An active site mutant of Escherichia coli cyclopropane fatty acid synthase forms new non-natural fatty acids providing insights on the mechanism of the enzymatic reaction |
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Authors: | Guangqi E Thierry Drujon Isabelle Correia Olivier Ploux Dominique Guianvarc'h |
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Affiliation: | 1. UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7203, Laboratoire des BioMolécules, 4, place Jussieu, F-75005 Paris, France;2. CNRS, UMR 7203, 75005 Paris, France;3. ENS, UMR 7203, Département de Chimie, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 75005 Paris, France;4. Chimie ParisTech ENSCP, Laboratoire Charles Friedel, 11 rue Pierre et Marie Curie, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France;5. CNRS, UMR 7223, 75005 Paris, France |
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Abstract: | We have produced and purified an active site mutant of the Escherichia coli cyclopropane fatty acid synthase (CFAS) by replacing the strictly conserved G236 within cyclopropane synthases, by a glutamate residue, which corresponds to E146 of the homologous mycolic acid methyltransferase, Hma, producing hydroxymethyl mycolic acids. The G236E CFAS mutant had less than 1% of the in vitro activity of the wild type enzyme. We expressed the G236E CFAS mutant in an E. coli (DE3) strain in which the chromosomal cfa gene had been deleted. After extraction of phospholipids and conversion into the corresponding fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs), we observed the formation of cyclopropanated FAMEs suggesting that the mutant retained some of the normal activity in vivo. However, we also observed the formation of new C17 methyl-branched unsaturated FAMEs whose structures were determined using GC/MS and NMR analyses. The double bond was located at different positions 8, 9 or 10, and the methyl group at position 10 or 9. Thus, this new FAMEs are likely arising from a 16:1 acyl chain of a phospholipid that had been transformed by the G236E CFAS mutant in vivo. The reaction catalyzed by this G236E CFAS mutant thus starts by the methylation of the unsaturated acyl chain at position 10 or 9 yielding a carbocation at position 9 or 10 respectively. It follows then two competing steps, a normal cyclopropanation or hydride shift/elimination events giving different combinations of alkenes. This study not only provides further evidence that cyclopropane synthases (CSs) form a carbocationic intermediate but also opens the way to CSs engineering for the synthesis of non-natural fatty acids. |
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Keywords: | Cyclopropane fatty acid synthase Mycolic acid methyltransferase Fatty acid methyl ester Enzyme mechanism |
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