Literature DB >> 16455658

Laboratory-evolved vanadium chloroperoxidase exhibits 100-fold higher halogenating activity at alkaline pH: catalytic effects from first and second coordination sphere mutations.

Zulfiqar Hasan1, Rokus Renirie, Richard Kerkman, Harald J Ruijssenaars, Aloysius F Hartog, Ron Wever.   

Abstract

Directed evolution was performed on vanadium chloroperoxidase from the fungus Curvularia inaequalis to increase its brominating activity at a mildly alkaline pH for industrial and synthetic applications and to further understand its mechanism. After successful expression of the enzyme in Escherichia coli, two rounds of screening and selection, saturation mutagenesis of a "hot spot," and rational recombination, a triple mutant (P395D/L241V/T343A) was obtained that showed a 100-fold increase in activity at pH 8 (k(cat) = 100 s(-1)). The increased K(m) values for Br(-) (3.1 mm) and H(2)O(2) (16 microm) are smaller than those found for vanadium bromoperoxidases that are reasonably active at this pH. In addition the brominating activity at pH 5 was increased by a factor of 6 (k(cat) = 575 s(-1)), and the chlorinating activity at pH 5 was increased by a factor of 2 (k(cat) = 36 s(-1)), yielding the "best" vanadium haloperoxidase known thus far. The mutations are in the first and second coordination sphere of the vanadate cofactor, and the catalytic effects suggest that fine tuning of residues Lys-353 and Phe-397, along with addition of negative charge or removal of positive charge near one of the vanadate oxygens, is very important. Lys-353 and Phe-397 were previously assigned to be essential in peroxide activation and halide binding. Analysis of the catalytic parameters of the mutant vanadium bromoperoxidase from the seaweed Ascophyllum nodosum also adds fuel to the discussion regarding factors governing the halide specificity of vanadium haloperoxidases. This study presents the first example of directed evolution of a vanadium enzyme.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16455658     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M512166200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  11 in total

Review 1.  Exploring the chemistry and biology of vanadium-dependent haloperoxidases.

Authors:  Jaclyn M Winter; Bradley S Moore
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2009-04-10       Impact factor: 5.157

2.  The Vanadium Iodoperoxidase from the marine flavobacteriaceae species Zobellia galactanivorans reveals novel molecular and evolutionary features of halide specificity in the vanadium haloperoxidase enzyme family.

Authors:  Jean-Baptiste Fournier; Etienne Rebuffet; Ludovic Delage; Romain Grijol; Laurence Meslet-Cladière; Justyna Rzonca; Philippe Potin; Gurvan Michel; Mirjam Czjzek; Catherine Leblanc
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2014-09-26       Impact factor: 4.792

Review 3.  Enzymatic Halogenation and Dehalogenation Reactions: Pervasive and Mechanistically Diverse.

Authors:  Vinayak Agarwal; Zachary D Miles; Jaclyn M Winter; Alessandra S Eustáquio; Abrahim A El Gamal; Bradley S Moore
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2017-01-20       Impact factor: 60.622

4.  Vanadium pentoxide nanoparticles mimic vanadium haloperoxidases and thwart biofilm formation.

Authors:  Filipe Natalio; Rute André; Aloysius F Hartog; Brigitte Stoll; Klaus Peter Jochum; Ron Wever; Wolfgang Tremel
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2012-07-01       Impact factor: 39.213

5.  Enzymatic Photometric Assays for the Selective Detection of Halides.

Authors:  Qingyun Tang; Askin S Aslan-Üzel; Eva D Schuiten; Christoffel P S Badenhorst; Ioannis V Pavlidis; Uwe T Bornscheuer
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

Review 6.  Halogenation in Fungi: What Do We Know and What Remains to Be Discovered?

Authors:  Bastien Cochereau; Laurence Meslet-Cladière; Yves François Pouchus; Olivier Grovel; Catherine Roullier
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-05-14       Impact factor: 4.927

7.  Chemoenzymatic Hunsdiecker-Type Decarboxylative Bromination of Cinnamic Acids.

Authors:  Huanhuan Li; Sabry H H Younes; Shaohang Chen; Peigao Duan; Chengsen Cui; Ron Wever; Wuyuan Zhang; Frank Hollmann
Journal:  ACS Catal       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 13.700

8.  Potential and utilization of thermophiles and thermostable enzymes in biorefining.

Authors:  Pernilla Turner; Gashaw Mamo; Eva Nordberg Karlsson
Journal:  Microb Cell Fact       Date:  2007-03-15       Impact factor: 5.328

9.  An Ultrasensitive Fluorescence Assay for the Detection of Halides and Enzymatic Dehalogenation.

Authors:  Aşkın S Aslan-Üzel; Andy Beier; David Kovář; Clemens Cziegler; Santosh K Padhi; Eva D Schuiten; Mark Dörr; Dominique Böttcher; Frank Hollmann; Florian Rudroff; Marko D Mihovilovic; Tomáš Buryška; Jiří Damborský; Zbyněk Prokop; Christoffel P S Badenhorst; Uwe T Bornscheuer
Journal:  ChemCatChem       Date:  2020-01-31       Impact factor: 5.686

Review 10.  Synthetic biology for the directed evolution of protein biocatalysts: navigating sequence space intelligently.

Authors:  Andrew Currin; Neil Swainston; Philip J Day; Douglas B Kell
Journal:  Chem Soc Rev       Date:  2015-03-07       Impact factor: 54.564

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