Scientific Reports | 2021

Kinetic studies and homology modeling of a dual-substrate linalool/nerolidol synthase from Plectranthus amboinicus

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Linalool and nerolidol are terpene alcohols that occur naturally in many aromatic plants and are commonly used in food and cosmetic industries as flavors and fragrances. In plants, linalool and nerolidol are biosynthesized as a result of respective linalool synthase and nerolidol synthase, or a single linalool/nerolidol synthase. In our previous work, we have isolated a linalool/nerolidol synthase (designated as PamTps1 ) from a local herbal plant, Plectranthus amboinicus , and successfully demonstrated the production of linalool and nerolidol in an Escherichia coli system. In this work, the biochemical properties of Pam Tps1 were analyzed, and its 3D homology model with the docking positions of its substrates, geranyl pyrophosphate (C 10 ) and farnesyl pyrophosphate (C 15 ) in the active site were constructed. Pam Tps1 exhibited the highest enzymatic activity at an optimal pH and temperature of 6.5 and 30\xa0°C, respectively, and in the presence of 20\xa0mM magnesium as a cofactor. The Michaelis–Menten constant ( K m ) and catalytic efficiency ( k cat / K m ) values of 16.72\u2009±\u20091.32\xa0µM and 9.57\u2009×\u200910 –3 \xa0µM −1 \xa0s −1 , respectively, showed that Pam Tps1 had a higher binding affinity and specificity for GPP instead of FPP as expected for a monoterpene synthase. The Pam Tps1 exhibits feature of a class I terpene synthase fold that made up of α-helices architecture with N-terminal domain and catalytic C-terminal domain. Nine aromatic residues (W268, Y272, Y299, F371, Y378, Y379, F447, Y517 and Y523) outlined the hydrophobic walls of the active site cavity, whilst residues from the RRx 8 W motif, RxR motif, H-α1 and J-K loops formed the active site lid that shielded the highly reactive carbocationic intermediates from the solvents. The dual substrates use by Pam Tps1 was hypothesized to be possible due to the architecture and residues lining the catalytic site that can accommodate larger substrate (FPP) as demonstrated by the protein modelling and docking analysis. This model serves as a first glimpse into the structural insights of the Pam Tps1 catalytic active site as a multi-substrate linalool/nerolidol synthase.

Volume 11
Pages None
DOI 10.1038/s41598-021-96524-z
Language English
Journal Scientific Reports

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