransferases with assignable specificities therefore remains a distant goal.
Sequence-
guided or structure-based design has had some successes in glycosyltransferase engineering for 37, 43, 167
biocatalytic applications.
However, induced-fit substrate binding is a structural53, 172
mechanistic feature apparently quite common among the glycosyltransferases.
Rational
engineering should therefore rely on structural evidence of the ternary Michaelis complex or a
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ACS Catalysis
173-174
Besides swapping sequence regions or whole domains between
good surrogate thereof.
47, 74, 175-177
different glycosyltransferases,
37, 167
of new enzyme specificities.
directed evolution proved useful in the development
It is noted that good protein expression is a critical
requirement for directed evolution to take its full effect in creating the desired trait(s) in an enzyme. Advances in high-throughput glycosyltransferase assays have supported enzyme 74, 166, 178-180
directed evolution.
Glycosyltransferase engineering for promiscuity and for a specific function. The substrate scope of OleD was expanded dramatically through a directed evolution combined with high37, 178, 181
throughput fluorescence screening (Scheme 8A).
The triple variant (Pro67Thr
Ser132Phe Ala242Val) utilized 15 donor substrates of which 12 were "new". It was superpromiscuous with respect to the acceptor substrate, leading to ≥ 50 "new" candidate molecules for glycosylation. Furthermore, the variant was able to glycosylate different nucleophiles, including alcohols, amines, thiols, oximes, hydrazines, hydrazides, N-hydroxyamides, Osubstituted oxyamines and carboxylic acids. Further engineering of OleD improved the enzyme's efficiency for sugar nucleotide synthesis. Quintuple variant incorporating additional substitutions Ile112Pro and Thr113Met showed >400-fold improvements in kcat/Km for formation of different NDP-(deoxy)-glucoses.
182
The enzyme was immobilized through His-tag affinity binding. Its
use under flow conditions afforded a 280-fold improved enzyme utilization as compared to homogeneous reaction using the soluble enzyme.
183
Engineering of a glycosyltransferase for a defined target function is represented by UGT51 (from Saccharomyces cerevisiae).
179
The enzyme whose natural function is believed to be the
synthesis of ergosteryl β-D-glucoside is inherently promiscuous for β-D-glucosylation of sterols. To enable production of the ginsenoside Rh2 (Scheme 1), UGT51 was engineered for enhanced reactivity with the precursor sterol protopanaxadiol. Screening according to Scheme 8B was performed. The best improved 7-fold variant (Ser81Ala Leu82Ala Val84Ala Lys92Ala Glu96Lys
Ser129Ala
Asn172Asp)
showed
1800-fold
enhanced
efficiency
towards
-1
protopanaxadiol, with a kcat of 1.4 s and a Km of 0.28 mM. The engineered glycosyltransferase was useful to boost ginsenoside Rh2 production in recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
184
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OH
B
A
HO GT (variant)
O HO
O
glucosylated acceptor
UDP
HO O UDP
HO
UDP-glucose
GT 2
O HO
O
OH O
O
4-methyl-umbelliferone
4-methyl-umbelliferyl glycoside
fluorescent
non-fluorescent
O
Cl
O
O
HO HO
Cl O
OH NO2
NO2 2-chloro-4-nitrophenolate
yellow
2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl β-D-glucopyranoside
colorless
Scheme 8. High-throughput glycosyltransferase reactions with fluorescence (A) or absorbance (B) detection are shown. They were used in enzyme engineering.
185
In another study of targeted glycosyltransferase engineering,
the acceptor binding pocket of
the enzyme UGT76G1 (from Stevia rebaudiana) was subjected to extensive site-saturation mutagenesis at 38 positions. UGT76G1 participates in a complex metabolic glycosylation grid that leads to numerous glyco-forms of steviol, some of which are desired as sweeteners like rebaudioside D and rebaudioside M whereas others like stevioside and rebaudioside A (Scheme 1) are undesired for their additional bitter taste. UGT76G1 catalyzes β1-3 glucosylation of glucosyl residues attached to the steviol core molecule. Variant enzymes (Thr146Leu or His115Leu) showing improved participation in the network of glycosylation reactions and consequently reduced by-product formation in vivo (S. cerevisiae) were identified. An important finding from structure-function studies of the mannosyl glycerate synthase (from 186
Rhodotermus marinus)
O
O
HO HO
NDP-sugar
GT (variant)
HO
OH
NDP
O NDP
O
HO HO
acceptor
was that mutation of residues interacting with the guanine base of
GDP were correlated with large increases in kcat at relatively unchanged kcat/Km. If this were a principle broadly applicable to glycosyltransferases, one could foresee interesting practical applications in the design of rate-enhanced glycosylation catalysts for synthetic use.
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ACS Catalysis
Application of natural product glycosyltransferases in biocatalytic synthesis. The enormous structural diversity of glycosylated natural products necessitates discussion based on 13-14, 34,
representative examples. Excluding discovery- and mainly diversity-oriented synthesis, 40, 51, 60, 168, 177, 187
we focus on simple glycosylations (e.g., glucosylation, galactosylation) of
flavonoid and terpenoid scaffolds (Scheme 1). This is in consideration of the various possible applications that the resulting glycosidic products have as industrial fine chemicals and 12-14, 188
ingredients.
Acceptor substrate solubility is a problem largely absent from biocatalytic glycosylations of sugar molecules, but one that requires special attention in the glycosylation of almost any natural product. Generally, therefore, product titers are severely limited by the amount of acceptor 51-52, 60
solubilized (usually ≤ 1 mM).
Substrate solubility enhancement is certainly not new to 24
biocatalysis and various well-known strategies have been developed to its end,
yet, it must be
noted, they all necessitate a (highly) robust enzyme. The simplest approach involves a whole-cell catalyst prepared from the host organism, most often E. coli, overexpressing the relevant glycosyltransferase. The sugar nucleotide is provided by (residual) cellular metabolism on addition of Glc or Gal to the reaction mixture. Typical -1 40, 52
product concentrations were in the approximate range 20 - 200 mg L .
Using a water
immiscible ionic liquid, N-hexylpyridinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imid, as a second phase for fed-batch supply of the geraniol acceptor substrate,
189
geranyl β-D-glucoside (Scheme 1) was
-1
-
produced in 20 h to a concentration of 291 mg L by a whole-cell catalyst (4.3 g cell dry mass L 1
) based on E. coli BL21(DE3) expressing the Arabidopsis thaliana glucosyltransferase GT14a. -1
The reference reaction used geraniol dissolved in buffer and gave 118 mg product L . Recently, isopropyl myristate was shown to be a promising organic solvent for geranyl β-D-glucoside 190
production.
In a different study, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain expressing the UGT76G1 -1
(from Stevia rebaudiana) was used as whole cell catalyst to produce 1.2 g L rebaudioside A -1 191
(Scheme 1) from stevioside (2 g L ).
Besides glucose, citrate was added to enhance the
accumulation of intracellular UDP-glucose from the carbon source.
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Page 22 of 45
Strains harboring engineered pathways of donor substrate supply showed enhanced production -1 52
-1
or even ∼4 g L in the
of flavonoid glycosides with titers raised to several hundred mg L case of quercetin 3-O-β-D-glucoside.
192
The scope of sugars used for glycosylation was
broadened to include, among others, Xyl, Rha, GlcA, and L-Ara, which occur naturally in known 51-52, 193
flavonoid glycosides.
Besides UDP-sugars, TDP-activated sugars were used. Multiple
glycosylations on a single acceptor were also performed. De Mey and colleagues
194
constructed a
pathway in E. coli wherein UDP-Glc was synthesized from sucrose via α-glucose 1-phosphate. The UDP-Glc was the immediate precursor for UDP-Gal (Bifidobacterium bifidum UDP-glucose C'4 epimerase) and UDP-Rha (Arabidopsis thaliana UDP-Rha synthase; MUM4 gene) utilized for glycosylation of quercetin. A flavonol 3-O-glacatosyltransferase (from Petunia hybrida) or flavonol-3-O-rhamnosyltransferase (from A. thaliana) was overexpressed. In 1-L bioreactor -1
cultivations quercetin 3-O-galactoside (hyperoside, Scheme 1; 0.94 g L ) and quercetin 3-O-1
rhamnoside (quercetrin; 1.15 g L ) were formed within 30 h in a yield of roughly 50% based on the quercetin added. Using a similar approach employing a versatile glucosyltransferase (from Vinis vitivera), a series of carboxylic acids were converted to the corresponding β-glucose esters.
195
Other interesting examples are the glucosylation of hydroquinone to give arbutin β-D-1 196
glucoside (6.62 g L )
-1 197
and of salicylate to give salicylate 2-O-β-D-glucoside (2.5 g L ).
Enzymatic glycosylations were performed on various acceptors (e.g., quercetin, resveratrol, phloretin, stevioside, curcumin) using sugar donor regeneration.
60, 198-208
However, final product
concentrations, after some optimizations, were typically still in the low mM range, reflecting limitations on acceptor substrate solubility. Unlike oligosaccharide synthesis, therefore, these reactions can hardly challenge the performance of the regeneration systems used. Intensification of enzymatic flavonoid glycosylation with in situ sugar nucleotide recycling is described below based on the example of synthesis of the C-glycoside nothofagin. Sugar or aglycon exchange reactions were exploited primarily for diversity-oriented transformations by promiscuous glycosyltransferases.
37, 131-135, 198, 209
Free enzymes or whole
cell catalysts were used, typically in small scale reactions. Besides O-glycosides, a series of Nand S-glucosides were produced using para-nitrophenyl-β-D-glucoside as donor.
131-132, 135, 210
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ACS Catalysis
Rearrangement of aromatic O- to C-glycosides was also reported (Scheme 7B). This reaction is thermodynamically favored, thus enabling a highly atom-efficient transformation in quantitative 72, 142
yield.
5. INTEGRATED BIOCATALYTIC PRODUCTION OF GLYCOSIDES USING LELOIR GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASES Large-scale production (∼100 g) of glycosides by glycosyltransferases was interconnected with downstream processing in a holistic development of biocatalytic processes. Systematic evaluation of kinetic, thermodynamic and stability parameters of the enzymatic reaction(s) was essential to push the limits of the biocatalytic conversion. Thus, in the examples shown, process efficiencies typically required in fine chemicals production were obtained. 5.1 Nucleoside diphosphate-glucoses. A biocatalytic production of UDP-glucose was developed.
26, 211
Sucrose synthase converted sucrose and UDP into UDP-glucose and fructose
(Figure 2A). The logKeq for the reaction was shown to decrease at high pH above a pK of 6.0 (Figure 2B). Only when UDP was completely protonated at around pH 5.0, the UDP-glucose synthesis was thermodynamically favored. The Keq at pH 5.0 was 1.14. Under these conditions, with pH properly controlled during the reaction, UDP conversion was 85% when only a fivefold excess of sucrose was used. Recognizing the crucial role of pH in driving the reaction of sucrose synthase was essential to the identification of a narrow window of efficient process operation. 212
Sucrose synthases from bacteria (Acidithiobacillus caldus) 75
max)
26
and plant (soybean; Glycine
were compared for UDP-glucose production. In terms of kcat/Km, the plant sucrose 26
synthase was at least 45-fold more specific for UDP than the bacterial enzyme.
However, at
high UDP concentrations used in the reaction (300 mM), the specific activity of the A. caldus sucrose synthase exceeded that of the G. max enzyme by 11.4-fold. The effect was due to a combination of increased kcat and lowered substrate inhibition in the bacterial sucrose synthase. The A. caldus enzyme was therefore the clearly preferred choice for UDP-glucose production. -1
Gram-scale synthesis of UDP-glucose (255 mM; 144 g L ; Figure 2C-D) gave a productivity of
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-1
Page 24 of 45
-1
25 g L h . A mass-based TTN of 1440 was obtained for the sucrose synthase. These parameters were considered to be a good basis for further process development.
26
The optimized enzymatic reaction was integrated with efficient enzyme production and downstream processing.
211, 213
A. caldus sucrose synthase was expressed under control of a
constitutive promotor of intermediate strength. Bioreactor cultivation of E. coli BL21(DE3) gave -1
a total enzyme activity of 4800 U L culture. The sucrose synthase accumulated to a level of 480 U/g cell dry mass, which enabled direct use of mildly permeabilized E. coli cells as biocatalyst -1
for synthesis. The catalyst concentration used was only 2.5 g cell dry mass L . Synthesis at 100 -1
g scale was performed. The final UDP-glucose concentration was 100 g L and the yield based -1
-1
on UDP added to the reaction was 86%. The productivity was 10 g L h and the TTN based on dry cell mass used was about 100.
Figure 2. Enzymatic production of UDP-glucose by A. caldus sucrose synthase. A, Reaction scheme. B, Dependence of the equilibrium constant of the reaction (Keq) on pH at 45°C. C, Time -1
course of conversion using 1.5 M sucrose (5-fold excess over UDP) and 100 µg mL enzyme at 45°C and pH 5. The pH was controlled (with HCl) during the reaction. D, The substrates before dissolution in 100 mL total volume.
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ACS Catalysis
UDP-glucose was recovered from the reaction mixture in ≥90% purity and in 73% isolated yield. A chromatography-free procedure of downstream processing of nucleoside diphosphate glucoses was developed. This involved phosphatase digestion of residual UDP in the reaction mixture followed by ethanol precipitation of UDP-glucose as the main processing steps. The -1
overall balance for the biocatalytic process was about 0.7 kg UDP-glucose L E. coli bioreactor culture. Immobilization of sucrose synthase has only recently been accomplished and provides a significantly (340-fold) stabilized biocatalyst for UDP-glucose production that can be 77, 214
recycled.
The nucleoside diphosphate represents a main cost factor of glucose nucleotide production by sucrose synthase. Nucleoside monophosphate is significantly more expedient (≥ 100-fold in the case of AMP or UMP) as starting material. A biocatalytic cascade reaction was established for adenosine diphosphate glucose production from sucrose (1 M), adenosine 5'-monophosphate 118
(100 mM) and polyphosphate (132 mM).
Besides the A. caldus sucrose synthase, a
polyphosphate kinase (Scheme 5) from Meiothermus ruber 2+
performed at 45°C, pH 5.5 and 25 mM Mg
215
was applied. Optimized reaction -1
2+
gave ADP-glucose at 81 mM (48 g L ). The Mg
concentration was important not only for enzyme activity, especially that of polyphosphate kinase, but it also affected polyphosphate solubility. Using a total enzyme loading of just 150 mg -1
-1
-1
L , a productivity of 2 g L h was obtained and the mass-based TTN was 320. Purified sucrose synthase and polyphosphate kinase were employed in a 2:1 mass ratio. Isolation procedure for ADP-glucose in high purity (99%) was developed. Removal of polyphosphate was achieved using fractional precipitation with ethanol. ADP-glucose (155 mg) was purified in a (nonoptimized) yield of 30%. The biocatalytic cascade reaction by polyphosphate kinase and sucrose synthase could be applied to synthesize GDP-glucose, CDP-glucose, UDP-glucose and dTDPglucose from the corresponding nucleoside monophosphates (10 mM). Its efficiency decreased in the order of glucose nucleotides shown, reflecting preference of the polyphosphate kinase for reaction with pyrimidine as compared to purine nucleobases.
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Page 26 of 45
A potentially interesting catalyst for glucose nucleotide synthesis is trehalose synthase. Using the enzyme from the hyperthermophile Pyrocococcus furiosus at 37°C and applying nucleoside diphosphate (113 - 117 mM) and trehalose (420 - 444 mM) in excess, production of ADP-Glc (35%; 41 mM), GDP-Glc (17%; 19 mM), CDP-Glc (12%; 14 mM) and UDP-Glc (10%; 11 mM) -
was shown in repeated cycles (up to 30; 12 h each) with re-use of the soluble enzyme (0.24 g L 1
). A mass-based TTN of well above thousand appears to be possible with this apparently quite 216
stable enzyme.
5.2 Nothofagin. The natural dihydrochalcone phloretin occurs in different glycoforms, typically featuring β-D-glucosylation of one phenolic hydroxy group. In addition, C-glucosylation at the C-3' of phloretin is found in nothofagin, a natural product present in the rooibos plant and linked 217
to the various health-promoting effects of its herbal tea.
Nothofagin represents an emerging
class of C-glycosidic natural products, which have recently attracted much interest for their 38, 218-220
different possible applications.
Nothofagin is a powerful antioxidant and has positive
effects in diabetes treatment. Natural scarcity and difficult chemical synthesis restrict promising applications of nothofagin. Biocatalytic synthesis was therefore considered. Installing the Cglycosidic linkage in nothofagin requires Leloir glycosyltransferases distinct from the enzymes 221
synthesizing phloretin O-glucosides. Using the C-glucosyltransferase from rice (Oryza sativa)
a biocatalytic synthesis of nothofagin at 100 g scale was developed. Promising design for the enzymatic reaction involved a cascade of the C-glucosyltransferase and sucrose synthase, as 75
shown in Figure 3A. The one-pot β-D-glucosylation at C3' of phloretin occurs from sucrose via an UDP/UDP-glucose shuttle. The same concept was used for synthesis of phloretin-Oglucosides.
222
Kinetic characterization of different sucrose synthases revealed that a low UDP Km was very 86
important for enzyme efficiency in UDP-glucose regeneration.
The G. max sucrose synthase
was superior to the A. caldus sucrose synthase according to this kinetic criterion. The A. caldus enzyme preferred ADP over UDP. Structure-guided engineering of the sucrose synthase was 223
used to enhance the enzyme's affinity for UDP.
Engineered variants of the A. caldus enzyme
exhibiting a UDP Km 60-fold lowered compared to the wildtype sucrose synthase showed
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86
improved performance in UDP-glucose recycling.
However, the G. max sucrose synthase,
which naturally exhibits a high affinity for UDP (Km = 0.13 mM) was the best enzyme candidate for coupling with the C-glycosyltransferase. Basic parameters of the cascade reaction requiring optimization were the enzyme activity ratio (5-fold excess of C-glycosyltransferase) as well as the sucrose (100 mM) and the UDP concentration (0.5 - 1.0 mM). The low water-solubility of phloretin (≤ 0.5 mM) was a main bottleneck of an efficient nothofagin synthesis. Using DMSO (20%, by volume) as cosolvent, about 5 mM phloretin was dissolved and the same concentration of nothofagin was produced (Figure 3B). To enhance the final nothofagin concentration, phloretin was added in 5 mM portions during the course of the 75
reaction and about 45 mM product could so be formed (Figure 3B). Among various strategies for phloretin solubility enhancement, inclusion complexation by β-cyclodextrins was best compatible with enzyme stability and activity (Figure 3B).
79
The expedient and well-soluble 2-
hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin enabled solubilization of phloretin to a point (∼150 mM) where 76
viscous fluid mixing became a physical boundary on the process operation.
The nothofagin
synthesis thus pushed to upper practical limits gave a final product concentration of ∼120 mM -1
-1
-1
(50 g L ) at a productivity of about 3 g L h (Figure 3B-C). The UDP was regenerated 220 times. A limiting mass-based TTN of 100 was obtained for the C-glycosyltransferase in a single batch conversion lasting 24 h (Figure 3C). Reaction scale up to the 50 - 100 g scale was done with no practical loss in efficiency and productivity (Figure 3D). Stability of the enzymes, especially the sucrose synthase, remains an issue. Immobilization of the sucrose synthase, or of both enzymes, could present a useful solution for stabilization and re-use.
77, 214
Isolation of polyphenol glycosides from glycosyltransferase reactions was realized previously mostly at small preparative scale (≤ 100 mg). It involved procedures, like size exclusion chromatography, that are not easy to scale up. A downstream process for efficient recovery of 76
nothofagin (≥ 95% purity) was developed.
A tailored anion-exchange chromatography at pH
8.5 was used for capture and initial purification of the product. The 2-hydroxypropyl-βcyclodextrin could be also recovered at this step. Precipitation of nothofagin at a lowered pH of 6.0 and re-dissolution in acetone effectively replaced desalting by size exclusion chromatography
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76
in the final step of product purification. Nothofagin was recovered in an overall yield of 65%.
The successful nothofagin process involves upstream and downstream processing efficiently interconnected. The idea of a holistic process development for biocatalytic production of flavonoid glycosides by coupled Leloir glycosyltransferases is supported. This may find further applications in natural product glycosylation. By including additional enzymatic steps into the reaction cascade (e.g., epimerisation, oxidation at C'6), the scope of glycosylation from sucrose can be expanded to glycosyl residues (e.g., Gal or GlcA) other than Glc.
A
B
C
D
61
Figure 3. Nothofagin synthesis from phloretin and sucrose by C-glycosyltransferase (from O. sativa; OsCGT) and sucrose synthase (from G. max; GmSuSy) at pH 6.5 and 40°C. A, Reaction scheme. B, Optimization of the nothofagin titer (blue) from initially 5 mM using (left to right) substrate feeding and inclusion complexation with β-cyclodextrin and 2-hydroxypropyl-βcyclodextrin. Product yield is shown in black. C, Time course of nothofagin production at 50 g -1
-1
scale using 1.6 units mL C-glycosyltransferase and 0.5 units mL sucrose synthase. Reaction
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conditions: 112 mM phloretin (complexed with 140 mM 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin), 500 mM sucrose, 0.5 mM UDP. D, Scale up effect on space-time yield and product yield.
6. CONCLUSIONS In comparing known catalysts for glycosylation, Leloir glycosyltransferases impress with their selectivity. In addition, many glycosyltransferases exhibit remarkably flexible substrate specificity, rendering them broadly applicable for synthesis. To harness the prowess of glycosyltransferases for chemical production, limitations in robustness and efficiency of their corresponding biocatalytic systems need to be overcome. Enhancing enzyme expression to enable efficient whole-cell biocatalysis is key. A comprehensive approach integrating enzyme engineering with synthetic biology will be required. Biochemical engineering principles applied to the characterization of glycosyltransferase cascades will facilitate optimization of their output 224-225
in one-pot multicomponent transformations. Adopting concepts of flow chemistry
might
enable continuous production with integrated enzyme re-use. A holistic process design involves a biocatalytic synthesis optimized for efficient interconnected performance with product recovery. Perceived limitations on the applicability of Leloir glycosyltransferases in industrial biocatalysis will be challenged most effectively through paradigmatic examples of their successful use.
ASSOCIATED CONTENT Supporting Information. Tables S1 and S2 giving a representative summary of recombinant production
in
E.
coli
of,
respectively,
bacterial
sialyltransferases
and
bacterial
fucosyltransferases. This information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website.
AUTHOR INFORMATION Corresponding Author
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*Bernd Nidetzky; Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, TU Graz; Petersgasse 12, A-8010 Graz, Austria; e-mail:
[email protected]; phone: +433168738400; fax: +433168738434 Present Addresses Alexander Gutmann, Specialty Ingredients & Technology, Lonza AG, Lonzastraße, CH-3930 Visp, Switzerland Author Contributions The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. All authors have given approval to the final version of the manuscript. Funding Sources EU FP7 project SuSy (Sucrose Synthase as Effective Mediator of Glycosylation); Austrian Research Promotion Agency FFG through the COMET Funding Program.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT Funding from the EU FP7 project SuSy (Sucrose Synthase as Effective Mediator of Glycosylation) and the Austrian Research Promotion Agency FFG through the COMET Funding Program is gratefully acknowledged.
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GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT
X = O, N, S, C
HO
O NDP
H + X
= natural product, sugar, oligosaccharide
HO
O X
+
NDP-O(H)
O Recycle cascade
Integrated biocatalytic glycosylation process for chemical production
The development of Leloir glycosyltransferases into optimized biocatalytic systems for practical use in synthetic glycosylations is reviewed. Strategies to overcome perceived limitations on the applicability of Leloir glycosyltransferases are illustrated from first examples of integrated biocatalytic process development with this class of enzymes.
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