Bacterial Quinoproteins Glucose Dehydrogenase and Alcohol Dehydrogenase

Author(s):  
Kazunobu Matsushita ◽  
Osao Adachi
Catalysts ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 931
Author(s):  
Yunpeng Jia ◽  
Qizhou Wang ◽  
Jingjing Qiao ◽  
Binbin Feng ◽  
Xueting Zhou ◽  
...  

Citronellol is a kind of unsaturated alcohol with rose-like smell and its (S)-enantiomer serves as an important intermediate for organic synthesis of (-)-cis-rose oxide. Chemical methods are commonly used for the synthesis of citronellol and its (S)-enantiomer, which suffers from severe reaction conditions and poor selectivity. Here, the first one-pot double reduction of (E/Z)-citral to (S)-citronellol was achieved in a multi-enzymatic cascade system: N-ethylmaleimide reductase from Providencia stuartii (NemR-PS) was selected to catalyze the selective reduction of (E/Z)-citral to (S)-citronellal, alcohol dehydrogenase from Yokenella sp. WZY002 (YsADH) performed the further reduction of (S)-citronellal to (S)-citronellol, meanwhile a variant of glucose dehydrogenase from Bacillus megaterium (BmGDHM6), together with glucose, drove efficient NADPH regeneration. The Escherichia coli strain co-expressing NemR-PS, YsADH, and BmGDHM6 was successfully constructed and used as the whole-cell catalyst. Various factors were investigated for achieving high conversion and reducing the accumulation of the intermediate (S)-citronellal and by-products. 0.4 mM NADP+ was essential for maintaining high catalytic activity, while the feeding of the cells expressing BmGDHM6 effectively eliminated the intermediate and by-products and shortened the reaction time. Under optimized conditions, the bio-transformation of 400 mM citral caused nearly complete conversion (>99.5%) to enantio-pure (S)-citronellol within 36 h, demonstrating promise for industrial application.


RSC Advances ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 2325-2331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yitong Chen ◽  
Baodi Ma ◽  
Songshuang Cao ◽  
Xiaomei Wu ◽  
Yi Xu

A simple and efficient process for the synthesis of optically active (S)-N-boc-3-hydroxy piperidine was developed using the “designer cells” co-expressing alcohol dehydrogenase and glucose dehydrogenase.


1996 ◽  
Vol 313 (1) ◽  
pp. 311-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duncan ROBERTSON ◽  
Colin SMITH ◽  
G. Paul BOLWELL

UDP-glucose dehydrogenase is responsible for channelling UDP-glucose into the pool of UDP-sugars utilized in the synthesis of wall matrix polysaccharides and glycoproteins. It has been purified to homogeneity from suspension-cultured cells of French bean by a combination of hydrophobic-interaction chromatography, gel filtration and dye-ligand chromatography. The enzyme had a subunit of Mr 40000. Km values were measured for UDP-glucose as 5.5±1.4 mM and for NAD+ as 20±3 μM. It was subject to inhibition by UDP-xylose. UDP-glucose dehydrogenase activity co-purified with alcohol dehydrogenase activity from suspension-cultured cells, elicitor-treated cells and elongating hypocotyls, even when many additional chromatographic steps were employed subsequently. The protein from each source was resolved into virtually identical patterns of isoforms on two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/PAGE. However, a combination of peptide mapping and sequence analysis, gel analysis using activity staining and kinetic analysis suggests that both activities are a function of the same protein. An antibody was raised and used to immunolocalize UDP-glucose dehydrogenase to developing xylem and phloem of French bean hypocotyl. Together with data published previously, these results are consistent with an important role in the regulation of carbon flux into wall matrix polysaccharides.


1995 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 2069-2069
Author(s):  
M Shinjoh ◽  
N Tomiyama ◽  
A Asakura ◽  
T Hoshino

Volume 61, no. 2, p. 419, column 1, lines 15-19: this sentence should read as follows. "The alcohol dehydrogenase and glucose dehydrogenase have a common region reported to be related to pyrroloquinoline quinone binding (2, 10), but SNDH does not contain such a region, indicating that SNDH is not a quinoprotein." Page 419, column 2, line 12: "(Table 4)" should read "(Table 3)." [This corrects the article on p. 413 in vol. 61.].


2017 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
pp. 531-535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaozhi Hu ◽  
Liqin Liu ◽  
Daijie Chen ◽  
Yongzhong Wang ◽  
Junliang Zhang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jieyu Zhou ◽  
Yanfei Wu ◽  
Qingye Zhang ◽  
Guochao Xu ◽  
YE NI

Abstract Ni2+-functionalized porous ceramic/agarose composite beads (Ni-NTA Cerose) can be used as carrier materials to immobilize enzymes harboring a metal affinity tag. Here, a 6×His-tag fusion alcohol dehydrogenase Mu-S5 and glucose dehydrogenase from Bacillus megaterium (BmGDH) were co-immobilized on Ni-NTA Cerose to construct a packed bed reactor (PBR) for the continuous synthesis of the chiral intermediate (S)-(4-chlorophenyl)-(pyridin-2-yl) methanol [(S)-CPMA]. NADPH recycling and in situ product adsorption was achieved simultaneously by assembling a D101 macroporous resin column after the PBR. Using an optimum enzyme activity ration of 2:1 (Mu-S5: BmGDH) and hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin as co-solvent, a space-time yield of 1,560 g/(L·d) could be achieved in the first three days at a flow rate of 5 mL/min and substrate concentration of 10 mM. With simplified selective adsorption and extraction procedures, (S)-CPMA was obtained in 84% isolated yield.


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