open access publication

Article, 2020

Bacterial cytochrome P450-catalyzed regio- and stereoselective steroid hydroxylation enabled by directed evolution and rational design

Bioresources and Bioprocessing, ISSN 2197-4365, Volume 7, 1, Page 2, 10.1186/s40643-019-0290-4

Contributors

Zhang, Xiaodong [1] Peng, Yaqin [1] Zhao, Jing 0000-0002-0305-9791 [1] Li, Qian [1] Yu, Xiaojuan [1] Acevedo-Rocha, Carlos G 0000-0002-5877-2084 [2] Li, Ai-Tao 0000-0001-6036-4058 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Hubei University
  2. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  3. [2] Biosyntia (Denmark)
  4. [NORA names: Other Companies; Private Research; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Steroids are the most widely marketed products by the pharmaceutical industry after antibiotics. Steroid hydroxylation is one of the most important functionalizations because their derivatives enable a higher biological activity compared to their less polar non-hydroxylated analogs. Bacterial cytochrome P450s constitute promising biocatalysts for steroid hydroxylation due to their high expression level in common workhorses like Escherichia coli. However, they often suffer from wrong or insufficient regio- and/or stereoselectivity, low activity, narrow substrate range as well as insufficient thermostability, which hampers their industrial application. Fortunately, these problems can be generally solved by protein engineering based on directed evolution and rational design. In this work, an overview of recent developments on the engineering of bacterial cytochrome P450s for steroid hydroxylation is presented.

Keywords

Escherichia coli, P450s, activity, analogs, antibiotics, applications, bacterial cytochrome P450s, biocatalyst, biological activity, cytochrome P450s, development, engineering, evolution, expression, expression levels, function, hydroxyl, industrial applications, industry, levels, low activity, narrow substrate range, non-hydroxylated analogs, overview, pharmaceutical industry, problem, production, protein, protein engineering, range, regio-, stereoselectivity, steroid hydroxylation, steroids, substrate range, thermostability, workhorses

Funders

  • National Natural Science Foundation of China

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