Abstract

BackgroundA NAD(P)H-dependent enoate reductase (OYE2p) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae YJM1341 was discovered by genome data mining for asymmetric reduction of (E/Z)-citral to (R)-citronellal with high enantioselectivity.MethodsThis enzyme was heterologously expressed in E. coli and characterized for its biocatalytic properties. OYE2p was identified with reduction activities toward a diverse range of ɑ,β-unsaturated compounds bearing conjugated aldehyde, ketone, imide, carboxylic acid and ester.ResultsOYE2p showed the highest specific activity at 40 °C and a pH optimum at 7.0–8.0. The stability of OYE2p was rather pH-independent, and the half-life time values of the enzyme at pH 6.0–8.0 were more than 257 h. With regard to the reduction of (E)-citral and (Z)-citral, OYE2p exhibited different selectivity patterns. (E)-citral was exclusively reduced to (R)-citronellal by OYE2p in ≥ 99% ee, which was independent on pH. OYE2p produced both enantiomers of citronellal from (Z)-citral, but showed (R)-citronellal formation tendency, and the ee value of (R)-citronellal was affected by pH in the reaction system. Accordingly, the ee values for (R)-citronellal formation increased with the increasing levels of E-isomer in the (E/Z)-citral mixture as well as the increase of pH. Under the reaction conditions (30 °C and pH 8.6), using purified OYE2p as catalyst, 200 mM (E/Z)-citral (an approximately 10:9 mixture of geometric E-isomer and Z-isomer) was efficiently converted to (R)-citronellal with 88.8% ee and 87.2% yield.ConclusionAll these positive features demonstrate high potential of OYE2p for practical synthesis of (R)-citronellal and in asymmetric reduction of activated alkenes.

Highlights

  • A NAD(P)H-dependent enoate reductase (OYE2p) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae YJM1341 was discovered by genome data mining for asymmetric reduction of (E/Z)-citral to (R)-citronellal with high enantioselectivity

  • The present study provided some indepth characterization of this enzyme, and detailed that enantioselectivity was influenced by the citral isomer ratio and by the reaction pH

  • A multiple sequence alignment revealed that the amino acid sequence of OYE2p from S. cerevisiae YJM1341 shared the identity of 99.3, 91.8, 81.3, 71.3, and 38.6% with the reported OYE2 from S. cerevisiae (GenBank Accession Number: Q03558.3), OYE1 from Saccharomyces carlsbergensis (GenBank Accession Number: Q02899.3), OYE3 from S. cerevisiae (GenBank Accession Number: CAA97878), KYE1 from K. lactis (Genbank Accession Number: L37452.1) and OYE2.6 from P. stipites (NCBI Accession Number: xp_001384055) (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

A NAD(P)H-dependent enoate reductase (OYE2p) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae YJM1341 was discovered by genome data mining for asymmetric reduction of (E/Z)-citral to (R)-citronellal with high enantioselectivity. Comparing to (S)-enantiomer, (R)-citronellal is more valuable, and it is a useful intermediate for the synthesis of l-menthol, At present, chemocatalysis was the main method for the production of (R)-citronellal, such as chiral (S)BINAP-Rh complex-catalyzed enantioselective isomerization of geranylamine to (R)-citronellal in the Takasago process (Tani 1985; Akutagawa 1997), and enantioselective reduction of (E)-citral presented by BASF (Bergner et al 2010). For the former method, the catalyst is quite harsh to prepare and difficult to recover. Enantioselective hydrogenation of the low-cost (E/Z)-citral provided a straightforward and

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