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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2005, p. 6578-6583, Vol. 71, No. 11
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.11.6578-6583.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Preparation, Characterization, and Optimization of an In Vitro C30 Carotenoid Pathway
Bosung Ku,1
Jae-Cheol Jeong,1
Benjamin N. Mijts,2
Claudia Schmidt-Dannert,2 and
Jonathan S. Dordick1*
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180,1
Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 551082
Received 9 May 2005/
Accepted 27 June 2005

ABSTRACT
The
ispA gene encoding farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) synthase
from
Escherichia coli and the
crtM gene encoding 4,4'-diapophytoene
(DAP) synthase from
Staphylococcus aureus were overexpressed
and purified for use in vitro. Steady-state kinetics for FPP
synthase and DAP synthase, individually and in sequence, were
determined under optimized reaction conditions. For the two-step
reaction, the DAP product was unstable in aqueous buffer; however,
in situ extraction using an aqueous-organic two-phase system
resulted in a 100% conversion of isopentenyl pyrophosphate and
dimethylallyl pyrophosphate into DAP. This aqueous-organic two-phase
system is the first demonstration of an in vitro carotenoid
synthesis pathway performed with in situ extraction, which enables
quantitative conversions. This approach, if extended to a wide
range of isoprenoid-based pathways, could lead to the synthesis
of novel carotenoids and their derivatives.

INTRODUCTION
Carotenoids are naturally occurring pigments found in a wide
variety of plants and microorganisms (
22,
23). Recent studies
indicate that these isoprenoid-based natural products possess
biologically active properties (
21,
24), thereby making them
of interest to the medicinal chemist. Most carotenoids belong
to the C
30 and C
40 classes, being distinguished by the number
of iterative steps of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) condensation
to add C
5 isoprene units. The initial synthetic step is the
condensation of IPP with

,

-dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP)
catalyzed by farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) synthase (
ispA) to
give geranyl pyrophosphate (GPP) and, sequentially, FPP (
9).
This C
15 compound serves as a central node for the synthesis
of sterols (
29), farnesylated proteins (
4), hemes (
20), sesquiterpenes
(
6), and dolichols (
5), as well as the crucial precursor for
carotenoids.
C30 carotenoids are present in the nonphotosynthetic bacteria, such as Streptococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, and Methylobacterium rhodinum, and in the photosynthetic Heliobacterium species (16, 25, 27, 28). Only the genes encoding 4,4'-diapophytoene (DAP) synthase (crtM) and 4,4'-diapophytoene desaturase (crtN) from S. aureus have been cloned and functionally expressed in Escherichia coli, resulting in the yellow 4,4'-diaponeurosporene from FPP (30) (Fig. 1). The first committed step in C30 carotenoid biosynthesis is the condensation of two molecules of FPP catalyzed by DAP synthase to form the colorless carotenoid 4,4'-diapophytoene.
Until now, only a few reports have discussed the formation of
DAP through a reconstituted C
30 carotenoid metabolic pathway
in vitro (
13,
17), and none have provided a full kinetic analysis
or reaction optimization of the in vitro pathway. Nevertheless,
such a study would be valuable in order to design novel carotenoids
and carotenoid-based hybrid natural products. Therefore, in
the current work, we set out to optimize the C
30 carotenoid
pathway reconstructed in vitro for the synthesis of DAP from
IPP and DMAPP. Furthermore, we elucidated the kinetic behavior
of both the FPP synthase and DAP synthase and developed a unique
optimization technique for carotenoid synthesis involving two-phase
biocatalysis in the presence of a hydrophobic organic solvent
(
1,
2). This technique allowed us to overcome product instability
and resulted in a nearly 100% conversion of IPP and DMAPP into
DAP, thereby providing a new route to the high-yield synthesis
of isoprenoids.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Materials.
ispA (farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase) was cloned from
E. coli strain JM109 (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), and
crtM (4,4'-diapophytoene
synthase) was cloned from
S. aureus genomic DNA (ATCC).
E. coli type III alkaline phosphatase, IPP, DMAPP, GPP, FPP, LB broth,
ampicillin, and arabinose were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis,
MO). All other chemicals and reagents were obtained commercially
at the highest purity available and used without further purification.
Generation, overexpression, and purification of recombinant His-tagged proteins
The vector pThioHis-TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) was modified by using TOPO cloning of a linker insert introducing a 5' KpnI site and a 3' EcoRI site downstream from the His patch-thioredoxin open reading frame. The ispA and crtM genes were amplified with forward and reverse primers that introduce corresponding KpnI and EcoRI sites so that the His patch-thioredoxin leader peptide remained in frame. The PCR products were digested with Acc651 and EcoRI, gel purified, and ligated into similarly treated vector. These ligations were transformed into chemically competent E. coli strain JM109, and the insert containing the plasmids was isolated and sequenced to confirm that no PCR errors were present.
Cells were grown at 37°C in LB medium containing 100 µg/ml ampicillin with shaking at 200 rpm. Overnight LB-ampicillin starter cultures (2 ml) were added to 50 ml LB-ampicillin and grown for 2 h (until reaching an optical density at 600 nm of 0.6 to 0.8). The expression of recombinant proteins was induced with 2 mg/ml sterilized arabinose for 4 h. The cells were then harvested by centrifugation. All subsequent procedures were performed at 4°C. The cell pellets were resuspended in 8 ml native binding buffer supplied with the Probond purification kit (Invitrogen, CA) with 8 mg lysozyme and incubated on ice for 30 min. Resuspended cells were lysed by four rapid freeze-thaw cycles using liquid nitrogen and a 25°C water bath. By use of the native purification conditions according to the manufacturer's instructions, expressed cell lysates and purified proteins were obtained and confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Invitrogen, CA). Protein concentrations in the cell lysates and purified preparations were determined by the microbicinchoninic acid protein assay reagent (Pierce, Rockford, IL) with bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Enzyme activity assays and product analysis
FPP synthase activity was determined using an assay developed by Davisson et al. (7) with a slight modification. The standard reaction mixture for FPP synthase catalysis at 37°C contained 20 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.7), 3 mM MgCl2, 10 µg/ml phosphatidylcholine, 40 µM IPP, 20 µM DMAPP, and 9.2 µg purified FPP synthase in a 500-µl reaction volume contained within 3-ml vials. Reactions for FPP synthase starting with GPP were performed in identical reaction mixtures, except that the substrates consisted of 50 µM IPP and 50 µM GPP. Kinetic parameters for FPP synthase were determined in reaction mixtures containing 10 to 50 µM IPP and 5 to 30 µM DMAPP. FPP synthase-catalyzed condensation of GPP with IPP was performed with 2.5 to 50 µM GPP and 10 to 50 µM IPP. Reaction mixtures were incubated for 30 min at 37°C, after which 0.2 M lysine hydrochloride buffer (10%, vol/vol; pH 10.5) was added to terminate the enzymatic reaction. The reaction mixture was then incubated with 50 units E. coli type III alkaline phosphatase for 1 h before the extraction of the reaction products with hexane. The hydrolyzed products were analyzed by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) using an Altima C18 column (4.6 by 150 mm, 3-µm particle diameter; Alltech, Deerfield, IL) with a total flow rate of 0.8 ml/min. Solvent A was water, and solvent B was acetonitrile-methanol-isopropanol (85:10:5). The mobile-phase concentration of solvent B was initially maintained at 70% for 2 min and then was increased linearly to 100% in 8 min, held at 100% for 25 min, decreased to 70% in 30 min, and then held at 70% for 40 min. Detection was performed with a UV/visible-spectrum photodiode array detector at 254 nm. Unless otherwise indicated, all experiments were conducted in triplicate.
For DAP synthase catalysis, reaction mixtures contained 2 mM NADPH, 50 µM FPP as the substrate, and 18.2 µg purified DAP synthase in 500 µl of aqueous buffer (the same as for FPP synthase). The reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for 60 min in 3-ml vials, which were brown to prevent potential light-induced product degradation. The DAP product was extracted with hexane, analyzed by HPLC using the aforementioned Altima C18 column, and eluted with acetonitrile-methanol-isopropanol (85:10:5) at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min. UV and visible spectra were obtained with a photodiode array detector with 200- to 700-nm wavelength scanning, and DAP was detected at 286 nm (
= 1,050 M1 cm1). Mass spectrometry (HPLC/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization) analysis was performed on an Agilent 100 series HPLC equipped with an MS 1100 series LC/MSD (Palo Alto, CA). Kinetic analysis of DAP synthase involved 2.5 to 50 µM FPP as the substrate in the standard reaction mixture.
Effects of water-immiscible solvents on FPP synthase and DAP synthase
Biphasic reactions were performed with hexane, toluene, cyclohexane, or ethyl acetate in 1:1 volumes with aqueous buffer. The reaction mixtures contained 9.2 µg FPP synthase and either 18.2 µg DAP synthase with 40 µM IPP and 20 µM DMAPP or 18.2 µg DAP synthase with 20 µM FPP. Assay mixtures were incubated for up to 48 h at 37°C, and then the organic phases were analyzed by HPLC as detailed above.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Cloning, expression, and purification of FPP synthase and DAP synthase.
For expression in
E. coli and subsequent purification, the
ispA gene (0.9 kb) encoding FPP synthase from
E. coli and the
crtM gene (0.9 kb) encoding DAP synthase from
S. aureus were cloned
into the arabinose-inducible expression vector pThioHis. The
expression of these genes as six-His-thioredoxin fusion proteins
enabled rapid purification to give relatively pure enzymes according
to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(data not shown), with ca. 22- and 18-fold enrichments in specific
activities for FPP synthase and DAP synthase, respectively (Table
1).
Enzyme kinetics for FPP synthase and DAP synthase.
The kinetics of FPP synthase has been reported previously (
8,
19) specifically for the condensation of IPP and DMAPP in a
2:1 molar ratio. However, a complete kinetic analysis of FPP
formation through the discrete GPP intermediate has not been
done. Because of the importance of FPP synthase as the first
step in isoprenoid synthesis, we sought a more detailed kinetic
understanding of FPP synthase, which included the kinetics of
both GPP and FPP formation. The kinetic parameters of the formation
of GPP from IPP and DMAPP and the subsequent kinetics of FPP
synthesis from the condensation of GPP with IPP were determined
from Lineweaver-Burk plots (Fig.
2). Parallel plots were obtained
for GPP formation, indicating a classical ping-pong-bi-bi kinetic
mechanism (Fig.
2A). Secondary replots yielded a
Vmax of 10.7
µM/h and
Km values for IPP and DMAPP of 1.3 and 29.3 µM,
respectively (Fig.
2A, inset, and Table
2). Because the FPP
yield was <5% during the initial rate analysis, the condensation
of IPP with GPP was minor and did not influence the observed
reaction kinetics for GPP synthesis. These results appear to
be the first report to date that describes the kinetics of the
FPP synthase-catalyzed formation of GPP.
FPP formation from IPP and GPP (Fig.
2B) revealed an ordered
bi-bi reaction kinetic mechanism, wherein GPP binds first to
the enzyme's active site, followed by the binding of IPP and
the subsequent release of pyrophosphate. These results are consistent
with the literature for the formation of FPP from GPP for FPP
synthases from several organisms (
14,
15,
18,
26). The maximal
reactivity for the second step of FPP synthase catalysis (formation
of FPP) was more than twice that of the first step (formation
of GPP). Moreover, evaluation of the
Vmax/
Km values for the
allylic substrates (10-fold higher for GPP than for DMAPP [Table
2]) suggests that the enzyme has greater binding-energy interaction
with the larger substrate (
12). Since it is likely that the
same binding pocket is used for DMAPP and GPP, the former is
too small to take advantage of the substrate-protein interactions
at the binding site and, therefore, shows lower binding affinity,
as reflected in the higher
Km value for DMAPP than for GPP.
The parameters for DAP synthase from FPP showed typical Michaelis-Menten
kinetics for a single-substrate system (data not shown).
In vitro C30 pathway catalysis.
The combined action of FPP synthase and DAP synthase provides the simplest in vitro C30 carotenoid pathway. The theoretical time course formations of GPP, FPP, and DAP can be solved using a Runge-Kutta method. Concentrations of DMAPP and IPP at any time, tt, are determined using simple reaction stoichiometry (equations 1 and 2, respectively). Rate expressions for the formation of GPP, FPP, and DAP are shown in equations 3 through 5, respectively, and these expressions can be integrated to provide time course predictions for each compound synthesized, based solely on initial rate kinetics.
 | 1 |
 | 2 |
 | 3 |
 | 4 |
 | 5 |
Here,
Vmax is the maximum reaction velocity from Table
2, and
KI,GPP,
71.4 µM, is the dissociation constant of GPP obtained
from the secondary plot (Fig.
2B, inset). Figure
3A and B show
a numerical simulation and the experimental data, respectively,
for the combined FPP synthase and DAP synthase reaction. At
early times (<20 min) in both cases, GPP is the predominant
product, which, as expected, is further consumed to give FPP
and DAP. Experimentally, DAP formation maximizes at ca. 60 min,
along with that of the total measurable products, even though
there remain substantial concentrations of unreacted DMAPP and
IPP. This indicates a general instability of the reaction products
in aqueous solution. Extending the reaction time to 48 h (data
not shown) resulted in the complete consumption of the DMAPP,
yet, essentially, no observable product. Analysis of the reaction
mixture by mass spectrometry did not reveal end products other
than DAP nor any intermediates other than GPP and FPP. These
results were quite distinct from the predicted values generated
through use of the initial rate kinetics (Table
2). As shown
in Fig.
3B, the series reaction from DMAPP and IPP to DAP does
seem to semiquantitatively match the theoretical values only
at early reaction times (<30 min). However, past this point,
there is a clear loss of product. The lower yields of the intermediates
and product of the bienzymatic reaction may be due to product
instability. A similar result was obtained by Kanasawud and
Crouzet for lycopene and ß-carotene synthesis (
10,
11), where it was observed that these C
40 products were degraded
in aqueous buffer into volatile compounds at 30°C. Therefore,
it is not surprising that DAP, which is structurally similar
to the C
40 products, would also be unstable.
To confirm similar behavior for DAP, we examined the loss of
a known concentration of DAP under DAP synthase reaction conditions.
Figure
4A shows the loss of DAP from aqueous buffer in the presence
of DAP synthase at 37°C, which clearly demonstrates the
instability of DAP. From this result, an expression for the
degradation rate of DAP in the presence of enzyme was obtained
(equation
6). The combined rate expression of DAP, taking into
account the degradation of DAP, is shown in equation
7. Based
on the degradation rate of DAP, we compared our experimental
data for DAP production from 20 µM FPP with equation
7.
As shown in Fig.
4B, the values for the reaction from FPP to
DAP do seem to quantitatively match the observed values.
 | (6) |
 | 7 |
In vitro C30 pathway under biphasic conditions.
The instability of DAP from the enzymatic reaction mixture limits
the in vitro approach to generating C
30-based products. To overcome
this limitation, we reasoned that removal of the DAP from the
aqueous reaction mixture, once it is generated, could result
in high DAP yields. Therefore, we examined two-phase enzymatic
catalysis, using a water-immiscible organic solvent as the second
phase. Four solvents were examined, including hexane, cyclohexane,
toluene, and ethyl acetate.
As shown in Fig. 5, when hexane and cyclohexane were used as the biphasic solvents, the reaction yields were nearly 100% for DAP synthase (Fig. 5A) and 100% for the FPP synthase-DAP synthase bienzyme system (Fig. 5B), respectively. This contrasts greatly with the results of the aqueous reactions (Fig. 3B), as well as the findings of Raisig and Sandmann, who observed a <20% yield for DAP synthesis (17). Importantly, the formation of DAP was fast in both solvent systems. Therefore, the removal of the DAP product once it is generated does enable high conversion rates to be achieved. Reactions were more efficient in hydrophobic solvents; reactions in toluene were less efficient than in hexane or cyclohexane, and essentially no activity was observed with ethyl acetate as the cosolvent. This is likely due to the relatively high solubility of ethyl acetate in the aqueous phase, which is known to deactivate enzymes (3).
In conclusion, we have reported the kinetic characterization
of FPP synthase (
ispA) from
E. coli and DAP synthase (
crtM)
from
S. aureus. The results suggest that FPP synthase was more
active on GPP than on DMAPP and showed the different mechanisms
for GPP and FPP formation. This result provides further information
on the nature of the in vivo metabolic pathway. In particular,
one significant finding is that the binding of the allylic substrate
increases as the pathway proceeds from DMAPP to GPP to FPP.
Such increased binding energy may provide a thermodynamic driving
force to complete the C
30 pathway once the initial condensation
of IPP and DMAPP occurs. On a more applied level, while the
in vitro pathway is challenged by the instability of DAP, the
use of a biphasic reaction system, including hexane or cyclohexane
as the product recovery organic phase, results in essentially
100% conversion from the IPP and DMAPP precursors. This approach,
if generalized, may prove useful in performing carotenoid and
other isoprenoid syntheses upon the isolation and further characterization
of key pathway enzymes, particularly from C
40 and related pathways.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (N66001-02-1-8926).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180. Phone: (518) 276-2899. Fax: (518) 276-2207. E-mail:
dordick{at}rpi.edu.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2005, p. 6578-6583, Vol. 71, No. 11
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.11.6578-6583.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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