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      Engineering the Biosynthesis of prFMN Promotes the Conversion between Styrene/CO2 and Cinnamic Acid Catalyzed by the Ferulic Acid Decarboxylase Fdc1

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      Catalysts
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          Enzymatic decarboxylation and carboxylation are emerging as prospective processes to produce high-value compounds under mild conditions. Ferulic acid decarboxylase Fdc1 catalyzes broad substrate tolerance against α, β-unsaturated carboxylic acids, and provides green routes for carbon dioxide fixation with the reversible carboxylation, while the activity of the enzyme is limited by the indispensable cofactor prenylated flavin (prFMN), which is unstable and is rarely detected in nature. In this study, a prFMN efficient synthesis route was built using six exogenous enzymes introduced into E. coli cells, leading to the construction of a powerful cell catalyst named SC-6. Based on the metabolic analysis, the results indicated that the reduction of FMN to FMNH2 was the bottleneck in prFMN synthesis pathway, and introducing FMN reductase increased the production of prFMN 3.8-fold compared with the common flavin prenyltransferase UbiX overexpression strain. Using SC-6 cell catalyst, the decarboxylation activity of Fdc1 increased more than 20 times with cinnamic acid and 4-acetoxycinnamic acid as substrates. Furthermore, the reversible carboxylation reaction was carried out, and the cell catalyst presented 20 times carbon dioxide fixation activity using styrene to produce cinnamic acid. Finally, the maximum yield of cinnamic acid catalyzed by SC-6 achieved 833.68 ± 34.51 mM·mg−1 in two hours. The constructed prFMN pathway in vivo provides fundamentals for efficient decarboxylation and carbon fixation reactions catalyzed by prFMN-dependent enzymes.

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          Most cited references33

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          The UbiX-UbiD system: The biosynthesis and use of prenylated flavin (prFMN).

          The UbiX-UbiD system consists of the flavin prenyltransferase UbiX that produces prenylated FMN that serves as the cofactor for the (de)carboxylase UbiD. Recent developments have provided structural insights into the mechanism of both enzymes, detailing unusual chemistry in each case. The proposed reversible 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between the cofactor and substrate serves as a model to explain many of the key UbiD family features. However, considerable variation exists in the many branches of the UbiD family tree.
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            Enzymatic Carboxylation of 2-Furoic Acid Yields 2,5-Furandicarboxylic Acid (FDCA)

            The biological production of FDCA is of considerable value as a potential replacement for petrochemical-derived monomers such as terephthalate, used in polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastics. HmfF belongs to an uncharacterized branch of the prenylated flavin (prFMN) dependent UbiD family of reversible (de)carboxylases and is proposed to convert 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid (FDCA) to furoic acid in vivo. We present a detailed characterization of HmfF and demonstrate that HmfF can catalyze furoic acid carboxylation at elevated CO2 levels in vitro. We report the crystal structure of a thermophilic HmfF from Pelotomaculum thermopropionicum, revealing that the active site located above the prFMN cofactor contains a furoic acid/FDCA binding site composed of residues H296-R304-R331 specific to the HmfF branch of UbiD enzymes. Variants of the latter are compromised in activity, while H296N alters the substrate preference to pyrrole compounds. Solution studies and crystal structure determination of an engineered dimeric form of the enzyme revealed an unexpected key role for a UbiD family wide conserved Leu residue in activity. The structural insights into substrate and cofactor binding provide a template for further exploitation of HmfF in the production of FDCA plastic precursors and improve our understanding of catalysis by members of the UbiD enzyme family.
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              Regioselective para ‐Carboxylation of Catechols with a Prenylated Flavin Dependent Decarboxylase

              Abstract The utilization of CO2 as a carbon source for organic synthesis meets the urgent demand for more sustainability in the production of chemicals. Herein, we report on the enzyme‐catalyzed para‐carboxylation of catechols, employing 3,4‐dihydroxybenzoic acid decarboxylases (AroY) that belong to the UbiD enzyme family. Crystal structures and accompanying solution data confirmed that AroY utilizes the recently discovered prenylated FMN (prFMN) cofactor, and requires oxidative maturation to form the catalytically competent prFMNiminium species. This study reports on the in vitro reconstitution and activation of a prFMN‐dependent enzyme that is capable of directly carboxylating aromatic catechol substrates under ambient conditions. A reaction mechanism for the reversible decarboxylation involving an intermediate with a single covalent bond between a quinoid adduct and cofactor is proposed, which is distinct from the mechanism of prFMN‐associated 1,3‐dipolar cycloadditions in related enzymes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                CATACJ
                Catalysts
                Catalysts
                MDPI AG
                2073-4344
                June 2023
                May 23 2023
                : 13
                : 6
                : 917
                Article
                10.3390/catal13060917
                bf3b34eb-2c99-46ca-b776-d449f58c0ed2
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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