posted on 2017-08-16, 00:00authored byHem R. Thapa, Su Tang, James C. Sacchettini, Timothy P. Devarenne
Recently, the biosynthetic
pathway for lycopadiene, a C40 tetraterpenoid hydrocarbon,
was deciphered from the L race of Botryococcus braunii, an alga that produces hydrocarbon
oils capable of being converted into combustible fuels. The lycopadiene
pathway is initiated by the squalene synthase (SS)-like enzyme lycopaoctaene
synthase (LOS), which catalyzes the head-to-head condensation of two
C20 geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP) molecules to produce
C40 lycopaoctaene. LOS shows unusual substrate promiscuity
for SS or SS-like enzymes by utilizing C15 farnesyl diphosphate
(FPP) and C20 phytyl diphosphate in addition to GGPP as
substrates. These three substrates can be combined by LOS individually
or in combinations to produce six different hydrocarbons of C30, C35, and C40 chain lengths. To understand
LOS substrate and product specificity, rational mutagenesis experiments
were conducted based on sequence alignment with several SS proteins
as well as a structural comparison with the human SS (HSS) crystal
structure. Characterization of the LOS mutants in vitro identified Ser276 and Ala288 in the LOS active site as key amino
acids responsible for controlling substrate binding, and thus the
promiscuity of this enzyme. Mutating these residues to those found
in HSS largely converted LOS from lycopaoctaene production to C30 squalene production. Furthermore, these studies were confirmed in vivo by expressing LOS in E. coli cells
metabolically engineered to produce high FPP and GGPP levels. These
studies also offer insights into tetraterpene hydrocarbon metabolism
in B. braunii and provide a foundation for engineering
LOS for robust production of specific hydrocarbons of a desired chain
length.