Regioselective O-acetylation of various glucosides catalyzed by Escherichia coli maltose O-acetyltransferase

Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2023 Dec;107(23):7031-7042. doi: 10.1007/s00253-023-12790-z. Epub 2023 Sep 20.

Abstract

Escherichia coli, a well-known prokaryotic organism, has been widely employed as a versatile host for heterologous overexpression of proteins/biocatalysts and the production of pharmaceutically important intermediates/small molecules. However, some E. coli endogenous enzymes showing substrate promiscuity may disturb the heterologous metabolic flux, which will result in the reduction of substrates, intermediates, and target products. Here we reported an unexpected E. coli-catalyzed regioselective O-acetylation of various glucosides. The regioselectively O-acetylated products, 6'-O-acetyl-loganin and 6'-O-acetyl-loganic acid, were obtained and characterized from the enzymatic reaction in which the supernatants of E. coli expressing either CaCYP72A565 and CaCPR, the key enzymes involved in camptothecin biosynthesis, or empty vector were used as catalyst and loganin and loganic acid as independent substrate. An alkaloidal glucoside strictosamide was converted into the regioselectively O-acetylated product 6'-O-acetyl-strictosamide, implying substrate promiscuity of the E. coli-catalyzed O-acetylation reaction. Furthermore, 8 glucosides, including 5 iridoid glucosides and 3 flavonoid glucosides, were successfully converted into the regioselectively O-acetylated products by E. coli, indicating the wide substrate range for the unexpected E. coli-catalyzed O-acetylation. E. coli maltose O-acetyltransferase was demonstrated to be responsible for the mentioned regioselective O-acetylation at the 6-OH of the glucopyranosyl group of multiple classes of natural product glucosides through candidate acetyltransferase-encoding gene analysis, gene knock-out, gene complementation, and the relevant enzymatic reaction activity assays. The present study not only provides an efficient biocatalyst for regioselective O-acetylation but also notifies cautions for metabolic engineering and synthetic biology applications in E. coli. KEY POINTS: • 6-OH of glucosyl of multiple glucosides was regioselectively O-acetylated by E. coli. • Endogenous EcMAT is responsible for the regioselective O-acetylation reaction.

Keywords: Alkaloidal glucoside; Escherichia coli; Flavonoid glucoside; Iridoid glucoside; Maltose O-acetyltransferase; O-acetylation.

MeSH terms

  • Acetylation
  • Acetyltransferases / genetics
  • Catalysis
  • Escherichia coli* / metabolism
  • Glucosides* / metabolism
  • Maltose / metabolism

Substances

  • loganin
  • Glucosides
  • loganic acid
  • Maltose
  • Acetyltransferases