Engineering bacterial phenylalanine 4-hydroxylase for microbial synthesis of human neurotransmitter precursor 5-hydroxytryptophan.
Study Design
- Study Type
- In Vitro
- Population
- In vitro and microbial (E. coli) study; no human subjects
- Intervention
- Engineering bacterial phenylalanine 4-hydroxylase for microbial synthesis of human neurotransmitter precursor 5-hydroxytryptophan. engineered phenylalanine 4-hydroxylase in E. coli; whole-cell bioconversion from tryptophan
- Comparator
- wild-type prokaryotic phenylalanine 4-hydroxylase
- Primary Outcome
- Microbial production yield of 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) from tryptophan and from glucose
- Effect Direction
- Positive
- Risk of Bias
- Unclear
Abstract
5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) is a drug that is clinically effective against depression, insomnia, obesity, chronic headaches, etc. It is only commercially produced by the extraction from the seeds of Griffonia simplicifolia because of a lack of synthetic methods. Here, we report the efficient microbial production of 5-HTP via combinatorial protein and metabolic engineering approaches. First, we reconstituted and screened prokaryotic phenylalanine 4-hydroxylase activity in Escherichia coli. Then, sequence- and structure-based protein engineering dramatically shifted its substrate preference, allowing for efficient conversion of tryptophan to 5-HTP. Importantly, E. coli endogenous tetrahydromonapterin (MH4) could be utilized as the coenzyme, when a foreign MH4 recycling mechanism was introduced. Whole-cell bioconversion allowed the high-level production of 5-HTP (1.1-1.2 g/L) from tryptophan in shake flasks. On this basis, metabolic engineering efforts were further made to achieve the de novo 5-HTP biosynthesis from glucose. This work not only holds great scale-up potential but also demonstrates a strategy for expanding the native metabolism of microorganisms.
TL;DR
The efficient microbial production of 5-HTP via combinatorial protein and metabolic engineering approaches is reported, demonstrating a strategy for expanding the native metabolism of microorganisms.