Construction and characterization of a recombinant whole-cell biocatalyst of Escherichia coli expressing styrene monooxygenase under the control of arabinose promoter
BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOPROCESS ENGINEERING, v.13, no.1, pp.69 - 76
Abstract
A recombinant Escherichia coli (pBAB1) containing styrene monooxygenase (SMO) was developed for the conversion of styrene to enantiopure (S)-styrene oxide that is an important chiral building block in organic synthesis. The styAB genes encoding SMO was cloned into a multicopy plasmid under the tightly regulated promoter of bacterial L-arabinose operon which is inducible by L-arabinose. The recombinant showed that expression level of StyA protein and whole-cell SMO activities were varied depending on the concentration of the inducer L-arabinose. The maximum SMO activity was 108 U/g cdw when the cells were induced with 0.2% L-arabinose. SDS-PAGE and Western blot analyses indicated that whole-cell SMO activity was strongly correlated with the expression level of StyA protein. Organic-aqueous two-phase experiment could yield 50 mM enantiopure (S)-styrene oxide in organic phase in 18 h, but the recombinant SMO activity was unstable during the reaction. The expression of styAB under the control Of L-arabinose promoter was significantly repressed in the presence of glucose.