Anett Schallmey
RWTH Aachen University
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Featured researches published by Anett Schallmey.
Green Chemistry | 2011
Frank Hollmann; Isabel W. C. E. Arends; Katja Buehler; Anett Schallmey; Bruno Bühler
Biocatalysis is an enabling technology adding to organic oxidation chemistry. Especially the high selectivity of enzymatic oxidation coevally operating under mild conditions and not necessitating problematic solvents makes it a very valuable tool for (green) chemistry. The present state of the art in the use of enzymes and microorganisms for catalytic oxidation and oxyfunctionalization chemistry is reviewed.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011
Anett Schallmey; Gijs den Besten; Ite G. P. Teune; Roga F. Kembaren; Dick B. Janssen
Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases are valuable biocatalysts due to their ability to hydroxylate unactivated carbon atoms using molecular oxygen. We have cloned the gene for a new cytochrome P450 monooxygenase, named CYP154H1, from the moderately thermophilic soil bacterium Thermobifida fusca. The enzyme was overexpressed in Escherichia coli at up to 14% of total soluble protein and purified to homogeneity in three steps. CYP154H1 activity was reconstituted using putidaredoxin reductase and putidaredoxin from Pseudomonas putida DSM 50198 as surrogate electron transfer partners. In biocatalytic reactions with different aliphatic and aromatic substrates of varying size, the enzyme converted small aromatic and arylaliphatic compounds like ethylbenzene, styrene, and indole. Furthermore, CYP154H1 also accepted different arylaliphatic sulfides as substrates chemoselectively forming the corresponding sulfoxides and sulfones. The enzyme is moderately thermostable with an apparent melting temperature of 67°C and exhibited still 90% of initial activity after incubation at 50°C.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014
Marcus Schallmey; Julia Koopmeiners; Elizabeth Wells; Rainer Wardenga; Anett Schallmey
ABSTRACT Halohydrin dehalogenases are very rare enzymes that are naturally involved in the mineralization of halogenated xenobiotics. Due to their catalytic potential and promiscuity, many biocatalytic reactions have been described that have led to several interesting and industrially important applications. Nevertheless, only a few of these enzymes have been made available through recombinant techniques; hence, it is of general interest to expand the repertoire of these enzymes so as to enable novel biocatalytic applications. After the identification of specific sequence motifs, 37 novel enzyme sequences were readily identified in public sequence databases. All enzymes that could be heterologously expressed also catalyzed typical halohydrin dehalogenase reactions. Phylogenetic inference for enzymes of the halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme family confirmed that all enzymes form a distinct monophyletic clade within the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily. In addition, the majority of novel enzymes are substantially different from previously known phylogenetic subtypes. Consequently, four additional phylogenetic subtypes were defined, greatly expanding the halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme family. We show that the enormous wealth of environmental and genome sequences present in public databases can be tapped for in silico identification of very rare but biotechnologically important biocatalysts. Our findings help to readily identify halohydrin dehalogenases in ever-growing sequence databases and, as a consequence, make even more members of this interesting enzyme family available to the scientific and industrial community.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015
Pere Picart; Pablo Domínguez de María; Anett Schallmey
The set-up of biorefineries for the valorization of lignocellulosic biomass will be core in the future to reach sustainability targets. In this area, biomass-degrading enzymes are attracting significant research interest for their potential in the production of chemicals and biofuels from renewable feedstock. Glutathione-dependent β-etherases are emerging enzymes for the biocatalytic depolymerization of lignin, a heterogeneous aromatic polymer abundant in nature. They selectively catalyze the reductive cleavage of β-O-4 aryl-ether bonds which account for 45–60% of linkages present in lignin. Hence, application of β-etherases in lignin depolymerization would enable a specific lignin breakdown, selectively yielding (valuable) low-molecular-mass aromatics. Albeit β-etherases have been biochemically known for decades, only very recently novel β-etherases have been identified and thoroughly characterized for lignin valorization, expanding the enzyme toolbox for efficient β-O-4 aryl-ether bond cleavage. Given their emerging importance and potential, this mini-review discusses recent developments in the field of β-etherase biocatalysis covering all aspects from enzyme identification to biocatalytic applications with real lignin samples.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2016
Anett Schallmey; Marcus Schallmey
Halohydrin dehalogenases are industrially relevant enzymes that catalyze the reversible dehalogenation of vicinal haloalcohols with formation of the corresponding epoxides. In the reverse reaction, also other negatively charged nucleophiles such as azide, cyanide, or nitrite are accepted besides halides to open the epoxide ring. Thus, novel C-N, C-C, or C-O bonds can be formed by halohydrin dehalogenases, which makes them attractive biocatalysts for the production of various β-substituted alcohols. Despite the fact that only five individual halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme sequences have been known until recently enabling their heterologous production, a large number of different biocatalytic applications have been reported using these enzymes. The recent characterization of specific sequence motifs has facilitated the identification of novel halohydrin dehalogenase sequences available in public databases and has largely increased the number of recombinantly available enzymes. These will help to extend the biocatalytic repertoire of this enzyme family and to foster novel biotechnological applications and developments in the future. This review gives a general overview on the halohydrin dehalogenase enzyme family and their biochemical properties and further focuses on recent developments in halohydrin dehalogenase biocatalysis and protein engineering.
Green Chemistry | 2015
Pere Picart; Marc Sevenich; Pablo Domínguez de María; Anett Schallmey
Glutathione-dependent β-etherases and glutathione lyases are key-enzymes for the biocatalytic depolymerization of lignin. In the first step, the nucleophilic attack of glutathione to the common β-O-4-aryl-ether motif in lignin is catalyzed by β-etherases and afterwards the glutathione is removed again by the action of glutathione lyases. Given their potential impact for lignin valorization, in this paper novel glutathione lyases are reported and biocatalytically characterized based on lignin model compounds. As a result, an enzyme exhibiting increased thermostability and lowered enantioselectivity – key features for implementation of glutathione lyases in enzymatic lignin depolymerization processes – was identified. Furthermore, first mutational studies of these enzymes revealed the possibility to further alter the activity as well as enantioselectivity of glutathione lyases by means of protein engineering. From a practical perspective, one-pot multi-step processes combining β-etherases and glutathione lyases are successfully set-up, giving hints on the potential that the implementation of these biocatalysts may bring for biorefinery purposes.
Chemcatchem | 2013
Lotte Wiermans; Sebastian Hofzumahaus; Christiane Schotten; Lisa Weigand; Marcus Schallmey; Anett Schallmey; Pablo Domínguez de María
Hydrolases catalyze synthetic reactions in nonaqueous media, whereas they perform hydrolysis under aqueous solutions. An acyl transferase from Mycobacterium smegmatis (MsAcT) is able to catalyze synthetic reactions in buffer because of its highly hydrophobic active site, which enables efficient transesterification reactions even at 99.9 % v/v buffer solution. This unique feature of MsAcT among hydrolases may open new opportunities to conduct synthetic (bio)catalysis in aqueous media. With these goals in mind, this paper explores some evidence of such potential: MsAcT can perform enantioselective transesterifications (e.g., (S)‐2‐octanol), which could be combined with other aqueous multistep (asymmetric) reactions; 5‐hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) can be esterified to produce more hydrophobic and easily extractable HMF esters (e.g., for downstream processing or wastewater treatment); and upon addition of dilute H2O2, MsAcT works efficiently as a perhydrolase to form in situ peracids—in bulk water—that can be used for oxidations (e.g., furfural to furoic acid oxidation). Overall, these and many other new applications can be envisaged by using MsAcT in aqueous solutions.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2017
Pere Picart; Haifeng Liu; Philipp M. Grande; Nico Anders; Leilei Zhu; Jürgen Klankermayer; Walter Leitner; Pablo Domínguez de María; Ulrich Schwaneberg; Anett Schallmey
Lignin is a biomass-derived aromatic polymer that has been identified as a potential renewable source of aromatic chemicals and other valuable compounds. The valorization of lignin, however, represents a great challenge due to its high inherent functionalization, what compromises the identification of chemical routes for its selective depolymerization. In this work, an in vitro biocatalytic depolymerization process is presented, that was applied to lignin samples obtained from beech wood through OrganoCat pretreatment, resulting in a mixture of lignin-derived aromatic monomers. The reported biocracking route comprises first a laccase-mediator system to specifically oxidize the Cα hydroxyl group in the β-O-4 structure of lignin. Subsequently, selective β-O-4 ether cleavage of the oxidized β-O-4 linkages is achieved with β-etherases and a glutathione lyase. The combined enzymatic approach yielded an oily fraction of low-molecular-mass aromatic compounds, comprising coniferylaldehyde and other guaiacyl and syringyl units, as well as some larger (soluble) fractions. Upon further optimization, the reported biocatalytic route may open a valuable approach for lignin processing and valorization under mild reaction conditions.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014
Konrad Herzog; Paula Bracco; Akira Onoda; Takashi Hayashi; Kurt Hoffmann; Anett Schallmey
CYP154C5 from Nocardia farcinica is a bacterial cytochrome P450 monooxygenase active on steroid molecules. The enzyme has recently been shown to exhibit exclusive regioselectivity and stereoselectivity in the conversion of various pregnans and androstans, yielding 16α-hydroxylated steroid products. This makes the enzyme an attractive candidate for industrial application in steroid hormone synthesis. Here, crystal structures of CYP154C5 in complex with four different steroid molecules were solved at resolutions of up to 1.9 Å. These are the first reported P450 structures from the CYP154 family in complex with a substrate. The active site of CYP154C5 forms a flattened hydrophobic channel with two opposing polar regions, perfectly resembling the size and polarity distribution of the steroids and thus resulting in highly specific steroid binding with Kd values in the range 10-100 nM. Key enzyme-substrate interactions were identified that accounted for the exclusive regioselectivity and stereoselectivity of the enzyme. Additionally, comparison of the four CYP154C5-steroid structures revealed distinct structural differences, explaining the observed variations in kinetic data obtained for this P450 with the steroids pregnenolone, dehydroepiandrosterone, progesterone, androstenedione, testosterone and nandrolone. This will facilitate the generation of variants with improved activity or altered selectivity in the future by means of protein engineering.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2013
Sebastian Hofzumahaus; Anett Schallmey
Elicitins are sterol carrier proteins from the Oomycete genera Phytophthora and Phytium and elicit a hypersensitive response in many economically important plants, in some cases causing a systemic acquired resistance. Their recombinant expression in bacteria is complicated by the presence of three disulfide bonds in the elicitin structure. In consequence, elicitins have so far only been produced in soluble form by isolation from native Phytophthora or Phytium strains or by recombinant expression in the yeast Pichia pastoris. Here, for the first time, we report the soluble expression of the elicitin β-cinnamomin from Phytophthora cinnamomi in Escherichia coli by secretion of the protein into the periplasm. β-Cinnamomin yields have been significantly improved after careful selection of the optimum secretion signal sequence. In total, 17.6 mg β-cinnamomin per liter cell culture have been obtained in shake flasks with the secretion signal sequence of the maltose-binding protein MalE from E. coli. Furthermore, by making use of a C-terminal His-tag, β-cinnamomin purification has been significantly simplified with only one step of immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography yielding protein of high purity (>90%). The established protocol has further been successfully applied to the soluble expression of another elicitin.