Abstract

Secondary alcohol dehydrogenase (SADH) from Thermoanaerobacter ethanolicus reduces ketones to chiral alcohols, and generally obeys Prelog's Rule, with binding pockets for large and small alkyl substituents, giving (S)-alcohols. We have previously shown that mutations in both the large and small pockets can alter both substrate specificity and stereoselectivity. In the present work, Met-151 and Thr-153, residues located in the small pocket, were mutated to alanine. The M151A mutant SADH shows significantly lower activity and lower stereoselectivity for reduction of aliphatic ketones than wild-type SADH. Furthermore, M151A showed non-linear kinetics for reduction of acetone. T153A SADH shows lower activity but similar stereoselectivity for ketone reduction compared to wild-type SADH. The I86A/M151A/C295A and I86A/T153A/C295A triple mutant SADH show altered specificity for reduction of substituted acetophenones. These results confirm that these mutations are useful to combine with I86A/C295A SADH to expand the small pocket of SADH and broaden the substrate specificity.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call