Nicotinamide adenine
dinucleotide (NAD) and its 2′-phosphorylated
form NADP are crucial cofactors for a large array of biocatalytically
important redox enzymes. Their high cost and relatively poor stability,
however, make them less attractive electron mediators for industrial
processes. Nicotinamide cofactor biomimetics (NCBs) are easily synthesized,
are inexpensive, and are also generally more stable than their natural
counterparts. A bottleneck for the application of these artificial
hydride carriers is the lack of efficient cofactor recycling methods.
Therefore, we engineered the thermostable F420:NADPH oxidoreductase
from Thermobifida fusca (Tfu-FNO), by structure-inspired site-directed mutagenesis, to accommodate
the unnatural N1 substituents of eight NCBs. The extraordinarily low
redox potential of the natural cofactor F420H2 was then exploited to reduce these NCBs. Wild-type enzyme had detectable
activity toward all selected NCBs, with Km values in the millimolar range and kcat values ranging from 0.09 to 1.4 min–1. Saturation
mutagenesis at positions Gly-29 and Pro-89 resulted in mutants with
up to 139 times higher catalytic efficiencies. Mutant G29W showed
a kcat value of 4.2 s–1 toward 1-benzyl-3-acetylpyridine (BAP+), which is similar
to the kcat value for the natural substrate
NADP+. The best Tfu-FNO variants for a
specific NCB were then used for the recycling of catalytic amounts
of these nicotinamides in conversion experiments with the thermostable
ene-reductase from Thermus scotoductus (TsOYE). We were able to fully convert 10 mM ketoisophorone
with BAP+ within 16 h, using F420 or its artificial
biomimetic FOP (FO-2′-phosphate) as an efficient electron mediator
and glucose-6-phosphate as an electron donor. The generated toolbox
of thermostable and NCB-dependent Tfu-FNO variants
offers powerful cofactor regeneration biocatalysts for the reduction
of several artificial nicotinamide biomimetics at both ambient and
high temperatures. In fact, to our knowledge, this enzymatic method
seems to be the best-performing NCB-recycling system for BNAH and
BAPH thus far