Dick B. Janssen
University of Groningen
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Advances in Applied Microbiology | 2007
Dick B. Janssen
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses dehalogenase enzymes and its types. The chapter emphasizes on the microbial origin and distribution of these enzymes, their biochemical properties, and their engineering and use in biocatalysis. Dehalogenases comprise a diverse group of enzymes belonging to different phylogenetic and mechanistic classes. They have biotechnological potential because of their high-catalytic power in the cleavage of carbon–halogen bonds of toxic environmental pollutants. Dehalogenases appear with very different structural folds, reaction types, and catalytic mechanisms. For example, several reductive dehalogenases that replace a chlorine substituent by a hydrogen possess a corrinoid cofactor typical for an electron transfer mechanism, whereas haloalkane dehalogenases belong to the α/β-hydrolase fold family, a group of proteins of which most members catalyze hydrolytic reactions via a covalent alkyl-enzyme intermediate, reminiscent to the acyl-enzyme intermediate of classical serine proteases. More recently, dehalogenases have been further explored for enantioselective conversion of other halocarboxylic acids and their esters and haloalkanes, as well as for their applicability in recycling and detoxifying trichloropropane.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2010
Barbara Weiner; Wiktor Szymanski; Dick B. Janssen; Adriaan J. Minnaard; Ben L. Feringa
In this critical review, the progress in catalytic asymmetric synthesis of beta-amino acids is discussed, covering the literature since 2002. The review treats transition metal catalysis, organocatalysis and biocatalysis and covers the most important synthetic methods, such as hydrogenation, the Mannich reaction and conjugate additions (160 references).
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2003
Esther M. Gabor; Erik F. J. de Vries; Dick B. Janssen
Using direct and cell extraction-based (indirect) isolation methods, DNA was obtained from environmental samples with largely differing characteristics (loam soil, sand soil, sediment, activated sludge, and compost) and evaluated with respect to the comprised bacterial diversity and its suitability for expression cloning in Escherichia coli. Indirect DNA extraction methods yielded 10 to 100-fold lower amounts of DNA than direct procedures, but the bacterial diversity of DNA recovered by indirect means was distinctly higher as shown by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. Furthermore, much lower amounts of eukaryotic DNA were co-extracted if cell extraction-based methods were used (<8% of eukaryotic DNA by indirect methods versus 61-93% by direct lysis protocols). Considering the higher purity, i.e. higher cloning efficiency of DNA isolated by indirect methods, similar numbers of clones carrying prokaryotic inserts could be produced by either strategy. Gene banks prepared from directly extracted DNA, however, are expected to contain large portions of clones with eukaryotic inserts, whereas those constructed from indirectly isolated DNA should mainly contain inserts of bacterial origin. As eukaryotic genetic information is generally not expressed in bacterial host organisms but increases the library size, our findings suggest that the use of indirect DNA isolation methods allows the construction of environmental gene banks of superior quality.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2005
Marco W. Fraaije; Jin Wu; Dominic P. H. M. Heuts; Erik W. van Hellemond; Jeffrey H. Lutje Spelberg; Dick B. Janssen
Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenases represent useful biocatalytic tools, as they can catalyze reactions which are difficult to achieve using chemical means. However, only a limited number of these atypical monooxygenases are available in recombinant form. Using a recently described protein sequence motif, a putative Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenase (BVMO) was identified in the genome of the thermophilic actinomycete Thermobifida fusca. Heterologous expression of the respective protein in Escherichia coli and subsequent enzyme characterization showed that it indeed represents a BVMO. The NADPH-dependent and FAD-containing monooxygenase is active with a wide range of aromatic ketones, while aliphatic substrates are also converted. The best substrate discovered so far is phenylacetone (kcat = 1.9 s−1, KM = 59 μM). The enzyme exhibits moderate enantioselectivity with α-methylphenylacetone (enantiomeric ratio of 7). In addition to Baeyer–Villiger reactions, the enzyme is able to perform sulfur oxidations. Different from all known BVMOs, this newly identified biocatalyst is relatively thermostable, displaying an activity half-life of 1 day at 52°C. This study demonstrates that, using effective annotation tools, genomes can efficiently be exploited as a source of novel BVMOs.
Handbook on biodegradation and biological treatment of hazardous organic compounds. | 1998
M.H. van Agteren; Sytze Keuning; Dick B. Janssen
Preface. 1. Introduction. 2. Aliphatic Compounds. 3. Halogenated Aliphatic Compounds. 4. Aromatic Compounds. 5. Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons. 6. Chloroaromatic Compounds. 7. Synonyms. Abbreviations. Glossary. Index.
FEBS Letters | 2002
Marco W. Fraaije; Nanne M. Kamerbeek; Willem J. H. van Berkel; Dick B. Janssen
Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs) form a distinct class of flavoproteins that catalyze the insertion of an oxygen atom in a C–C bond using dioxygen and NAD(P)H. Using newly characterized BVMO sequences, we have uncovered a BVMO‐identifying sequence motif: FXGXXXHXXXW(P/D). Studies with site‐directed mutants of 4‐hydroxyacetophenone monooxygenase from Pseudomonas fluorescens ACB suggest that this fingerprint sequence is critically involved in catalysis. Further sequence analysis showed that the BVMOs belong to a novel superfamily that comprises three known classes of FAD‐dependent monooxygenases: the so‐called flavin‐containing monooxygenases (FMOs), the N‐hydroxylating monooxygenases (NMOs), and the BVMOs. Interestingly, FMOs contain an almost identical sequence motif when compared to the BVMO sequences: FXGXXXHXXX(Y/F). Using these novel amino acid sequence fingerprints, BVMOs and FMOs can be readily identified in the protein sequence databank.
Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2003
Erik F. J. de Vries; Dick B. Janssen
Epoxides are attractive intermediates for producing chiral compounds. Important biocatalytic reactions involving epoxides include epoxide hydrolase mediated kinetic resolution, leading to the formation of diols and enantiopure remaining substrates, and enantioconvergent enzymatic hydrolysis, which gives high yields of a single enantiomer from racemic mixtures. Epoxides can also be converted by non-hydrolytic enantioselective ring opening, using alternative anionic nucleophiles; these reactions can be catalysed by haloalcohol dehalogenases. The differences in scope of these enzymatic conversions is related to their different catalytic mechanisms, which involve, respectively, covalent catalysis with an aspartate carboxylate as the nucleophile and non-covalent catalysis with a tyrosine that acts as a general acid-base. The emerging new possibilities for enantioselective biocatalytic conversion of epoxides suggests that their importance in green chemistry will grow.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Marco Nardini; Ivo S. Ridder; Kor H. Kalk; Rick Rink; Dick B. Janssen; Bauke W. Dijkstra
Epoxide hydrolases catalyze the cofactor-independent hydrolysis of reactive and toxic epoxides. They play an essential role in the detoxification of various xenobiotics in higher organisms and in the bacterial degradation of several environmental pollutants. The first x-ray structure of one of these, from Agrobacterium radiobacter AD1, has been determined by isomorphous replacement at 2.1-Å resolution. The enzyme shows a two-domain structure with the core having the α/β hydrolase-fold topology. The catalytic residues, Asp107 and His275, are located in a predominantly hydrophobic environment between the two domains. A tunnel connects the back of the active-site cavity with the surface of the enzyme and provides access to the active site for the catalytic water molecule, which in the crystal structure, has been found at hydrogen bond distance to His275. Because of a crystallographic contact, the active site has become accessible for the Gln134 side chain, which occupies a position mimicking a bound substrate. The structure suggests Tyr152/Tyr215 as the residues involved in substrate binding, stabilization of the transition state, and possibly protonation of the epoxide oxygen.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2001
Johan E. T. van Hylckama Vlieg; Lixia Tang; Jeffrey H. Lutje Spelberg; Tim Smilda; Gerrit J. Poelarends; Tjibbe Bosma; Annet E. J. van Merode; Marco W. Fraaije; Dick B. Janssen
Halohydrin dehalogenases, also known as haloalcohol dehalogenases or halohydrin hydrogen-halide lyases, catalyze the nucleophilic displacement of a halogen by a vicinal hydroxyl function in halohydrins to yield epoxides. Three novel bacterial genes encoding halohydrin dehalogenases were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the enzymes were shown to display remarkable differences in substrate specificity. The halohydrin dehalogenase of Agrobacterium radiobacter strain AD1, designated HheC, was purified to homogeneity. The k(cat) and K(m) values of this 28-kDa protein with 1,3-dichloro-2-propanol were 37 s(-1) and 0.010 mM, respectively. A sequence homology search as well as secondary and tertiary structure predictions indicated that the halohydrin dehalogenases are structurally similar to proteins belonging to the family of short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDRs). Moreover, catalytically important serine and tyrosine residues that are highly conserved in the SDR family are also present in HheC and other halohydrin dehalogenases. The third essential catalytic residue in the SDR family, a lysine, is replaced by an arginine in halohydrin dehalogenases. A site-directed mutagenesis study, with HheC as a model enzyme, supports a mechanism for halohydrin dehalogenases in which the conserved Tyr145 acts as a catalytic base and Ser132 is involved in substrate binding. The primary role of Arg149 may be lowering of the pK(a) of Tyr145, which abstracts a proton from the substrate hydroxyl group to increase its nucleophilicity for displacement of the neighboring halide. The proposed mechanism is fundamentally different from that of the well-studied hydrolytic dehalogenases, since it does not involve a covalent enzyme-substrate intermediate.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002
Wouter H. Noordman; Dick B. Janssen
ABSTRACT The biodegradation of hexadecane by five biosurfactant-producing bacterial strains (Pseudomonas aeruginosa UG2, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus RAG1, Rhodococcus erythropolis DSM 43066, R. erythropolis ATCC 19558, and strain BCG112) was determined in the presence and absence of exogenously added biosurfactants. The degradation of hexadecane by P. aeruginosa was stimulated only by the rhamnolipid biosurfactant produced by the same organism. This rhamnolipid did not stimulate the biodegradation of hexadecane by the four other strains to the same extent, nor was degradation of hexadecane by these strains stimulated by addition of their own biosurfactants. This suggests that P. aeruginosa has a mode of hexadecane uptake different from those of the other organisms. Rhamnolipid also enhanced the rate of epoxidation of the aliphatic hydrocarbon α,ω-tetradecadiene by a cell suspension of P. aeruginosa. Furthermore, the uptake of the hydrophobic probe 1-naphthylphenylamine by cells of P. aeruginosa was enhanced by rhamnolipid, as indicated by stopped-flow fluorescence experiments. Rhamnolipid did not stimulate the uptake rate of this probe in de-energized cells. These results indicate that an energy-dependent system is present in P. aeruginosa strain UG2 that mediates fast uptake of hydrophobic compounds in the presence of rhamnolipid.