| Literature DB >> 29445091 |
Federica Rigoldi1, Stefano Donini2, Francesca Giacomina3, Federico Sorana3, Alberto Redaelli1, Tiziano Bandiera3, Emilio Parisini4, Alfonso Gautieri5.
Abstract
Amadoriases are a class of FAD-dependent enzymes that are found in fungi,Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29445091 PMCID: PMC5813194 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-19991-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the amino acid deglycation reaction catalyzed by Amadoriase I. The enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of the C-N bond between the nitrogen of the amino acid moiety of the Amadori product and C1 of the fructosyl portion. The reaction results in the Schiff base which is hydrolyzed to yield glucosone and a free amino acid. The reduced FAD is oxidized by an oxygen molecule with the release of hydrogen peroxide. Only relevant hydrogen atoms are shown. Blue font highlights the products of the enzymatic catalysis.
Figure 2MD-based screening of mutants. (A) RMSF of WT-Amadoriase I at different temperatures, showing how higher temperatures induce an increase in the baseline but also a steep increase in specific regions of the protein (e.g., residue from 60 to 70). (B) avg-RMSF of WT-Amadoriase I at increasing temperatures. Here, the slope is considered as a proxy of the sensitivity to thermal stress and it is used to filter out mutations that badly affect thermal stability. In particular, enzyme mutants showing larger slopes are considered less stable than the WT, whereas enzyme mutants showing smaller slopes are considered as promising thermostable variants and thus experimentally tested.
Screening of SS-variants.
| Enzyme | Mutated residues | λ | R2 | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |
| SS01* | S10, H216 | 0.00162 | 0.965 | 0.0407 |
| SS02* | A29, L179 | 0.00201 | 0.996 | 0.0013 |
| SS03 | S67, P121 | 0.00151 | 0.995 | 0.8234 |
| SS04* | A74, I399 | 0.00242 | 0.997 | 0.0004 |
| SS05 | Y95, A168 | 0.00187 | 0.993 | 0.8326 |
| SS06* | G100, P260 | 0.00202 | 0.960 | 0.0028 |
| SS07* | H106, G150 | 0.00115 | 0.997 | 0.0022 |
| SS08* | K438, E441 | 0.00138 | 0.984 | 0.0187 |
| SS09* | F148, W151 | 0.00181 | 0.972 | 0.0056 |
| SS10* | V202, L263 | 0.00063 | 0.426 | 0.0021 |
| SS11* | K233, P404 | 0.00134 | 0.924 | 0.0202 |
| SS12* | K234, A407 | 0.00183 | 0.999 | 0.0027 |
| SS13* | Q247, S337 | 0.00173 | 0.990 | 0.0070 |
| SS14* | M248, V253 | 0.00202 | 0.939 | 0.0036 |
| SS15* | C290, S304 | 0.00221 | 0.926 | 0.0026 |
| SS16* | G432, Q435 | 0.00166 | 0.888 | 0.0475 |
| SS17* | D295, K303 | 0.00118 | 0.993 | 0.0027 |
| SS18* | R298, Q301 | 0.00187 | 0.999 | 0.0022 |
| SS19* | L324, A332 | 0.00170 | 0.997 | 0.0080 |
As a result of the comparison of the λ value for the 19 SS-variants with λWT, four mutants (SS03, SS07, SS08, SS17) were selected for experimental production and characterization. Statistically significant differences between the λ value of SS-variant and λ of WT are marked with (*).
Figure 3Amadoriase I enzyme and selected mutations. The crystal structure of WT Amadoriase I (PDB code: 4WCT) is shown in cartoon representation, while the residues that were mutated to Cys in the selected SS-variants are represented in sticks (for SS03 residues S67 and P121, for SS07 residues H106 and G150, for SS11 residues K233 and P404, for SS17 residues D295 and K303). The FAD cofactor is shown in purple sticks.
Figure 4UV-vis absorption spectra. The UV-visible absorption spectra of WT and SS03, SS07, SS17, and SS19 variants show two prominent peaks (at 368 nm and 454 nm) typical of bound FAD cofactor. Conversely, the SS11 does not show the two relevant regions of the UV-visible spectrum, indicating that it does not bind the flavin cofactor.
Comparison of the apparent steady state parameters for wild type Amadoriase I to the mutated enzymes using fructosyl-lysine as substrate.
| Enzyme | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| WT | 0.51 ± 0.19 | 21.55 ± 3.08 | 41.68 ± 16.48 |
| SS03 | 0.34 ± 0.13 | 21.90 ± 2.73 | 64.17 ± 25.5 |
| SS07 | 0.99 ± 0.22 | 11.97 ± 1.69 | 12.02 ± 2.86 |
| SS17 | 0.68 ± 0.18 | 22.91 ± 2.12 | 33.34 ± 10.16 |
| SSDM | 0.97 ± 0.22 | 14.50 ± 1.67 | 14.85 ± 3.85 |
Experiments were performed at 25 °C, as described in the material and methods section.
Comparison of the size of the substrate tunnel bottleneck in the wildtype enzyme and in the SS07 mutant.
| Enzyme |
|
|---|---|
| WT | 1.83 ± 0.17 |
| SS07 | 1.57 ± 0.20 |
Figure 5Temperature effect on the activity of the WT Amadoriase I and the mutants. (A–E) Residual activity of the oxidized form (triangle) and the reduced form (circle) as a function of the temperature for the WT enzyme and the tested SS-mutants. Enzymes were treated at temperatures ranging from 25 °C to 100 °C for 10 min before the activity assay. The residual activity at 25 °C, for each enzyme, is assumed as 100%. (F) Panel (a) Temperature at which each enzyme loses half of its initial activity (measured at 25 °C) Panel (b) Residual activity at 60 °C. The reported data are the mean values of three replicates ±SD (standard deviation).
Absolute T50 and difference with respect to WT Amadoriase (ΔT50).
| Enzyme | ||
|---|---|---|
| WT | 52.40 ± 0.69 | — |
| SS03 | 55.25 ± 3.28 | +2.85 |
| SS07 | 40.76 ± 1.80 | −11.64 |
| SS17 | 60.62 ± 0.95 | +8.22 |
| SSDM | 55.79 ± 0.25 | +3.39 |
The reported data are the mean values of three replicates ±SD (standard deviation).
Figure 6Effect of pH on the activity of the WT Amadoriase I and the thermally stabilized mutants. Activity was measured at 25 °C in a pH range from 6 to 11. Experimental conditions are described in the materials and methods section. The activity is normalized to the maximum activity for each enzyme. The reported data are the mean values of three replicates ±SD (standard deviation).
Figure 7Detailed view of the electron density map in the region of the double cysteine mutation for the SS03 enzyme variant (Panel A) and for the SS17 enzyme variant (Panel B). Both maps show the clear formation of the disulfide bonds.
Figure 8Superposition of WT enzyme (gray) with the disulfide mutants (green). The SS03 mutant (Panel A) presents no significant alteration of any part of the enzyme due to the introduction of the disulfide bond, including the region near the double cysteine mutation (Panel C). The SS17 mutant (Panel B) presents no significant alteration in the overall structure of the enzyme and in the catalytic pocket. However, it shows a structural rearrangement close to the introduced mutations (Panel D) and a significant displacement of a loop (residues 63 to 69) that is far from the introduced mutation (orange circle in Panel B).
Root Mean Square Deviation (RMSD) comparison for native enzyme, and mutants SS03 and SS17.
| Mutant | RMSD [Å] |
|---|---|
| WT | 0.99 |
| SS03 | 0.93 |
| SS17 | 1.35 |
The RMSD is calculated, for each enzyme between the crystallographic structure and end-point of 5 ns long MD simulation at 300 K. The RMSD calculation was done considering main chain atoms only.
Figure 9Superposition of the RMSF of WT-Amadoriase I and experimental β-factor, showing how the RMSF from MD simulations reproduces the same trend of the experimental β-factors and it allows to pinpoint the same peaks, which represent highly flexible protein regions.
Data collection and refinement statistics of the SS03 and the SS17 crystal structures.
| Crystal | SS03 (PBD id: 5OC3) | SS17 (PBD id: 5OC2) |
|---|---|---|
|
| P212121 | P21 |
|
| 47.87–2.15 | 46.37–2.85 |