Polyphenol-hydroxylating tyrosinase activity under acidic ph enables efficient synthesis of plant catechols and gallols

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Abstract

Tyrosinase is generally known as a melanin-forming enzyme, facilitating monooxygena-tion of phenols, oxidation of catechols into quinones, and finally generating biological melanin. As a homologous form of tyrosinase in plants, plant polyphenol oxidases perform the same oxidation reactions specifically toward plant polyphenols. Recent studies reported synthetic strategies for large scale preparation of hydroxylated plant polyphenols, using bacterial tyrosinases rather than plant polyphenol oxidase or other monooxygenases, by leveraging its robust monophenolase activity and broad substrate specificity. Herein, we report a novel synthesis of functional plant polyphe-nols, especially quercetin and myricetin from kaempferol, using screened bacterial tyrosinases. The critical bottleneck of the biocatalysis was identified as instability of the catechol and gallol under neutral and basic conditions. To overcome such instability of the products, the tyrosinase reaction proceeded under acidic conditions. Under mild acidic conditions supplemented with reducing agents, a bacterial tyrosinase from Bacillus megaterium (BmTy) displayed efficient consecutive two-step monophenolase activities producing quercetin and myricetin from kaempferol. Furthermore, the broad substrate specificity of BmTy toward diverse polyphenols enabled us to achieve the first biosynthesis of tricetin and 3′-hydroxyeriodictyol from apigenin and naringenin, respectively. These results suggest that microbial tyrosinase is a useful biocatalyst to prepare plant polyphenolic catechols and gallols with high productivity, which were hardly achieved by using other monoox-ygenases such as cytochrome P450s.

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Song, H., Lee, P. G., Kim, H., Lee, U. J., Lee, S. H., Kim, J., & Kim, B. G. (2021). Polyphenol-hydroxylating tyrosinase activity under acidic ph enables efficient synthesis of plant catechols and gallols. Microorganisms, 9(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9091866

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