Abstract

Deacetyl-7-aminocephalosporanic acid (D-7-ACA) is required for producing of many semisynthetic β-lactam antibiotics; therefore, enzymes capable of converting 7-aminocephalosporanic acid (7-ACA) to D-7-ACA present a valuable resource to the pharmaceutical industry. In the present study, a putative acetylesterase, EstZY, was identified and characterized from a thermophilic bacterium Alicyclobacillus tengchongensis. Sequence alignment showed that EstZY was an acetylesterase which belonged to carbohydrate esterase family 7 (CE7), with substrate preference for short-chain acyl esters p-NPC2 to p-NPC8. Maximum enzyme activity was recorded at pH 9.0 and 50 °C, where Km and Vmax were calculated as 1.9 ± 0.23 mM and 258 ± 18.5 μM min−1, respectively. The residues Ser185, Asp274, and His303 were identified as the putative catalytic triad by homology modelling, site-directed mutagenesis and molecular docking. Moreover, EstZY can remove the acetyl group at C3′ position of 7-ACA to form D-7-ACA; this is the first report of a 7-ACA deacetylase from CE7 family in A. tengchongensis and may represent a new enzyme with industrial values.

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