Indigo production identifies hotspots in cytochrome P450 BM3 for diversifying aromatic hydroxylation

Abstract

Evolution of P450 BM3 is a topic of extensive research, but screening the various substrate/reaction combinations remains a time-consuming process. Indigo production has the potential to serve as a simple high-throughput method for reaction screening, as bacterial colonies expressing indigo (+) variants can be visually identified via their blue phenotype. Indigo (+) single variants, indigo (−) single variants and a combinatorial library, containing mutations that enable the blue phenotype, were screened for their ability to hydroxylate a panel of 12 aromatic compounds using the 4-aminoantipyrine colorimetric assay. Recombination of indigo (+) single variants to create a multiple-variant library is a particularly useful strategy, as all top performing P450 BM3 variants with high hydroxylation activity were either indigo (+) single variants or contained multiple substitutions. Furthermore, active variants, as determined using the 4-AAP assay, were further characterized and several variants were identified that gave more than 90% conversion with 1,3-dichlorobenzene and predominantly formed 2,6-dichlorophenol; other variants showed significant substrate selectivity. This supports the hypothesis that substitution at positions that enable the indigo (+) phenotype, or hotspot residues, is a general mechanism for increasing aromatic hydroxylation activity. Overall, this research demonstrates that indigo (+) single variants, identified via colorimetric colony-based screening, may be recombined to generate a multiply-substituted variant library containing many variants with high aromatic hydroxylation activity. The combination of colony-based screening and other screening assays greatly accelerates enzyme engineering, as readily-identified indigo (+) single variants can be recombined to create a library of active multiple variants without extensive screening of single variants.

Graphical abstract: Indigo production identifies hotspots in cytochrome P450 BM3 for diversifying aromatic hydroxylation

  • This article is part of the themed collection: Biocatalysis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 feb. 2024
Accepted
05 feb. 2024
First published
12 jul. 2024

Faraday Discuss., 2024, Advance Article

Indigo production identifies hotspots in cytochrome P450 BM3 for diversifying aromatic hydroxylation

D. J. Fansher, J. N. Besna and J. N. Pelletier, Faraday Discuss., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4FD00017J

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