Abstract

Optically pure chiral amino acids and their derivatives can be efficiently synthesised by the biocatalytic conversion of 5-substituted hydantoins in reactions catalysed by stereo-selective microbial enzymes: initially a hydantoinase catalyses the cleavage of the hydantoin producing an N-carbamyl amino acid. In certain bacteria where an N-carbamyl amino acid amidohydrolase (NCAAH) is present, the N-carbamyl amino acid intermediate is further converted to amino acid, ammonia and CO2. In this study we report on a novel Pseudomonas putida strain which exhibits high levels of hydantoin-converting activity, yielding l-amino acid products including alanine, valine, and norleucine, with bioconversion yields between 60% and 100%. The preferred substrates are generally aliphatic, but not necessarily short chain, 5-alkylhydantoins. In characterizing the enzymes from this microorganism, we have found that the NCAAH has l-selectivity, while the hydantoinase is non-stereoselective. In addition, resting cell reactions under varying conditions showed that the hydantoinase is highly active, and is not subject to substrate inhibition, or product inhibition by ammonia. The rate-limiting reaction appears to be the NCAAH-catalysed conversion of the intermediate. Metal-dependence studies suggest that the hydantoinase is dependent on the presence of magnesium and cobalt ions, and is strongly inhibited by the presence of copper ions. The relative paucity of l-selective hydantoin-hydrolysing enzyme systems, together with the high level of hydantoinase activity and the unusual substrate selectivity of this P. putida isolate, suggest that is has significant potential in industrial applications.

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