posted on 2025-11-05, 05:05authored byBin Wu, Qi He, Yiling Tang, Dongming Lan, Bo Yang, Manting Du, Yunjian Ma, Yonghua Wang
Fatty acid photodecarboxylases (FAPs) are promising biocatalysts
for converting renewable fatty acids into alkanes. However, naturally
occurring FAPs capable of catalyzing aromatic acids are exceedingly
rare. In this study, we engineered the substrate selectivity of a
novel FAP from Chrysochromulina tobinii (<i>Ct</i>FAP) by modifying its catalytic pocket structure.
The active variant <i>Ct</i>FAP-S endowed it with unique
preferential catalysis of 5-phenylvaleric acid (43.1%) over linear
C8 and C18 fatty acids (13.5–33.5%). Mutagenesis revealed that
sites L431 and F437 are key determinants of the C<i>t</i>FAP-S substrate selectivity. The double mutant L431F/F437W shifted
catalytic preference toward long-chain substrates, achieving 77.4%
conversion for C18:0. Molecular dynamics confirmed cavity geometry-directed
substrate preference modulation. Analogous mutations in other FAPs
validated the universal role of catalytic pocket geometry in substrate
selectivity regulation. This work provides a structure-guided strategy
for tailoring FAP catalytic properties, paving a new avenue for biofuel
and fine chemical production.