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Dive into the research topics where Michael Ringle is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Ringle.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2010

Regioselective hydroxylation of norisoprenoids by CYP109D1 from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56

Yogan Khatri; Marco Girhard; Anna Romankiewicz; Michael Ringle; Frank Hannemann; Vlada B. Urlacher; Michael C. Hutter; Rita Bernhardt

Sesquiterpenes are particularly interesting as flavorings and fragrances or as pharmaceuticals. Regio- or stereoselective functionalizations of terpenes are one of the main goals of synthetic organic chemistry, which are possible through radical reactions but are not selective enough to introduce the desired chiral alcohol function into those compounds. Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases are versatile biocatalysts and are capable of performing selective oxidations of organic molecules. We were able to demonstrate that CYP109D1 from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56 functions as a biocatalyst for the highly regioselective hydroxylation of norisoprenoids, α- and β-ionone, which are important aroma compounds of floral scents. The substrates α- and β-ionone were regioselectively hydroxylated to 3-hydroxy-α-ionone and 4-hydroxy-β-ionone, respectively, which was confirmed by 1H NMR and 13C NMR. The results of docking α- and β-ionone into a homology model of CYP109D1 gave a rational explanation for the regio-selectivity of the hydroxylation. Kinetic studies revealed that α- and β-ionone can be hydroxylated with nearly identical Vmax and Km values. This is the first comprehensive investigation of the regioselective hydroxylation of norisoprenoids by CYP109D1.


Iubmb Life | 2012

Adrenodoxin—A versatile ferredoxin

Kerstin M. Ewen; Michael Ringle; Rita Bernhardt

Mammalian adrenodoxin (Adx) has been known for many years as an essential electron mediator in mitochondrial cytochrome P450 systems. Because of its ability to support several cytochrome P450 enzymes, it is involved not only in adrenal steroid hormone biosynthesis but also in vitamin D and bile acid metabolism. Recently, Adx is increasingly gaining attention because of its potential for pharmaceutical industry and biotechnology. With human cytochromes P450 becoming important drug targets, suitable Adx‐based screening systems have to be developed to test putative new drugs. Moreover, in artificial systems, Adx has been shown to functionally interact with diverse bacterial cytochromes P450 catalyzing a variety of chemically interesting reactions. Putative biotechnological applications of such Adx‐containing reconstituted systems are discussed.


Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry | 2013

Novel family members of CYP109 from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56 exhibit characteristic biochemical and biophysical properties.

Yogan Khatri; Frank Hannemann; Marco Girhard; Reinhard Kappl; Aurélie Même; Michael Ringle; Simon Janocha; Emmanuelle Leize-Wagner; Vlada B. Urlacher; Rita Bernhardt

The members of the CYP109 family (CYP109C1, CYP109C2, and CYP109D1) from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56 are among the 21 P450 enzymes, of which only CYP109D1 and CYP264B1 have so far been functionally characterized. Here, we attempted to characterize two other P450s (CYP109C1 and CYP109C2) for the first time and compare their biochemical, biophysical, and functional properties to those of the fatty acid hydroxylating CYP109D1. Considering the physiological importance of fatty acids, we investigated saturated fatty acid binding and conversion for all members of the CYP109 family. The interaction between the CYP109 members and different autologous/heterologous redox partners was compared using Biacore measurements in which only CYP109D1 and bovine adrenodoxin (Adx) formed a complex. Surprisingly, this interaction was similarly efficient as the interaction of Adx with its mammalian redox partners. The in vitro reconstitution assays showed no activity when using CYP109C1, although substrate binding was demonstrated; also, there was subterminal hydroxylation of saturated fatty acids, when using CYP109C2 and CYP109D1, where CYP109D1 was a much more efficient fatty acid hydroxylase. Interestingly, the hydroxylation position moved inside the fatty acid chain when using long‐chain fatty acids, thus producing possible precursors for physiologically important products.


ChemBioChem | 2016

Substrate Hunting for the Myxobacterial CYP260A1 Revealed New 1α‐Hydroxylated Products from C‐19 Steroids

Yogan Khatri; Michael Ringle; Michael Lisurek; Jens Peter von Kries; Josef Zapp; Rita Bernhardt

Cytochromes P450 catalyze a variety of synthetically useful reactions. However, it is difficult to determine their physiological or artificial functions when a plethora of orphan P450 systems are present in a genome. CYP260A1 from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56 is a new member among the 21 available P450s in the strain. To identify putative substrates for CYP260A1 we used high‐throughput screening of a compound library (ca. 17 000 ligands). Structural analogues of the type I hits were searched for biotechnologically relevant compounds, and this led us to select C‐19 steroids as potential substrates. We identified efficient surrogate redox partners for CYP260A1, and an Escherichia coli‐based whole‐cell biocatalyst system was developed to convert testosterone, androstenedione, and their derivatives methyltestosterone and 11‐oxoandrostenedione. A detailed 1H and 13C NMR characterization of the product(s) from C‐19 steroids revealed that CYP260A1 is the very first 1α‐steroid hydroxylase.


ChemBioChem | 2015

New Sesquiterpene Oxidations with CYP260A1 and CYP264B1 from Sorangium cellulosum So ce56.

Alexander Schifrin; Martin Litzenburger; Michael Ringle; Thuy T. B. Ly; Rita Bernhardt

Sesquiterpenes are natural products derived from the common precursor farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) but are highly diverse in structure and function. Cytochrome P450 enzymes (P450s) exhibit the unique ability to introduce molecular oxygen into non‐activated C−H bonds. In plant biosynthetic pathways, P450s commonly derivatize sesquiterpene hydrocarbons. However, the potential of bacterial P450s for terpene derivatization is still underinvestigated. This work compares the substrate specificities and regioselectivities of the sesquiterpene hydroxylases CYP260A1 and CYP264B1 from myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosum So ce56. Four tested substrate classes (eremophilanes, humulanes, caryophyllanes, and cedranes) were converted by both P450s. The achievable variety of oxidations is demonstrated on the model substrates (+)‐nootkatone and zerumbone. Increasing the number of functionally investigated P450s, this study represents a step towards the selective derivatization of sesquiterpenes.


Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry | 2017

An indole-deficient Escherichia coli strain improves screening of cytochromes P450 for biotechnological applications

Simone Brixius-Anderko; Frank Hannemann; Michael Ringle; Yogan Khatri; Rita Bernhardt

Escherichia coli has developed into an attractive organism for heterologous cytochrome P450 production, but, in some cases, was restricted as a host in view of a screening of orphan cytochromes P450 or mutant libraries in the context of molecular evolution due to the formation of the cytochrome P450 inhibitor indole by the enzyme tryptophanase (TnaA). To overcome this effect, we disrupted the tnaA gene locus of E. coli C43(DE3) and evaluated the new strain for whole‐cell substrate conversions with three indole‐sensitive cytochromes P450, myxobacterial CYP264A1, and CYP109D1 as well as bovine steroidogenic CYP21A2. For purified CYP264A1 and CYP21A2, the half maximal inhibitory indole concentration was determined to be 140 and 500 μM, which is within the physiological concentration range occurring during cultivation of E. coli in complex medium. Biotransformations with C43(DE3)_∆tnaA achieved a 30% higher product formation in the case of CYP21A2 and an even fourfold increase with CYP264A1 compared with C43(DE3) cells. In whole‐cell conversion based on CYP109D1, which converts indole to indigo, we could successfully avoid this reaction. Results in microplate format indicate that our newly designed strain is a suitable host for a fast and efficient screening of indole‐influenced cytochromes P450 in complex medium.


FEBS Letters | 2016

Structural characterization of CYP260A1 from Sorangium cellulosum to investigate the 1α-hydroxylation of a mineralocorticoid.

Yogan Khatri; Yvonne Carius; Michael Ringle; C. Roy D. Lancaster; Rita Bernhardt

In this study, we report the crystal structure of the cytochrome P450 CYP260A1 (PDB 5LIV) from the myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosum So ce56. In addition, we investigated the hydroxylation of 11‐deoxycorticosterone by CYP260A1 by reconstituting the enzyme with the surrogate redox partners adrenodoxin and adrenodoxin reductase. The major product of this steroid conversion was identified as 1α‐hydroxy‐11‐deoxycorticosterone, a novel Δ4 C‐21 steroidal derivative. Furthermore, we docked the substrate into the crystal structure and replaced Ser326, the residue responsible for substrate orientation, with asparagine and observed that the mutant S326N displayed higher activity and selectivity for the formation of 1α‐hydroxy‐11‐deoxycorticosterone compared to the wild‐type CYP260A1. Thus, our findings highlight the usefulness of the obtained crystal structure of CYP260A1 in identifying biotechnologically more efficient reactions.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2018

Structure-Based Engineering of Steroidogenic CYP260A1 for Stereo- and Regioselective Hydroxylation of Progesterone.

Yogan Khatri; Ilona K. Jóźwik; Michael Ringle; Irina Alexandra Ionescu; Martin Litzenburger; Michael C. Hutter; Andy-Mark W. H. Thunnissen; Rita Bernhardt

The production of regio- and stereoselectively hydroxylated steroids is of high pharmaceutical interest and can be achieved by cytochrome P450-based biocatalysts. CYP260A1 from Sorangium cellulosum strain So ce56 catalyzes hydroxylation of C19 or C21 steroids at the very unique 1α-position. However, the conversion of progesterone (PROG) by CYP260A1 is very unselective. In order to improve its selectivity we applied a semirational protein engineering approach, resulting in two different, highly regio- and stereoselective mutants by replacing a single serine residue (S276) of the substrate recognition site 5 with an asparagine or isoleucine. The S276N mutant converted PROG predominantly into 1α-hydroxy-PROG, while the S276I mutant led to 17α-hydroxy-PROG. We solved the high-resolution crystal structures of the PROG-bound S276N and S276I mutants, which revealed two different binding modes of PROG in the active site. The orientations were consistent with the exclusive 1α- (pro-1α binding mode) and 17α-hydroxylation (pro-17α-binding mode) of S276N and S276I, respectively. We observed that water-mediated hydrogen bonds contribute to the stabilization of the polar C3 and C17 substituents of PROG. Both binding modes of PROG may be stabilized in the wild-type enzyme. The change in regioselectivity is mainly driven by destabilizing the alternative binding mode due to steric hindrance and hydrogen bond disruption, caused by the mutations of Ser276. Thus, for the first time, the change in the selectivity of cytochrome P450-mediated steroid hydroxylation created by rational mutagenesis can be explained by the obtained 3D structures of the substrate-bound mutants, providing the basis for further experiments to engineer the biocatalyst toward novel steroid hydroxylation positions.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Application of a new versatile electron transfer system for cytochrome P450-based Escherichia coli whole-cell bioconversions

Michael Ringle; Yogan Khatri; Josef Zapp; Frank Hannemann; Rita Bernhardt


FEBS Letters | 2016

Structural characterization of CYP260A1 from Sorangium cellulosum to investigate the 1 alpha-hydroxylation of a mineralocorticoid.

Yogan Khatri; Yvonne Carius; Michael Ringle; C.R. Lancaster; Rita Bernhardt

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Marco Girhard

University of Düsseldorf

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