Ancestral terpene cyclases: From fundamental science to applications in biosynthesis.

Methods in enzymology(2024)

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Abstract
Terpenes constitute one of the largest family of natural products with potent applications as renewable platform chemicals and medicines. The low activity, selectivity and stability displayed by terpene biosynthetic machineries can constitute an obstacle towards achieving expedient biosynthesis of terpenoids in processes that adhere to the 12 principles of green chemistry. Accordingly, engineering of terpene synthase enzymes is a prerequisite for industrial biotechnology applications, but obstructed by their complex catalysis that depend on reactive carbocationic intermediates that are prone to undergo bifurcation mechanisms. Rational redesign of terpene synthases can be tedious and requires high-resolution structural information, which is not always available. Furthermore, it has proven difficult to link sequence space of terpene synthase enzymes to specific product profiles. Herein, the author shows how ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR) can favorably be used as a protein engineering tool in the redesign of terpene synthases without the need of a structure, and without excessive screening. A detailed workflow of ASR is presented along with associated limitations, with a focus on applying this methodology on terpene synthases. From selected examples of both class I and II enzymes, the author advocates that ancestral terpene cyclases constitute valuable assets to shed light on terpene-synthase catalysis and in enabling accelerated biosynthesis.
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