Harry J. Spacey, Daniel Healy, Jason M. D. Kalapothakis, Junfeng Ma, Michiyo Sakuma, Perdita E. Barran, Derren J. Heyes, Nigel S. Scrutton
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Fatty acid photodecarboxylase (FAP) is a FAD-containing enzyme that catalyzes the light-driven decarboxylation of medium-long chain fatty acids. Over recent years, the substrate scope of FAP has been broadened to improve its potential to catalyze a range of blue light-dependent industrially relevant reactions. However, photoinactivation constitutes a major hurdle for generalized applications. Previous studies have suggested that violet light may be a more suitable illumination wavelength for many of these applications. Here, we have investigated any possible enhancement in the catalytic activity of FAP upon illumination with violet light and utilized a spectrophotometric assay that detects the production of CO2 in real time to monitor the FAP reaction under different illumination conditions. We show that the activity of FAP at low intensities of violet light is approximately 6-fold higher than under identical illumination conditions with blue light. Moreover, the product yield increases further when the light is delivered in a pulsed manner, most likely as a result of lower levels of photoinactivation than is observed upon continuous illumination. More detailed spectrophotometric measurements have confirmed that FAP employs a similar catalytic cycle upon illumination with both violet and blue light. Rather, the enhancement in catalytic efficiency observed with violet light is attributable to higher populations of excited state FAD species that can proceed along a productive catalytic pathway. We suggest that pulses of low-intensity violet light provide an optimized route for FAP catalysis, highlighting the importance of illumination conditions in the expanding field of flavin-based photobiocatalysis.
期刊介绍:
ACS Catalysis is an esteemed journal that publishes original research in the fields of heterogeneous catalysis, molecular catalysis, and biocatalysis. It offers broad coverage across diverse areas such as life sciences, organometallics and synthesis, photochemistry and electrochemistry, drug discovery and synthesis, materials science, environmental protection, polymer discovery and synthesis, and energy and fuels.
The scope of the journal is to showcase innovative work in various aspects of catalysis. This includes new reactions and novel synthetic approaches utilizing known catalysts, the discovery or modification of new catalysts, elucidation of catalytic mechanisms through cutting-edge investigations, practical enhancements of existing processes, as well as conceptual advances in the field. Contributions to ACS Catalysis can encompass both experimental and theoretical research focused on catalytic molecules, macromolecules, and materials that exhibit catalytic turnover.