posted on 2025-03-27, 05:49authored byFranziska Kraußer, Kenny Rabe, Christopher M. Topham, Julian Voland, Laura Lilienthal, Jan-Ole Kundoch, Daniel Ohde, Andreas Liese, Thomas Walther
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent in vitro bioprocesses, such as cell-free protein synthesis and the production
of phosphorylated fine chemicals, are of considerable industrial significance.
However, their implementation is mainly hindered by the high cost
of ATP. We propose and demonstrate the feasibility of a cell-free
ATP regeneration system based on the in situ generation
of the high-energy compound acetyl phosphate from low-cost d-fructose and inorganic phosphate substrates. The enzyme cascade
chains d-fructose phosphoketolase, d-erythrose isomerase, d-erythrulose phosphoketolase, and glycolaldehyde phosphoketolase
activities theoretically enabling production of 3 mol ATP per mol
of d-fructose. Through a semirational engineering approach
and the screening of nine single-mutation libraries, we optimized
the phosphoketolase (PKT) from Bifidobacterium adolescentis, identifying the improved variant Bad.F6Pkt H548N. This mutant exhibited
a 5.6-fold increase in d-fructose activity, a 2.2-fold increase
in d-erythrulose activity, and a 1.3-fold increase in glycolaldehyde
activity compared to the wild-type enzyme. The Bad.F6Pkt H548N mutant
was initially implemented in a cell-free reaction system together
with an acetate kinase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus and a glycerol kinase from Cellulomonas sp. for the production of glycerol-3 phosphate from ADP and glycerol.
We demonstrated the feasibility of ATP regeneration from 25 mM d-fructose with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of ATP per mol of C6 ketose. Subsequently, the reaction system was enhanced by
incorporating d-erythrose isomerase activity provided by
a l-rhamnose isomerase from Pseudomonas stutzeri. In the complete system, the ATP yield increased to 2.53 mol molfructose–1 with a maximum productivity of
7.2 mM h–1.