Literature DB >> 17124868

Mechanisms of protein evolution and their application to protein engineering.

Margaret E Glasner1, John A Gerlt, Patricia C Babbitt.   

Abstract

Protein engineering holds great promise for the development of new biosensors, diagnostics, therapeutics, and agents for bioremediation. Despite some remarkable successes in experimental and computational protein design, engineered proteins rarely achieve the efficiency or specificity of natural enzymes. Current protein design methods utilize evolutionary concepts, including mutation, recombination, and selection, but the inability to fully recapitulate the success of natural evolution suggests that some evolutionary principles have not been fully exploited. One aspect of protein engineering that has received little attention is how to select the most promising proteins to serve as templates, or scaffolds, for engineering. Two evolutionary concepts that could provide a rational basis for template selection are the conservation of catalytic mechanisms and functional promiscuity. Knowledge of the catalytic motifs responsible for conserved aspects of catalysis in mechanistically diverse superfamilies could be used to identify promising templates for protein engineering. Second, protein evolution often proceeds through promiscuous intermediates, suggesting that templates which are naturally promiscuous for a target reaction could enhance protein engineering strategies. This review explores these ideas and alternative hypotheses concerning protein evolution and engineering. Future research will determine if application of these principles will lead to a protein engineering methodology governed by predictable rules for designing efficient, novel catalysts.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17124868     DOI: 10.1002/9780471224464.ch3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Enzymol Relat Areas Mol Biol        ISSN: 0065-258X


  14 in total

1.  The mutability of enzyme active-site shape determinants.

Authors:  Brian G Miller
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2007-09       Impact factor: 6.725

2.  Enzyme evolution beyond gene duplication: A model for incorporating horizontal gene transfer.

Authors:  Lianet Noda-García; Francisco Barona-Gómez
Journal:  Mob Genet Elements       Date:  2013-10-02

3.  Bisubstrate specificity in histidine/tryptophan biosynthesis isomerase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis by active site metamorphosis.

Authors:  Anne V Due; Jochen Kuper; Arie Geerlof; Jens Peter von Kries; Matthias Wilmanns
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-02-14       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Catalytic versus inhibitory promiscuity in cytochrome P450s: implications for evolution of new function.

Authors:  Robert S Foti; Mathew Honaker; Abhinav Nath; Josh T Pearson; Brian Buttrick; Nina Isoherranen; William M Atkins
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2011-03-11       Impact factor: 3.162

Review 5.  Protein Function Analysis through Machine Learning.

Authors:  Chris Avery; John Patterson; Tyler Grear; Theodore Frater; Donald J Jacobs
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2022-09-06

Review 6.  Enzyme (re)design: lessons from natural evolution and computation.

Authors:  John A Gerlt; Patricia C Babbitt
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2009-02-23       Impact factor: 8.822

7.  Target selection and annotation for the structural genomics of the amidohydrolase and enolase superfamilies.

Authors:  Ursula Pieper; Ranyee Chiang; Jennifer J Seffernick; Shoshana D Brown; Margaret E Glasner; Libusha Kelly; Narayanan Eswar; J Michael Sauder; Jeffrey B Bonanno; Subramanyam Swaminathan; Stephen K Burley; Xiaojing Zheng; Mark R Chance; Steven C Almo; John A Gerlt; Frank M Raushel; Matthew P Jacobson; Patricia C Babbitt; Andrej Sali
Journal:  J Struct Funct Genomics       Date:  2009-02-14

8.  Quantitative comparison of catalytic mechanisms and overall reactions in convergently evolved enzymes: implications for classification of enzyme function.

Authors:  Daniel E Almonacid; Emmanuel R Yera; John B O Mitchell; Patricia C Babbitt
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2010-03-12       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  Multicopy suppression underpins metabolic evolvability.

Authors:  Wayne M Patrick; Erik M Quandt; Dan B Swartzlander; Ichiro Matsumura
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2007-09-19       Impact factor: 16.240

Review 10.  Biological messiness vs. biological genius: Mechanistic aspects and roles of protein promiscuity.

Authors:  William M Atkins
Journal:  J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2014-09-12       Impact factor: 4.292

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