Abstract

BackgroundMethylacidiphilum sp. IT6 has been validated its C3 substrate assimilation pathway via acetol as a key intermediate using the PmoCAB3, a homolog of the particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO). From the transcriptomic data, the contribution of PmoD of strain IT6 in acetone oxidation was questioned. Methylomonas sp. DH-1, a type I methanotroph containing pmo operon without the existence of its pmoD, has been deployed as a biocatalyst for the gas-to-liquid bioconversion of methane and propane to methanol and acetone. Thus, Methylomonas sp. DH-1 is a suitable host for investigation. The PmoD-expressed Methylomonas sp. DH-1 can also be deployed for acetol production, a well-known intermediate for various industrial applications. Microbial production of acetol is a sustainable approach attracted attention so far.ResultsIn this study, bioinformatics analyses elucidated that novel protein PmoD is a C-terminal transmembrane–helix membrane with the proposed function as a transport protein. Furthermore, the whole-cell biocatalyst was constructed in Methylomonas sp. DH-1 by co-expression the PmoD of Methylacidiphilum sp. IT6 with the endogenous pMMO to enable acetone oxidation. Under optimal conditions, the maximum accumulation, and specific productivity of acetol were 18.291 mM (1.35 g/L) and 0.317 mmol/g cell/h, respectively. The results showed the first coupling activity of pMMO with a heterologous protein PmoD, validated the involvement of PmoD in acetone oxidation, and demonstrated an unprecedented production of acetol from acetone in type I methanotrophic biocatalyst. From the data achieved in batch cultivation conditions, an assimilation pathway of acetone via acetol as the key intermediate was also proposed.ConclusionUsing bioinformatics tools, the protein PmoD has been elucidated as the membrane protein with the proposed function as a transport protein. Furthermore, results from the assays of PmoD-heteroexpressed Methylomonas sp. DH-1 as a whole-cell biocatalyst validated the coupling activity of PmoD with pMMO to convert acetone to acetol, which also unlocks the potential of this recombinant biocatalyst for acetol production. The proposed acetone-assimilated pathway in the recombinant Methylomonas sp. DH-1, once validated, can extend the metabolic flexibility of Methylomonas sp. DH-1.

Highlights

  • Our study provided auxiliary information to further validate the catalytic activity of the proposed acetone monooxygenase Proposed acetone monooxygenase (PmoCAB3) in strain IT6, developed a novel whole-cell methanotrophic biocatalyst for bioproduction of acetol, and introduced fascinating hypotheses worth further study

  • The results are consistent with the previous study, in which this PmoCAB3 in strain IT6 was claimed as a homolog of particulate methane monooxygenase [12]

  • The results suggested that the evolution of those PmoD proteins in the Methylacidiphilum genus, along with novel protein PmoD of Methylacidiphilum sp

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Summary

Introduction

Strain TY-5, which belongs to the Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenase family [7] Another kind of acetone monooxygenase is the four-subunit MimABCD diiron monooxygenase discovered in mycobacteria, Mycobacterium smegmatis strain ­mc2155, and Mycobacterium goodii strain 12,523 [6, 8]. This acetone monooxygenase can convert acetone to acetol for further assimilation in these mycobacteria with the first biochemical evidence obtained using recombinant E. coli whole-cell assays. The oxidation of acetone to acetol by acetone monooxygenase and cytochrome P450 is the one-step bioconversion which is simpler than the methylglyoxal bypass pathway

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