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University of Groningen Mutants and homologs of cephalosporin acylase Sio, Charles Frederik IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if you wish to cite from it. Please check the document version below. Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Publication date: 2004 Link to publication in University of Groningen/UMCG research database Citation for published version (APA): Sio, C. F. (2004). Mutants and homologs of cephalosporin acylase: for antibiotics and antibiosis Groningen: s.n. Copyright Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Take-down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Downloaded from the University of Groningen/UMCG research database (Pure): http://www.rug.nl/research/portal. For technical reasons the number of authors shown on this cover page is limited to 10 maximum. Download date: 18-06-2017 Chapter 2: Improved β-lactam acylases and their use as industrial biocatalysts Charles F. Sio & Wim J. Quax Current Opinion in Biotechnology 2004, 15:349-355 Chapter 2 Summary Whereas the β-lactam acylases are traditionally used for the hydrolytic processing of penicillin G and cephalosporin C, new and mutated acylases can be used for the hydrolysis of alternative fermentation products as well as for the synthesis of semisynthetic β-lactam antibiotics. 3D structure determination and site-directed mutagenesis studies have increased the understanding of the catalytic mechanism of these enzymes. The yield of hydrolysis and synthesis has been greatly improved by process design including immobilization of the enzyme and the use of alternative reaction media. Significant advances have been made in the resolution of racemic mixtures by means of stereoselective acylation / hydrolysis using β-lactam acylases. Introduction In nature each enzyme exhibits a remarkable specificity for the conversion of a particular set of substrates. The introduction of these enzymes as biocatalysts in industrial processes has resulted in new innovative processes for the production of fine chemicals in the recent years. Driven by both environmental and economic considerations, particular progress has been made in the area of semi-synthesis of penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics. Not only the replacement of the acyl side chain but also modifications of the other substituents of the β-lactam nucleus are being performed with specific enzymes today. The enzymes of the β-lactam acylase class are traditionally used for the deacylation of the β-lactam compounds penicillin G and glutaryl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid (glutaryl-7ACA) to 6-aminocephalosporanic acid (6-APA) and 7-ACA. These β-lactam nuclei are the building blocks used in the production of semi-synthetic β-lactam antibiotics (see[11,15]). The most well known β-lactam acylase is the penicillin G acylase (PGA) from Escherichia coli. This enzyme hydrolyses the amide bond between the primary amino group of the β-lactam nucleus and the carboxyl group of the phenylacetic acid side chain of penicillin G. Likewise, cephalosporin acylases hydrolyze the amide bond between the nucleus and the aliphatic side chain of cephalosporins (Figure 1). The elucidation of the 3D structure of E. coli PGA has revealed a unique catalytic mechanism involving an N-terminal nucleophilic serine that is activated by the free N-terminal amino group [57]. Although advances in the fermentation processes and the hydrolytic processes have been made (see the reviews by Arroyo et al [87] and Elander [11]), the most interesting manuscripts in the last few years have focused on protein engineering and directed evolution of β-lactam acylases. This review discusses new and mutated acylases for synthesis and hydrolysis of β-lactams and other chiral compounds. Novel β-lactam acylases A newly characterized β-lactam acylase originates from Achromobacter sp. CCM 4824. The discovery of this enzyme was a result of classical screening of 2000 isolates from soil 30 Improved β-lactam acylases Figure 1: The hydrolysis of β-lactam fermentation products by β-lactam acylases. A: Penicillin G is hydrolyzed by PGA to 6-aminopenicillanic acid; B: glutaryl-7-ACA is hydrolyzed by cephalosporin acylase to 7-ACA; C: adipyl-7-ADCA is hydrolyzed by mutants of cephalosporin acylase to 7-ADCA; D: CPC is hydrolyzed by mutants of cephalosporin acylase to 7-ACA. samples and the corresponding bacterium has been characterized on the basis of the 16S RNA sequence as being 99.6 % identical to Achromobacter xylosoxidans [88]. The enzyme was found to hydrolyze β-lactams containing an α-amino group in the side chain, such as ampicillin and cephalexin, with a 2-fold higher activity compared to penicillin G. It is the only acylase described so far that is able to hydrolyze ampicillin faster than penicillin G, which is potentially interesting for the enzymatic synthesis of ampicillin, amoxicillin and cephalexin [89]. Furthermore, the substrate specificity of the acylase enzyme from Streptomyces lavendulae was recently investigated in detail. In accordance with its former classification this enzyme has a high activity on Penicillin V and almost no activity on Penicillin G. Surprisingly the highest activity was found towards substrates with octanoyl as the acyl side chain. These results taken together point to a highly hydrophobic active site, and it was proposed to classify this enzyme as a Penicillin K acylase [90]. Interestingly, a new class of β-lactam synthases was discovered with the amino-acid ester hydrolases of Xanthomonas citri and Acetobacter turbidans, which show a preference for substrates with α-amino side chains and have biochemical features distinct from the other β-lactam acylases [91,92]. These enzymes are especially suited for synthetic reactions as the β-lactam amide formed is not a substrate. The identification of this new class of βlactam amidase was a further investigation of ampicillin acylases that were first described 31 Chapter 2 Figure 2: Mutagenesis alters the substrate specificity of a cephalosporin acylase. The preferred substrate of cephalosporin acylase is glutaryl-7-ACA and activity towards the novel β-lactam fermentation product adipyl-7-ADCA is much lower. Mutants that exhibit an increased catalytic efficiency towards adipyl-7-ADCA were obtained by directed evolution of a cephalosporin acylase. Shown here are the best mutants found by random mutagenesis [5,6] and saturation mutagenesis of selected residues [100,99]. A greater than 15-fold increase in activity was observed for the single mutant N266M. “Triple” stands for the multiple mutant M271V+Q291K+T374S. 30 years ago [93]. The 3D structure of this enzyme has been determined recently and will be discussed separately. Within the past 1.5 years the number of available bacterial genome sequences has grown from 71 to over 155 (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/static/eub_g.html; April 2004). Database mining for novel β-acylases has therefore become feasible. A recent BLAST search using the paradigm of β-lactam acylases, E. coli PGA, as a template, revealed over 50 homologous genes in the various database libraries. However, the functional analysis of all these new putative genes is very time consuming, and it is therefore expected that the number of well characterized novel acylases will increase steeply in the coming years. Protein engineering of β-lactam acylases Mutating the existing β-lactam acylases can improve the physicochemical and catalytic characteristics. In a rational approach, non-conserved basic surface residues of Bacillus megaterium PGA were mutated into the small, hydrophobic residue alanine. This resulted in a two to three-fold increased half-life at 55ºC or in 40% DMF [94]. Alternatively, the charged residues of E. coli PGA were mutated to lysines, thereby improving the interaction with the immobilization agent glyoxyl-agarose. The inactivation of the immobilized enzyme was decreased four to eleven-fold depending on conditions [95]. 32 Improved β-lactam acylases With regard to the synthesis of β-lactam antibiotics, it was found that mutating several active site residues of E. coli PGA increased the fraction of the new acyl side chain that is coupled to the β-lactam nucleus (i.e. the synthesis to hydrolysis ratio Vs/Vh), thereby increasing the yield of ampicillin and cephalexin synthesis two to four-fold [96]. In a different approach, the Vs/Vh ratio was improved by DNA family shuffling, using E. coli, Kluyvera citrophila and Providencia rettgeri PGA with the P. rettgeri PGA gene as backbone. Chimeras exhibited a 40% improved ratio compared to P. rettgeri PGA, but the ratio was not significantly improved compared with E. coli PGA [97]. To increase the activity of cephalosporin acylase on the β-lactam fermentation product cephalosporin C (CPC; Figure 1), Kabsch and co-workers [52] made a model of a cephalosporin acylase with bound glutaryl-7-ACA and CPC. Several combinations of mutations were proposed to improve the binding of the desired substrate, but experimental results of these mutations are yet to be published. Based on a different model, Kim and co-workers selected active site residues that clashed with CPC. Step-wise random mutagenesis of these residues resulted in an 8-fold increase in hydrolysis, which is, however, still too low for industrial applications [86]. Quax and co-workers [18,98] used directed evolution to alter the substrate specificities of cephalosporin acylase towards the novel β-lactam fermentation product adipyl-7-ADCA (Figure 1) [16]. Random mutagenesis followed by a growth selection on adipylderivatives identified three hot-spot residues in the gene, of which one, Asn266 (which corresponds to position 68 of the β-subunit, Asnβ68), was not identified as an possible target for mutagenesis from the 3D structures [52,86]. The catalytic efficiency of the selected mutants towards adipyl-7-ADCA was increased two to four-fold [18,98]. Subsequently, the effect of two of the three hot-spot residues on activity was thoroughly analyzed through the incorporation of all 20 natural amino acids at these positions, showing several mechanisms to improve activity [99] (Figure 2). Substitutions of Asn266 with methionine afforded an 11-fold improved catalytic efficiency (Figure 2), and, moreover, improved activity towards CPC [100]. In contrast to these results, growth selection of mutants of E. coli PGA on glutaryl-leucine resulted in variants with an improved interaction with the leucine moiety of the selection substrate, but no activity towards the corresponding β-lactam compound, glutaryl-7-ACA [81]. Crystal structures of β-lactam acylases Recently, crystal structures of several highly homologous cephalosporin acylases have been resolved. Although the structures are all virtually identical, some controversies remain. The structure [59] and model [52] of glutaryl-7-ACA bound enzyme are very similar to the structure of the native enzyme, suggesting a lock-and-key mechanism for substrate binding. However, the binding of the substrate analog bromoacetyl-7-ACA to the non-solvent accessible residue Trpβ4 [101] and the subsequent hydrolysis of the bound substrate analog during crystallization [102] suggest that large conformational changes occur upon substrate binding. Moreover, the identity of the catalytic residues is also unclear; hydrolysis is thought to be mediated via a single catalytic residue Serβ1 [51], a Serβ1/Hisβ23 Hisβ23/Gluβ455 double dyad [52] or a Serβ1/Hisβ23/Gluβ455 catalytic 33 Chapter 2 triad [53]. The active enzyme is either a αβ heterodimer [51], or a (αβ)2 heterotetramer [52,53]. The autocatalytic processing of the transcribed precursor into the active enzyme, in which a spacer peptide between the α- and β-subunit is removed, has been studied via mutants deficient in processing. It was shown that a bound water molecule plays a pivotal role in activating the hydroxyl group of Serβ1, which is the nucleophile in the first processing step [53-55] (Figure 3). If this water is forced out by mutating Pheβ177 to proline, the hydroxyl group is not positioned correctly and processing is inhibited [55]. In the nondeficient enzyme, the formed intermediate is thought to be hydrolyzed by either the same water molecule [54,55] or via a different one following a structural rearrangement of the spacer peptide [53]. Finally, different lengths of the removed spacer peptide have been reported for the different homologs of cephalosporin acylase, ranging from eight to eleven residues [53]. This clearly indicates that more work is yet to be done. The crystal structure of the α-amino acid ester hydrolase from Xanthomonas citri was also elucidated, clearly setting this class of enzymes apart from the other β-lactam acylases. It consists of a homotetramer with a classical Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad instead of an Nterminal nucleophile active site residue [103]. Two aspartates and a glutamate residue close to the active site stabilize the α-amino group of the substrate, explaining the substrate specificity of this novel class of β-lactam amidases [91,92,103]. Mechanism of the acylase reaction In the past year a kinetic analysis of the penicillin reaction steps was published with emphasis on not only the hydrolysis reaction but also on the synthetic reaction [58]. The acylation step and the deacylation step have been described as separate steps in the reaction and it was shown that the breakdown of the acyl-enzyme is much faster than its formation implying that the rate of hydrolysis is set entirely by the acylation step. This information is relevant with respect to the use of β-lactam acylases for the kinetically controlled synthesis of semi-synthetic penicillins and cephalosporins, such as ampicillin and cephalexin. For this application the enzyme should have a low affinity for the antibiotic compared to the acyl donor to prevent the competing hydrolysis of the product as much as possible. This knowledge has been used to design novel variants of PGA with an improved Vs/Vh ratio (see above). It appears that the kinetics of the acylation and deacylation step can be changed separately, but it should be stressed that the thermodynamic equilibrium can not be changed by protein engineering of the enzyme. The conditions for optimal yield of the antibiotic product can be influenced by varying conditions (pH) and the concentrations of the substrates. The complexity of these processes has been analyzed elegantly by a neural network approach [104]. To circumvent kinetic limitations, efforts have also been directed at precipitating the antibiotic product to drive the reaction towards one end of the equilibrium. A theoretical description of this heterogeneous ”aqueous solution–precipitate” system was found to match quite accurately the experimental conversion of 86 % and 76 % for ampicillin and amoxicillin, respectively [105]. In a further refinement, the feasibility of precipitation-driven synthesis of a zwitterionic β-lactam antibiotic (e.g. amoxicillin) has been investigated [106]. For amoxicillin it was found that Zn2+ ions drive the precipitation of the product. In 34 Improved β-lactam acylases Figure 3: Two proposed mechanisms for the autocatalytic processing of cephalosporin acylase. Cephalosporin acylase is translated as an inactive precursor. The first maturation step is cleavage of the Gly169-Ser170 bond, releasing the N-terminus of the active site serine Ser170 (which becomes then the first residue of the β-subunit, Serβ1). This step was analyzed from two structures of the non-maturating Ser170Ala mutant, A [53] and B [55]. The hydroxyl group of Ser170 is activated by a water molecule (W1 in A and B) and performs a nucleophilic attack on the main chain carbonyl of Gly169. The intermediate thus formed is hydrolyzed by a water molecule. However, as the two structures contain water molecules at different positions, either W2 (activated by His192) is thought to perform this second nucleophilic attack (A) or W1, which is the only water near the scissile bond in structure B. Color figure at end of thesis. experiments where ZnSO4 was added, much higher levels of amoxicillin were reached, but an undesirable side-effect of increasing concentrations of Zn2+ ions was that β-lactam degradation seemed to increase [106]. 35 Chapter 2 Industrial applications including immobilization Although the enzymatic production of amide bonds can be carried out with unmodified substrates following a thermodynamically controlled strategy, the situation is very different using aliphatic amines or β-lactam nuclei. Whereas the pK of the amino group of the β-lactam nuclei is below pH 5, the pK of aliphatic amines is around 9.5 or even higher. This high pK value of the amine makes it necessary to either use a high pH value to obtain a high percentage of nonionized amine, or to use a high concentration of organic solvent to shift the pK of the carboxylic acid. This requirement has reduced the number of possibilities for performing a wide range of amidation reactions, including antibiotic synthesis. Recently, some significant improvements in the design of thermodynamically controlled syntheses catalyzed by PGA have been reported. On the one hand, the screening of different co-solvents showed some of them to have a similar effect on the pK of the carboxylic acid, but a low deleterious effect on the PGA stability. A reaction in acetonitrile containing 8% water afforded ampicillin in up to 86% yield using the more stable PGA from Alcaligenes faecalis [107]. Also, the yield of cephalexin could be increased significantly by using an aqueous two-phase system containing 20% (w/w) polyethyleen glycol (PEG) 400 and 15% (w/w) magnesium sulfate, because the inhibiting product accumulated separate from the enzyme in the PEG phase [108]. On the other hand, immobilization of the enzyme on solid supports increases the robustness of the enzyme towards organic media, non-physiological pH and temperature. High yields of cephalexin were obtained using immobilized PGA, but the process needs further refinements [109]. Outlook The latest addition to the list of applications of the β-lactam acylases is enantioselective acylation / hydrolysis. Whereas the side chain binding site of β-lactam acylases is restrictive, the aminic subsite accepts a large number of structures, allowing for the resolution of a large number of compounds. Analysis of the crystal structure of E. coli PGA identified hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts in the substrate-binding site, restricting the binding of aromatic substrates. Models of transition-state analogs of aromatic amino acid methyl esters showed that the ester group of the L-enantiomer can form an additional H-bond that cannot be formed by the ester of the D-enantiomer, explaining the observed enantioselectivity. By contrast, binding of aliphatic amino acids allowed for more degrees of freedom; esters of both enantiomers could form the H-bond, explaining why no enantioselectivity was observed [110]. E. coli PGA specifically acylates the R-enantiomer of phenylglycinonitrile with phenyl acetic acid (PAA). A low solubility of the product makes the reaction virtually irreversible and stoichiometric, leaving a high enantiopure S-phenylglycine in solution [111]. An extensive study of the enantioselective acylation of a β-amino acid ester showed that the source of the immobilized enzyme, pH, concentration and type of PAA and amine, and the reagents themselves (PAA or ethyl-PAA) influenced yield and enantioselectivity of ethyl 3-amino-5-(trimethylsilyl)-4-pentynoate to a great extent. Highly pure free amine 36 Improved β-lactam acylases and amide was obtained using 50 g/L phenylacetic acid as free acid, 100 g/L ethyl-3amino-5-(trimethylsilyl)-4-pentynoate as the amine and 14,000 U/L PGA-450 (Roche) as enzyme at pH 5.7, 28ºC. Moreover, the reaction could be scaled up to 70L batches, with a half-life of the enzyme of approximately 20 runs [112]. In addition, enantioselective hydrolysis of an ester lacking a PAA moiety by E. coli PGA was reported [113], as well as enantioselective hydrolysis of the amide bond or ester bond of several glutaryl coupled substrates by a cephalosporin acylase [21]. This greatly increases the substrate range for enantioselective reactions catalyzed by β-lactam acylases. Other new directions of research include the incorporation of immobilized PGA in a polyacrylamide gel (allowing for the control of penicillin G hydrolysis by applying a specific current) [114], the coupling of PGA to an HPLC column resulting in an HPLC enzyme reactor [115], and solid-state ampicillin synthesis by E. coli PGA in a wet powder of reagents, immobilized enzyme, salt hydrates and a little as 10% water resulting in high space-time yields [116]. The practical use of these findings, however, will have to be assessed in the coming years. Conclusion Recent years have brought new enzymes, new applications and new insights into the biochemical features of the β-lactam acylase family. A continuation of the stream of innovations is expected for the coming years, with high expectations for the datamining of microbial genomes, directed evolution of the known acylases, and alternatives for the aqueous reaction media. For the latter approach, more stable enzymes are expected to be designed. 37 38