Literature DB >> 25419863

Directed evolution of new and improved enzyme functions using an evolutionary intermediate and multidirectional search.

Joanne L Porter1, Priscilla L S Boon, Tracy P Murray, Thomas Huber, Charles A Collyer, David L Ollis.   

Abstract

The ease with which enzymes can be adapted from their native roles and engineered to function specifically for industrial or commercial applications is crucial to enabling enzyme technology to advance beyond its current state. Directed evolution is a powerful tool for engineering enzymes with improved physical and catalytic properties and can be used to evolve enzymes where lack of structural information may thwart the use of rational design. In this study, we take the versatile and diverse α/β hydrolase fold framework, in the form of dienelactone hydrolase, and evolve it over three unique sequential evolutions with a total of 14 rounds of screening to generate a series of enzyme variants. The native enzyme has a low level of promiscuous activity toward p-nitrophenyl acetate but almost undetectable activity toward larger p-nitrophenyl esters. Using p-nitrophenyl acetate as an evolutionary intermediate, we have generated variants with altered specificity and catalytic activity up to 3 orders of magnitude higher than the native enzyme toward the larger nonphysiological p-nitrophenyl ester substrates. Several variants also possess increased stability resulting from the multidimensional approach to screening. Crystal structure analysis and substrate docking show how the enzyme active site changes over the course of the evolutions as either a direct or an indirect result of mutations.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25419863     DOI: 10.1021/cb500809f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Chem Biol        ISSN: 1554-8929            Impact factor:   5.100


  5 in total

1.  Compensatory stabilizing role of surface mutations during the directed evolution of dienelactone hydrolase for enhanced activity.

Authors:  Joanne L Porter; Charles A Collyer; David L Ollis
Journal:  Protein J       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 2.371

2.  Distinctive structural motifs co-ordinate the catalytic nucleophile and the residues of the oxyanion hole in the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold enzymes.

Authors:  Polytimi S Dimitriou; Alexander I Denesyuk; Toru Nakayama; Mark S Johnson; Konstantin Denessiouk
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2018-11-12       Impact factor: 6.725

3.  Light Regimes Shape Utilization of Extracellular Organic C and N in a Cyanobacterial Biofilm.

Authors:  Rhona K Stuart; Xavier Mayali; Amy A Boaro; Adam Zemla; R Craig Everroad; Daniel Nilson; Peter K Weber; Mary Lipton; Brad M Bebout; Jennifer Pett-Ridge; Michael P Thelen
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2016-06-28       Impact factor: 7.867

4.  Establishing knowledge on the sequence arrangement pattern of nucleated protein folding.

Authors:  Fei Leng; Chao Xu; Xia-Yu Xia; Xian-Ming Pan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  The acid-base-nucleophile catalytic triad in ABH-fold enzymes is coordinated by a set of structural elements.

Authors:  Alexander Denesyuk; Polytimi S Dimitriou; Mark S Johnson; Toru Nakayama; Konstantin Denessiouk
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-02-21       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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