| Literature DB >> 32411108 |
Malvina Vogler1,2, Ram Karan1, Dominik Renn1, Alexandra Vancea1, Marie-Theres Vielberg2, Stefan W Grötzinger1, Priya DasSarma3, Shiladitya DasSarma3, Jörg Eppinger1, Michael Groll2, Magnus Rueping1.
Abstract
Environments previously thought to be uninhabitable offer a tremendous wealth of unexplored microorganisms and enzymes. In this paper, we present the discovery and characterization of a novel γ-carbonic anhydrase (γ-CA) from the polyextreme Red Sea brine pool Discovery Deep (2141 m depth, 44.8°C, 26.2% salt) by single-cell genome sequencing. The extensive analysis of the selected gene helps demonstrate the potential of this culture-independent method. The enzyme was expressed in the bioengineered haloarchaeon Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 and characterized by X-ray crystallography and mutagenesis. The 2.6 Å crystal structure of the protein shows a trimeric arrangement. Within the γ-CA, several possible structural determinants responsible for the enzyme's salt stability could be highlighted. Moreover, the amino acid composition on the protein surface and the intra- and intermolecular interactions within the protein differ significantly from those of its close homologs. To gain further insights into the catalytic residues of the γ-CA enzyme, we created a library of variants around the active site residues and successfully improved the enzyme activity by 17-fold. As several γ-CAs have been reported without measurable activity, this provides further clues as to critical residues. Our study reveals insights into the halophilic γ-CA activity and its unique adaptations. The study of the polyextremophilic carbonic anhydrase provides a basis for outlining insights into strategies for salt adaptation, yielding enzymes with industrially valuable properties, and the underlying mechanisms of protein evolution.Entities:
Keywords: extremophiles; extremozyme; gamma-carbonic anhydrase; halophiles; mutagenesis; salt adaptation; thermophiles
Year: 2020 PMID: 32411108 PMCID: PMC7199487 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Crystal structure of CA_D. (A) Ribbon structure of the CA_D monomer with the background showing the water-accessible surface. The inset shows a top view of the monomer depicting the triangular shape formed by the seven-turn, left-handed β-helix. (B) Structural overlay of the CA_D monomer (green) and the γ-CA Cam from Methanosarcina thermophila (red) (PDB ID 1qrg). (C) Ribbon structure of the CA_D trimer along with the water-accessible surface in the background. The inset contains a top view of the trimer. The three zinc ions are depicted as gray spheres. (D) The CA_D active center made up of three histidine residues (white-and-blue sticks) from two adjacent monomers. The zinc ion and a water molecule are depicted as gray and red spheres, respectively. (E) The active site cavity is colored according to hydrophobicity (red: hydrophilic, white: hydrophobic). The coordination residues are represented as sticks.
FIGURE 2Electrostatic surface potential of CA_D. (A) CA_D Monomer and (B) CA_D Trimer electrostatic surface potential color-coded from red (negative potential) to blue (positive potential). (C) The surface potential of CA_D compared to mesophilic γ-CA homologs (Escherichia coli, 3tio; Salmonella enterica, 3r3r; Anaplasma phagocytophilum, 3ixc; Bacillus cereus, 1xhd; Brucella abortus, 4n27; Clostridium difficile, 4mfg). Unit: –5 to +5 kT/e (k as the Boltzmann constant, T as the temperature in Kelvin and e as the charge of an electron).
FIGURE 3Comparison of surface-exposed amino acids between CA_D and meso- and thermophilic homologs. (A) hydrophobic, polar or charged amino acids residues, (B) depicts the amount per individual charged amino acid.
FIGURE 4Comparison of selected active site residues. (A) CA_D (crystal structure), (B) Cam (crystal structure) from M. thermophila (PDB ID: 1qrg), and (C) CA_D* including selected mutations such as I46E, K58Q, H166N (M2: indicates that residue belongs to the adjacent monomer). The central zinc ion is depicted as a gray sphere.
Rationalization of CA_D variants.
| 1QRG (Cam) | R59 | E62 | Q75 | E84 | N202 | H81 | H117 | H122 |
| CA_D | R43 | D67 | H64 | H89 | H94 | |||
| I46E | R43 | K58 | D67 | H166 | H64 | H89 | H94 | |
| K58Q | R43 | I46 | D67 | H166 | H64 | H89 | H94 | |
| H166N | R43 | I46 | K58 | D67 | H64 | H89 | H94 | |
| I46E-K58Q | R43 | D67 | H166 | H64 | H89 | H94 | ||
| K58Q-H166N | R43 | I46 | D67 | H64 | H89 | H94 | ||
| I46E-H166N | R43 | K58 | D67 | H64 | H89 | H94 | ||
| CA_D* (I46E-K58Q-H166N) | R43 | D67 | H64 | H89 | H94 | |||
| CA_D*-D67E | R43 | H64 | H89 | H94 | ||||
FIGURE 5Carbonic anhydrase activity assessment. CA_D WT and variants measured at 3 M KCl and 40°C.