Using mutability landscapes of a promiscuous tautomerase to guide the engineering of enantioselective Michaelases.

Journal: Nature Communications
Published:
Abstract

The Michael-type addition reaction is widely used in organic synthesis for carbon-carbon bond formation. However, biocatalytic methodologies for this type of reaction are scarce, which is related to the fact that enzymes naturally catalysing carbon-carbon bond-forming Michael-type additions are rare. A promising template to develop new biocatalysts for carbon-carbon bond formation is the enzyme 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase, which exhibits promiscuous Michael-type addition activity. Here we present mutability landscapes for the expression, tautomerase and Michael-type addition activities, and enantioselectivity of 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase. These maps of neutral, beneficial and detrimental amino acids for each residue position and enzyme property provide detailed insight into sequence-function relationships. This offers exciting opportunities for enzyme engineering, which is illustrated by the redesign of 4-oxalocrotonate tautomerase into two enantiocomplementary 'Michaelases'. These 'Michaelases' catalyse the asymmetric addition of acetaldehyde to various nitroolefins, providing access to both enantiomers of γ-nitroaldehydes, which are important precursors for pharmaceutically active γ-aminobutyric acid derivatives.

Authors
Jan-ytzen Van Der Meer, Harshwardhan Poddar, Bert-jan Baas, Yufeng Miao, Mehran Rahimi, Andreas Kunzendorf, Ronald Van Merkerk, Pieter Tepper, Edzard Geertsema, Andy-mark W Thunnissen, Wim Quax, Gerrit Poelarends