| Literature DB >> 34046253 |
Si Jie Lim1,2, Siti Nurbaya Oslan1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: -amylases catalyze the endo-hydrolysis of -1,4-D-glycosidic bonds in starch into smaller moieties. While industrial processes are usually performed at harsh conditions, -amylases from mainly the bacteria, fungi and yeasts are preferred for their stabilities (thermal, pH and oxidative) and specificities (substrate and product). Microbial -amylases can be purified and characterized for industrial applications. While exploring novel enzymes with these properties in the nature is time-costly, the advancements in protein engineering techniques including rational design, directed evolution and others have privileged their modifications to exhibit industrially ideal traits. However, the commentary on the strategies and preferably mutated residues are lacking, hindering the design of new mutants especially for enhanced substrate specificity and oxidative stability. Thus, our review ensures wider accessibility of the previously reported experimental findings to facilitate the future engineering work. SURVEY METHODOLOGY ANDEntities:
Keywords: -amylase; Directed evolution; Industrial usages; Microbial enzymes; Protein engineering; Rational design; Structural properties
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046253 PMCID: PMC8139272 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.11315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Reaction mechanisms of amylases.
(A) -Retaining double displacement mechanism of -amylases. (B) Inverting single displacement mechanism of -amylases. The figure was adapted from Zhang, Yip & Withers, 2010 and all the chemical structures were redrawn using ChemDraw JS version 19.
Characterization of microbial -amylases and their desired traits for industrial applications.
| Sources of -amylases | Optimum temperature and pH | Desired traits and performance | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starch Saccharification and Liquefaction | |||
| 60C, pH 7.0 | Hydrolyzed 57.52%, 49.61%, and 32.35% of 1% (w/v) corn, wheat and potato starches, respectively | ||
| 80C, pH 6.0 | Degraded 88.1%, 90.3%, and 81.1% of 10% (w/v) rice, wheat, and potato starches, respectively | ||
| Baking | |||
| 60C, pH 4.06.0 | Decreased elasticity: extensibility ratio to 1.2; increased dough baking strength to 172 104 J | ||
| 55C (intermediate temperature stable, ITS), pH 6.0 -7.0 | Not stated | ||
| Beverages | |||
| 60C, pH 6.5 | Converted 52% liquefied starch to maltose at 8 h | ||
| 50C, pH 5.5 | Reduced colour intensity of raw apple juice (OD440nm) up to 71.2% at 3 h | ||
| Fungus (expressed in | 60C, pH 5.05.5 | Maximum specific activity (200.4 U/mg) on amylopectin which is abundantly found in wheat material | |
| Detergent | |||
| 55C, pH 9.0 | Retained >34% activity in 1% non-ionic and anionic surfactants as well as oxidizing agents | ||
| 65C, pH 9.0 | Retained >95% starch stain removal rate with detergent added | ||
| 25C, pH 8.0 | Retained >76.9% amylolytic activity towards tested laundry detergents with better wash performance as a detergent additive | ||
| Textile and Leather | |||
| 60C, pH 5.5 | Desized cotton fabric with 9.5% weight loss, 5 s of absorbency time and 8 rating in Tegewa analysis | ||
| Biodegradation | |||
| Not stated | Increased biodegradation efficiency (53%) of residual hydrocarbons in the presence of starch | ||
| Reduced weight (48%) and tensile strength (87%) of low-density polyethylene (LDPE)-starch blend samples | |||
Figure 23D crystal structure of B. paralicheniformis-amylase (Bli Amy; PDB ID: 6TP1) with maltotetraose at its substrate-binding site (SBS) (Boi et al., 2020).
(A) Bli Amy has a three-domain fold structure which is composed of Domain A, Domain B and Domain C as depicted in light blue, violet and wheat colours, respectively. The catalytic triad residues (D231, E264 and D328) are shown as orange sticks while the calcium and sodium ions are depicted as blue and red balls, respectively. (B) The SBS in Bli Amy consists of two hydrophobic residues (F257 and Y358) in cyan colour where the yellow dashed line between the residues is the - hydrophobic interaction at 5 . Maltotetraose (MTT) molecule is shown as green carbon backbone. The structural image was generated using the PyMOL Molecular Graphic System, Version 2.4, Schrdinger, LLC.
Engineering of microbial -amylases for enhanced thermostability, pH tolerance, substrate and product specificities as well as oxidative stability.
| Microbial strains | Modifications | Improvements | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thermostability | |||
| V260I | Increased melting point (7.1C) and half-inactivation temperatures (4.9C) | ||
| R179 - G180 | Increased half-life at 100C (24 to 33 min) | ||
| E200C, H201C | Increased ligand-dependent thermostability at 50C for 30 min | ||
| S187D, N188T, A269K | Increased half-life (9-fold) at 95C | ||
| I181 G182, N193F | Increased half-life at 95C at 26-fold (Ca 2+-absent) and 5-fold (Ca 2+-present) | ||
| Chimeric Ba-Gt | Increased half-life at 90C (5 to 15 min) | ||
| S336C, S437C | Maintained 60% activity at 65C | ||
| Q294H | Increased optimum temperature (55 to 60C) and thermostability (35 to 85 min) | ||
| K415C, S450C | Increased half-life at 50C (25 to 55 min); maintained >50% activity at 100C | ||
| E166P, S185P, V212T, V232T, T350P | Increased optimum temperature (25 to 30C) and thermostability at 50C (1.8 to 3.3 min) | ||
| pH tolerance and stability | |||
| V174R | Increased half-life (2.55-fold) at pH 4.5 | ||
| G81R | Maintained 10% activity at pH 4.5 for 40 min | ||
| A270K, N271H | Decreased in optimum pH (pH 6.5 to 4.5); maintained >75% activity at pH 3.5 | ||
| R179 G180 | Increased acid-resistance in range of pH 4.5 6.0; decreased optimum pH (pH 5.5) | ||
| H286E | Increased half-life (6.43-fold) at pH 4.5 (57.28 to 66.65 min); decrease optimum pH (pH 4.5) | ||
| H293R, H316R, H327R | Maintained 31% activity at pH 4.5 for 40 min | ||
| H209L, Q226V, P477V | Increased optimum pH (pH 10.0) with active pH range (pH 6.0 12.0) | ||
| Substrate and product specificities | |||
| CBM20-linker substitution (7 to 21 residues) | Increased (>65.3%) substrate specificities in vitro | ||
| Y401W | Increased ( 10%) substrate specificities in vitro | ||
| S383Y, S386W | Improved (86.5%) substrate affinity at 20 ns in silico | ||
| S383Y, S386W, N421G, S278N, A284K, Q384K, K398R, G400_S401insTDGS | Improved (29.3%) substrate affinity at 100 ns in silico | ||
| Y204(F, I), V260(I, L) | Increased glucose (G1) production than maltose (G2) | ||
| G109(N, D, F) | Increased maltohexaose (G6) production (36.1, 42.4, 39.0% respectively) | ||
| W139(A, L, Y) | Increased maltopentaose (G5) production | ||
| H286(L, M) | Increased affinities towards maltotriose (G3) and soluble starch; increased G2 production | ||
| W177(F, Y, L, N, S) | Reduced G3 formation through increased hydrolysis of soluble starch | ||
| Oxidative stability | |||
| M145I-214A-229T-247T-317I | Improved (5.4-fold) and maintained 91.3% activity in 500 mM H2O2 for 1 h | ||
| Fusion of oligopeptide at N-terminal | Improved (2.7-fold) and maintained 54% activity in 500 mM H2O2 for 30 min | ||
| M55A, (M43A, M44A) | Maintained 50% and 39% activity in 100 mM H2O2, respectively | ||
| M247L | Improved oxidative resistance (72%) | ||
| Truncated C-terminal, M231L | Maintained >96% activity in 500 mM H2O2 | ||
| I214 G215, M197A | Maintained 70% activity in 1.8 M H2O2 for 60 min | ||
Figure 3Site-directed mutagenesis of G109D in Bst-MFAse (PDB ID: 6ag0; Xie et al., 2019a).
Extra interaction at subsite -6 has been established with the introduction of D109, leading to the highest increment of the G6 production from starch at 42.4% compared to other mutants (G109N and G109F) and its wild type (G109) (Xie et al., 2020). The structural figures were illustrated using the PyMOL Molecular Graphic System, Version 2.4, Schrdinger, LLC.