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1.
Biochem J ; 475(23): 3861-3873, 2018 12 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30409825

ABSTRACT

In plants and bacteria that use a Type II fatty acid synthase, isozymes of acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterase (TE) hydrolyze the thioester bond of acyl-ACPs, terminating the process of fatty acid biosynthesis. These TEs are therefore critical in determining the fatty acid profiles produced by these organisms. Past characterizations of a limited number of plant-sourced acyl-ACP TEs have suggested a thiol-based, papain-like catalytic mechanism, involving a triad of Cys, His, and Asn residues. In the present study, the sequence alignment of 1019 plant and bacterial acyl-ACP TEs revealed that the previously proposed Cys catalytic residue is not universally conserved and therefore may not be a catalytic residue. Systematic mutagenesis of this residue to either Ser or Ala in three plant acyl-ACP TEs, CvFatB1 and CvFatB2 from Cuphea viscosissima and CnFatB2 from Cocos nucifera, resulted in enzymatically active variants, demonstrating that this Cys residue (Cys348 in CvFatB2) is not catalytic. In contrast, the multiple sequence alignment, together with the structure modeling of CvFatB2, suggests that the highly conserved Asp309 and Glu347, in addition to previously proposed Asn311 and His313, may be involved in catalysis. The substantial loss of catalytic competence associated with site-directed mutants at these positions confirmed the involvement of these residues in catalysis. By comparing the structures of acyl-ACP TE and the Pseudomonas 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA TE, both of which fold in the same hotdog tertiary structure and catalyze the hydrolysis reaction of thioester bond, we have proposed a two-step catalytic mechanism for acyl-ACP TE that involves an enzyme-bound anhydride intermediate.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants/enzymology , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acids/genetics , Biocatalysis , Cocos/enzymology , Cocos/genetics , Cocos/metabolism , Cuphea/enzymology , Cuphea/genetics , Cuphea/metabolism , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants/genetics , Plants/metabolism , Protein Domains , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Thiolester Hydrolases/chemistry , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 84(10)2018 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29549102

ABSTRACT

Medium-chain fatty acids are commodity chemicals. Increasing and modifying the activity of thioesterases (TEs) on medium-chain fatty acyl-acyl carrier protein (acyl-ACP) esters may enable a high-yield microbial production of these molecules. The plant Cuphea palustris harbors two distinct TEs: C. palustris FatB1 (CpFatB1) (C8 specificity, lower activity) and CpFatB2 (C14 specificity, higher activity) with 78% sequence identity. We combined structural features from these two enzymes to create several chimeric TEs, some of which showed nonnatural fatty acid production as measured by an enzymatic assay and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Notably, chimera 4 exhibited an increased C8 fatty acid production in correlation with improved microbial expression. This chimera led us to identify CpFatB2-specific amino acids between positions 219 and 272 that lead to higher protein levels. Chimera 7 produced a broad range of fatty acids and appeared to combine a fatty acid binding pocket with long-chain specificity and an ACP interaction site that may activate fatty acid extrusion. Using homology modeling and in silico docking with ACP, we identified a "positive patch" within amino acids 162 to 218, which may direct the ACP interaction and regulate access to short-chain fatty acids. On the basis of this modeling, we transplanted putative ACP interaction sequences from CpFatB1 into CpFatB2 and created a chimeric thioesterase that produced medium-chain as well as long-chain fatty acids. Thus, the engineering of chimeric enzymes and characterizing their microbial activity and chain-length specificity suggested mechanistic insights into TE functions and also generated thioesterases with potentially useful properties. These observations may inform a rational engineering of TEs to allow alkyl chain length control.IMPORTANCE Medium-chain fatty acids are important commodity chemicals. These molecules are used as plastic precursors and in shampoos and other detergents and could be used as biofuel precursors if production economics were favorable. Hydrocarbon-based liquid fuels must be optimized to have a desired boiling point, low freezing point, low viscosity, and other physical characteristics. Similarly, the solubility and harshness of detergents and the flexibility of plastic polymers can be modulated. The length and distribution of the carbon chains in the hydrophobic tails determine these properties. The biological synthesis of cell membranes and fatty acids produces chains of primarily 16 to 18 carbons, which give rise to current biofuels. The ultimate goal of the work presented here is to engineer metabolic pathways to produce designer molecules with the correct number of carbons in a chain, so that such molecules could be used directly as specialty commodity chemicals or as fuels after minimal processing.


Subject(s)
Cuphea/enzymology , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Thiolester Hydrolases/chemistry , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Cuphea/genetics , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism
3.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 860, 2018 02 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29491418

ABSTRACT

The substrate specificity of acyl-ACP thioesterase (TE) plays an essential role in controlling the fatty acid profile produced by type II fatty acid synthases. Here we identify two groups of residues that synergistically determine different substrate specificities of two acyl-ACP TEs from Cuphea viscosissima (CvFatB1 and CvFatB2). One group (V194, V217, N223, R226, R227, and I268 in CvFatB2) is critical in determining the structure and depth of a hydrophobic cavity in the N-terminal hotdog domain that binds the substrate's acyl moiety. The other group (255-RKLSKI-260 and 285-RKLPKL-289 in CvFatB2) defines positively charged surface patches that may facilitate binding of the ACP moiety. Mutagenesis of residues within these two groups results in distinct synthetic acyl-ACP TEs that efficiently hydrolyze substrates with even shorter chains (C4- to C8-ACPs). These insights into structural determinants of acyl-ACP TE substrate specificity are useful in modifying this enzyme for tailored fatty acid production in engineered organisms.


Subject(s)
Cuphea/enzymology , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Thiolester Hydrolases/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Cuphea/chemistry , Cuphea/genetics , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants/chemistry , Plants/classification , Plants/enzymology , Plants/genetics , Protein Conformation , Protein Domains , Sequence Alignment , Substrate Specificity , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism
4.
Plant Physiol ; 174(1): 97-109, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28325847

ABSTRACT

Seed oils of many Cuphea sp. contain >90% of medium-chain fatty acids, such as decanoic acid (10:0). These seed oils, which are among the most compositionally variant in the plant kingdom, arise from specialized fatty acid biosynthetic enzymes and specialized acyltransferases. These include lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferases (LPAT) and diacylglycerol acyltransferases (DGAT) that are required for successive acylation of medium-chain fatty acids in the sn-2 and sn-3 positions of seed triacylglycerols (TAGs). Here we report the identification of a cDNA for a DGAT1-type enzyme, designated CpuDGAT1, from the transcriptome of C. avigera var pulcherrima developing seeds. Microsomes of camelina (Camelina sativa) seeds engineered for CpuDGAT1 expression displayed DGAT activity with 10:0-CoA and the diacylglycerol didecanoyl, that was approximately 4-fold higher than that in camelina seed microsomes lacking CpuDGAT1. In addition, coexpression in camelina seeds of CpuDGAT1 with a C. viscosissima FatB thioesterase (CvFatB1) that generates 10:0 resulted in TAGs with nearly 15 mol % of 10:0. More strikingly, expression of CpuDGAT1 and CvFatB1 with the previously described CvLPAT2, a 10:0-CoA-specific Cuphea LPAT, increased 10:0 amounts to 25 mol % in camelina seed TAG. These TAGs contained up to 40 mol % 10:0 in the sn-2 position, nearly double the amounts obtained from coexpression of CvFatB1 and CvLPAT2 alone. Although enriched in diacylglycerol, 10:0 was not detected in phosphatidylcholine in these seeds. These findings are consistent with channeling of 10:0 into TAG through the combined activities of specialized LPAT and DGAT activities and demonstrate the biotechnological use of these enzymes to generate 10:0-rich seed oils.


Subject(s)
Cuphea/metabolism , Diacylglycerol O-Acyltransferase/metabolism , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Plant Oils/chemistry , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Acyltransferases/genetics , Acyltransferases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Brassicaceae/genetics , Brassicaceae/metabolism , Cuphea/genetics , Diacylglycerol O-Acyltransferase/genetics , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Metabolic Engineering/methods , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified , Seeds/genetics , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
5.
J Biotechnol ; 230: 30-3, 2016 Jul 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27184430

ABSTRACT

The present proof-of-concept study reports the construction of a whole-cell biocatalyst for the de novo production of ω-hydroxy octanoic acid. This was achieved by hijacking the natural fatty acid cycle and subsequent hydroxylation using a specific monooxygenase without the need for the additional feed of alkene-like precursors. For this, we used the model organism Escherichia coli and increased primarily the release of the octanoic acid precursors by overexpressing the plant thioesterase FatB2 from Cuphea hookeriana in a ß-oxidation deficient strain, which lead to the production of 2.32mM (8.38mggcww(-1)) octanoic acid in 24h. In order to produce the corresponding ω-hydroxy derivative, we additionally expressed the engineered self-sufficient monooxygenase fusion protein CYP153AMaq(G307A)-CPRBM3 within the octanoic acid producing strain. With this, we finally produced 234µM (0.95mggcww(-1)) ω-hydroxy octanoic acid in a 20h fed-batch set-up.


Subject(s)
Caprylates/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Bioreactors/microbiology , Caprylates/analysis , Cuphea/enzymology , Cuphea/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism
6.
FEBS Lett ; 587(7): 936-42, 2013 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23454211

ABSTRACT

Engineering transgenic plants that accumulate high levels of medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA) has been least successful for shorter chain lengths (e.g., C8). We demonstrate that one limitation is the activity of acyl-ACP synthetase (AAE) that re-activates fatty acids released by acyl-ACP thioesterases. Seed expression of Cuphea pulcherrima FATB acyl-ACP thioesterase in a double mutant lacking AAE15/16 increased 8:0 accumulation almost 2-fold compared to expression in wild type. These results also provide an in planta demonstration that AAE enzymes participate not only in activation of exogenously added MCFA but also in activation of MCFA synthesized in plastids.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Carbon-Sulfur Ligases/genetics , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Seeds/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Carbon-Sulfur Ligases/metabolism , Cuphea/enzymology , Cuphea/genetics , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Mutation , Plants, Genetically Modified , Plastids/enzymology , Plastids/genetics , Seeds/metabolism , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism , Triglycerides/metabolism
7.
Plant J ; 32(4): 519-27, 2002 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12445123

ABSTRACT

Several Brassica napus lines transformed with genes responsible for the synthesis of medium- or long-chain fatty acids were examined to determine limiting factor(s) for the subsequent accumulation of these fatty acids in seed lipids. Examination of a decanoic acid (10:0) accumulating line revealed a disproportionately high concentration of 10:0 CoA during seed development compared to long-chain acyl CoAs isolated from the same tissues, suggesting that poor incorporation of 10:0 CoA into seed lipids limits 10:0 fatty acid accumulation. This relationship was also seen for dodecanoyl (12:0) CoA and fatty acid in a high 12:0 line, but not for octadecanoic (18:0) CoA and fatty acid in a high 18:0 line. Comparison of 10:0 CoA and fatty acid proportions from seeds at different developmental stages for transgenic B. napus and Cuphea hookeriana, the source plant for the medium-chain thioesterase and 3-ketoacyl-ACP synthase transgenes, revealed that C. hookeriana incorporates 10:0 CoA into seed lipids more efficiently than transgenic B. napus. Furthermore, beta-oxidation and glyoxylate cycle activities were not increased above wild type levels during seed development in the 8:0/10:0 line, suggesting that lipid catabolism was not being induced in response to the elevated 10:0 CoA concentrations. Taken together, these data suggest that transgenic plants that are engineered to synthesize medium-chain fatty acids may lack the necessary mechanisms, such as specific acyltransferases, to incorporate these fatty acids efficiently into seed lipids.


Subject(s)
Acyl Coenzyme A/metabolism , Brassica napus/metabolism , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Brassica napus/enzymology , Brassica napus/genetics , Cuphea/genetics , Cuphea/metabolism , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Lipid Metabolism , Lipids/chemistry
8.
Planta ; 215(5): 847-54, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12244451

ABSTRACT

With the aim of elucidating the mechanisms involved in the biosynthesis of medium-chain fatty acids in Cuphea lanceolata Ait., a crop accumulating up to 90% decanoic acid in seed triacylglycerols, cDNA clones of a beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase IV (clKAS IV, EC 2.3.1.41) were isolated from C. lanceolata seed embryos. The amino acid sequence deduced from clKAS IV cDNA showed 80% identity to other plant KAS II-type enzymes, 55% identity towards plant KAS I and over 90% towards other Cuphea KAS IV-type sequences. Recombinant clKAS IV was functionally overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and substrate specificity of purified enzyme showed strong preference for elongation of short-chain and medium-chain acyl-ACPs (C4- to C10-ACP) with nearly equal activity. Further elongation steps were catalysed with distinctly less activity. Moreover, short- and medium-chain acyl-ACPs exerted a chain-length-specific and concentration-dependent substrate inhibition of clKAS IV. Based on these findings a regulatory mechanism for medium-chain fatty acid synthesis in C. lanceolata is presented.


Subject(s)
3-Oxoacyl-(Acyl-Carrier-Protein) Synthase/genetics , Cuphea/enzymology , Fatty Acids/biosynthesis , Seeds/enzymology , 3-Oxoacyl-(Acyl-Carrier-Protein) Synthase/isolation & purification , 3-Oxoacyl-(Acyl-Carrier-Protein) Synthase/metabolism , Cloning, Molecular , Cuphea/genetics , DNA, Complementary/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Molecular Sequence Data , Seeds/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Substrate Specificity
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