Abstract
AbstractOptically active alcohols are important building blocks as versatile chiral synthons for asymmetric syntheses of pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals. The aim of this paper is to efficiently prepare chiral 2‐pentanol by means of microorganisms. The gene of dihydroxyacetone reductase (EC 1.1.1.6) from a methylotrophic yeast, Hansenula ofunaensis, was cloned and chiral 2‐pentanol was produced by the recombinant Escherichia coli harboring the gene. The gene encoding the enzyme was cloned from an H. ofunaensis genomic library. In the deduced amino acid sequence of 364 residues, the NAD(H) binding motif and the cysteine residues that correspond to the cysteine ligands in the zinc atom were conserved, as they are in alcohol dehydrogenases from other origins. Dihydroxyacetone reductase was similar to alcohol dehydrogenases of prokaryotes. For the production of chiral compounds, an E. coli HB101 strain was transformed. The H. ofunaensis gene product, dihydroxyacetone reductase, catalyzed the NAD+‐dependent oxidation of 2‐pentanol to 2‐pentanone as well as the corresponding reverse reactions, showing specificity towards the secondary alcohol in (R)‐configuration. From 100 mM 2‐pentanone, (R)‐2‐pentanol (98 mM, > 99.9 % enantiometric excess, e.e.) was obtained in a 30‐min reaction with resting cells of the E. coli HB101 strain harboring the expression plasmid, pSG‐HOD1, which possesses the genes of both dihydroxyacetone reductase and glucose dehydrogenase as an NADH reproducing system. The stereospecificity changed during the reduction, depending on the pH. E. coli HB101 was also transformed by the expression plasmid, pSE‐HOD4, in which the gene of glucose dehydrogenase was removed from pSG‐HOD1, and designated as E. coli HB101 (pSE‐HOD4). E. coli HB101 (pSE‐HOD4) oxidized only (R)‐2‐pentanol in 100 mM of the racemate (R:S = 52:48), and the reaction medium was enriched with (S)‐2‐pentanol (48 mM, 98 % e.e.) after 30 min of incubation. The reaction was sufficiently promoted without the other additives. E. coli transformants expressing the gene of this enzyme could be particularly advantageous to the production of optically active 2‐pentanol.
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