Semisynthetic cephalosporins are synthesized from 7-amino cephalosporanic acid, which is produced by chemical deacylation or by a two-step enzymatic process of the natural antibiotic cephalosporin C. The known acylases take glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid as a primary substrate, and their specificity and activity are too low for cephalosporin C. Starting from a known glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid acylase as the protein scaffold, an acylase gene optimized for expression in Escherichia coli and for molecular biology manipulations was designed. Subsequently we used error-prone PCR mutagenesis, a molecular modeling approach combined with site-saturation mutagenesis, and site-directed mutagenesis to produce enzymes with a cephalosporin C/glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid catalytic efficiency that was increased up to 100-fold, and with a significant and higher maximal activity on cephalosporin C as compared to glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid (e.g., 3.8 vs. 2.7 U/mg protein, respectively, for the A215Y-H296S-H309S mutant). Our data in a bioreactor indicate an ~90% conversion of cephalosporin C to 7-amino-cephalosporanic acid in a single deacylation step. The evolved acylase variants we produced are enzymes with a new substrate specificity, not found in nature, and represent a hallmark for industrial production of 7-amino cephalosporanic acid.
Evolution of an acylase active on cephalosporin C
POLLEGIONI, LOREDANO;ROSINI, ELENA;MARCONE, GIORGIA LETIZIA;MOLLA, GIANLUCA;PILONE, MIRELLA
2005-01-01
Abstract
Semisynthetic cephalosporins are synthesized from 7-amino cephalosporanic acid, which is produced by chemical deacylation or by a two-step enzymatic process of the natural antibiotic cephalosporin C. The known acylases take glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid as a primary substrate, and their specificity and activity are too low for cephalosporin C. Starting from a known glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid acylase as the protein scaffold, an acylase gene optimized for expression in Escherichia coli and for molecular biology manipulations was designed. Subsequently we used error-prone PCR mutagenesis, a molecular modeling approach combined with site-saturation mutagenesis, and site-directed mutagenesis to produce enzymes with a cephalosporin C/glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid catalytic efficiency that was increased up to 100-fold, and with a significant and higher maximal activity on cephalosporin C as compared to glutaryl-7-amino cephalosporanic acid (e.g., 3.8 vs. 2.7 U/mg protein, respectively, for the A215Y-H296S-H309S mutant). Our data in a bioreactor indicate an ~90% conversion of cephalosporin C to 7-amino-cephalosporanic acid in a single deacylation step. The evolved acylase variants we produced are enzymes with a new substrate specificity, not found in nature, and represent a hallmark for industrial production of 7-amino cephalosporanic acid.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.