Microbial Cell Factories (Jun 2022)

Characterization of a new L-carnosine synthase mined from deep-sea sediment metagenome

  • Jiajia She,
  • Lihong Fu,
  • Xiaowei Zheng,
  • Jing Li,
  • Limin Wang,
  • Bo Yu,
  • Jiansong Ju

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-022-01854-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract L-Carnosine is a natural biologically active dipeptide with critical physiological functions, such as antioxidant, antiglycation, and cytoplasmic buffering properties. Direct enzymatic synthesis is a promising way for L-carnosine production. In this study, a new aminopeptidase (gene_236976) with synthetic activity toward L-carnosine was identified by a metagenome mining approach from deep-sea sediment and functionally expressed in Escherichia coli. The enzyme shared a low identity of 14.3% with reported L-carnosine dipeptidase (SmPepD) from Serratia marcescens. β-Alanine methyl ester was proven to be the best substrate for the synthesis, and no ATP was needed for the enzymatic reaction. The enzyme activity was increased by structure-guided rational design. Only the mutant of G310 site gave positive results, and G310A mutant showed the best performance among the site-direct saturation mutagenesis, indicating that the additional CH3 group of mutant G310A was the main factor affecting the enzymatic activity. The engineered enzyme produced about 10 mM L-carnosine was produced from substrates of 50 mM β-alanine methyl ester and 50 mM L-histidine, under a tentatively optimized condition. This study enriched the enzyme resources for developing the microbial synthesis process of L-carnosine production.

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