PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Engineering of phenylalanine dehydrogenase from Thermoactinomyces intermedius for the production of a novel homoglutamate.

  • Muhammad Tariq,
  • Muhammad Israr,
  • Muslim Raza,
  • Bashir Ahmad,
  • Azizullah Azizullah,
  • Shafiq Ur Rehman,
  • Muhammad Faheem,
  • Xinxiao Sun,
  • Qipeng Yuan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263784
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
p. e0263784

Abstract

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The dramatic increase in healthcare costs has become a significant burden to this era. Many patients are unable to access medication because of the high price of drugs. Genetic engineering has made advances to increase the yield, titer, and productivity in the bio-based production of chemicals, materials of interest, and identification of innovative targets for drug discovery. Currently, the production of homoglutamate (α-Aminoadipic acid) involves petrochemical routes that are costly with low yield and often not suitable for industrial production. Here, we established the development of NADH-dependent homoglutamate by engineering NADH-dependent phenylalanine dehydrogenase (PDH) from Thermoactinomyces intermedius, which provides a novel tool for in-vivo metabolic engineering and in-vitro catalysis. Based on computational insight into the structure, we proposed the site-specific directed mutagenesis of the two important residues of PDH through docking simulations by AutoDock Vina which elucidated the binding mode of PDH with α-Ketoadipic acid and ligands. Our results demonstrated that the catalytic efficiency Km/Kcat of the final mutant Ala135Arg showed a 3-fold increase amination activity towards the ketoadipic acid as compared to the other mutant Gly114Arg, a double mutant Gly114Arg/Ala135Arg, and wild type TiPDH. Furthermore, we have introduced formate dehydrogenase as a cofactor regenerative system in this study which further made this study economically viable. Our study unfolds the possibility of biosynthesis of other non-proteinogenic amino acids that might be valuable pharmaceutical intermediaries.