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Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions

Access to chiral alcohols of high optical purity is today frequently provided by the enzymatic reduction of precursor ketones. However, bioreductions are complicated by the need for reducing equivalents in the form of NAD(P)H. The high price and molecular weight of NAD(P)H necessitate in situ recycl...

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Autores principales: Kratzer, Regina, Woodley, John M., Nidetzky, Bernd
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5414839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26343336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biotechadv.2015.08.006
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author Kratzer, Regina
Woodley, John M.
Nidetzky, Bernd
author_facet Kratzer, Regina
Woodley, John M.
Nidetzky, Bernd
author_sort Kratzer, Regina
collection PubMed
description Access to chiral alcohols of high optical purity is today frequently provided by the enzymatic reduction of precursor ketones. However, bioreductions are complicated by the need for reducing equivalents in the form of NAD(P)H. The high price and molecular weight of NAD(P)H necessitate in situ recycling of catalytic quantities, which is mostly accomplished by enzymatic oxidation of a cheap co-substrate. The coupled oxidoreduction can be either performed by free enzymes in solution or by whole cells. Reductase selection, the decision between cell-free and whole cell reduction system, coenzyme recycling mode and reaction conditions represent design options that strongly affect bioreduction efficiency. In this paper, each option was critically scrutinized and decision rules formulated based on well-described literature examples. The development chain was visualized as a decision-tree that can be used to identify the most promising route towards the production of a specific chiral alcohol. General methods, applications and bottlenecks in the set-up are presented and key experiments required to “test” for decision-making attributes are defined. The reduction of o-chloroacetophenone to (S)-1-(2-chlorophenyl)ethanol was used as one example to demonstrate all the development steps. Detailed analysis of reported large scale bioreductions identified product isolation as a major bottleneck in process design.
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spelling pubmed-54148392017-05-03 Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions Kratzer, Regina Woodley, John M. Nidetzky, Bernd Biotechnol Adv Article Access to chiral alcohols of high optical purity is today frequently provided by the enzymatic reduction of precursor ketones. However, bioreductions are complicated by the need for reducing equivalents in the form of NAD(P)H. The high price and molecular weight of NAD(P)H necessitate in situ recycling of catalytic quantities, which is mostly accomplished by enzymatic oxidation of a cheap co-substrate. The coupled oxidoreduction can be either performed by free enzymes in solution or by whole cells. Reductase selection, the decision between cell-free and whole cell reduction system, coenzyme recycling mode and reaction conditions represent design options that strongly affect bioreduction efficiency. In this paper, each option was critically scrutinized and decision rules formulated based on well-described literature examples. The development chain was visualized as a decision-tree that can be used to identify the most promising route towards the production of a specific chiral alcohol. General methods, applications and bottlenecks in the set-up are presented and key experiments required to “test” for decision-making attributes are defined. The reduction of o-chloroacetophenone to (S)-1-(2-chlorophenyl)ethanol was used as one example to demonstrate all the development steps. Detailed analysis of reported large scale bioreductions identified product isolation as a major bottleneck in process design. 2015-09-03 2015-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5414839/ /pubmed/26343336 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biotechadv.2015.08.006 Text en This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kratzer, Regina
Woodley, John M.
Nidetzky, Bernd
Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title_full Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title_fullStr Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title_full_unstemmed Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title_short Rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, NAD(P)H-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
title_sort rules for biocatalyst and reaction engineering to implement effective, nad(p)h-dependent, whole cell bioreductions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5414839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26343336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biotechadv.2015.08.006
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