In numerous industries such as
agrochemicals and
pharmaceuticals, halogenated chemicals abound. Aryl halides are also important intermediates in the syntheses of other compounds due to their versatility in reactions such as
nucleophilic aromatic substitution and
coupling reactions. Consequently, much research has been dedicated to modifying characteristics of tryptophan 7-halogenase to change properties such as substrate scope, optimal operating temperature, thermal stability, regioselectivity, and more.
Directed evolution is a particularly popular methodology to achieve desirable properties. As of yet, tryptophan 7-halogenase has not been isolated from any
thermophilic organism, so augmenting the thermal properties of the enzyme through unnatural means was necessary. As elevated temperatures allow for greater reaction rates, it is desirable to raise an enzyme's optimal operating temperature, but the thermal stability of the enzyme must accordingly be improved to prevent thermal unfolding. Through directed evolution, advances were achieved such as an increase in Topt from 30-35 °C to 40 °C and an increase in Tm from 52.4 °C to 70.0 °C. In combination with directed evolution, substrate walking generated a number of enzymes with greater substrate scope. Enzyme activity was evolved with a known substrate that bears structural similarity to the target substrate, then variants with high activity with respect to the target substrate are starting points for further evolution. Substrates significantly larger than tryptophan were able to be halogenated through this approach.
Carvedilol, an indole derivative with a molar mass of over 400 g mol−1 (compared to tryptophan's ~200 g mol−1), was able to be halogenated by an evolved enzyme with high selectivity and yield and low enzyme loading. These results suggest that for larger substrates, perhaps the entirety of the substrate molecule is not enclosed in the active site. Following design of a suitable enzyme, a
cross-linked enzyme aggregate is used for larger-scale reaction. The enzyme by itself faces stability issues, but immobilization through CLEA circumvents this problem. As tryptophan 7-halogenase requires a number of partner enzymes, a combiCLEA was created, where the halogenase is linked with auxiliary enzymes such as flavin reductase and
alcohol dehydrogenase, which are responsible for production of FADH2 and NADH, respectively. The three enzymes were precipitated with ammonium sulfate, then cross-linked with the dialdehyde
glutaraldehyde. This combiCLEA allowed for gram-scale halogenation, and the aggregate also offered improved properties over the natural enzyme such as recyclability, long-term storage capability, and ease of purification. == References ==