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1.
The thermostability of maltogenic amylase from Thermus sp. strain IM6501 (ThMA) was improved greatly by random mutagenesis using DNA shuffling. Four rounds of DNA shuffling and subsequent recombination of the mutations produced the highly thermostable mutant enzyme ThMA-DM, which had a total of seven individual mutations. The seven amino acid substitutions in ThMA-DM were identified as R26Q, S169N, I333V, M375T, A398V, Q411L, and P453L. The optimal reaction temperature of the recombinant enzyme was 75 degrees C, which was 15 degrees C higher than that of wild-type ThMA, and the melting temperature, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry, was increased by 10.9 degrees C. The half-life of ThMA-DM was 172 min at 80 degrees C, a temperature at which wild-type ThMA was completely inactivated in less than 1 min. Six mutations that were generated during the evolutionary process did not significantly affect the specific activity of the enzyme, while the M375T mutation decreased activity to 23% of the wild-type level. The molecular interactions of the seven mutant residues that contributed to the increased thermostability of the mutant enzyme with other adjacent residues were examined by comparing the modeled tertiary structure of ThMA-DM with those of wild-type ThMA and related enzymes. The A398V and Q411L substitutions appeared to stabilize the enzyme by enhancing the interdomain hydrophobic interactions. The R26Q and P453L substitutions led potentially to the formation of genuine hydrogen bonds. M375T, which was located near the active site of ThMA, probably caused a conformational or dynamic change that enhanced thermostability but reduced the specific activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
It is generally assumed that in proteins hydrophobic residues are not favorable at solvent-exposed sites, and that amino acid substitutions on the surface have little effect on protein thermostability. Contrary to these assumptions, we have identified hyperthermostable variants of Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase (BLA) that result from the incorporation of hydrophobic residues at the surface. Under highly destabilizing conditions, a variant combining five stabilizing mutations unfolds 32 times more slowly and at a temperature 13 degrees C higher than the wild-type. Crystal structure analysis at 1.7 A resolution suggests that stabilization is achieved through (a) extension of the concept of increased hydrophobic packing, usually applied to cavities, to surface indentations, (b) introduction of favorable aromatic-aromatic interactions on the surface, (c) specific stabilization of intrinsic metal binding sites, and (d) stabilization of a beta-sheet by introducing a residue with high beta-sheet forming propensity. All mutated residues are involved in forming complex, cooperative interaction networks that extend from the interior of the protein to its surface and which may therefore constitute "weak points" where BLA unfolding is initiated. This might explain the unexpectedly large effect induced by some of the substitutions on the kinetic stability of BLA. Our study shows that substantial protein stabilization can be achieved by stabilizing surface positions that participate in underlying cooperatively formed substructures. At such positions, even the apparently thermodynamically unfavorable introduction of hydrophobic residues should be explored.  相似文献   

3.
We used directed evolution to convert Bacillus subtilis subtilisin E into an enzyme functionally equivalent to its thermophilic homolog thermitase from Thermoactinomyces vulgaris. Five generations of random mutagenesis, recombination and screening created subtilisin E 5-3H5, whose half-life at 83 degrees C (3.5 min) and temperature optimum for activity (Topt, 76 degrees C) are identical with those of thermitase. The Topt of the evolved enzyme is 17 degrees C higher and its half-life at 65 degrees C is >200 times that of wild-type subtilisin E. In addition, 5-3H5 is more active towards the hydrolysis of succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-p-nitroanilide than wild-type at all temperatures from 10 to 90 degrees C. Thermitase differs from subtilisin E at 157 amino acid positions. However, only eight amino acid substitutions were sufficient to convert subtilisin E into an enzyme equally thermostable. The eight substitutions, which include known stabilizing mutations (N218S, N76D) and also several not previously reported, are distributed over the surface of the enzyme. Only two (N218S, N181D) are found in thermitase. Directed evolution provides a powerful tool to unveil mechanisms of thermal adaptation and is an effective and efficient approach to increasing thermostability without compromising enzyme activity.  相似文献   

4.
Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase (BLA) is a starch-degrading enzyme that is highly thermostable although it is produced by a rather mesophilic organism. Over the last decade, the origin of BLA thermal properties has been extensively investigated in both academic and industrial laboratories, yet it is poorly understood. Here, we have used structure-based mutagenesis in order to probe the role of amino acid residues previously proposed as being important for BLA thermostability. Residues involved in salt-bridges, calcium binding or potential deamidation processes have been selected and replaced with various amino acids using a site-directed mutagenesis method, based on informational suppression. A total of 175 amylase variants were created and analysed in vitro. Active amylase variants were tested for thermostability by measuring residual activities after incubation at high temperature. Out of the 15 target residues, seven (Asp121, Asn126, Asp164, Asn192, Asp200, Asp204 and Ala269) were found to be particularly intolerant to any amino acid substitutions, some of which lead to very unstable mutant enzymes. By contrast, three asparagine residues (Asn172, Asn188 and Asn190) could be replaced with amino acid residues that significantly increase the thermostability compared to the wild-type enzyme. The highest stabilization event resulted from the substitution of phenylalanine in place of asparagine at position 190, leading to a sixfold increase of the enzyme's half-life at 80 degrees C (pH 5.6, 0.1 mM CaCl(2)).These results, combined with those of previous mutational analyses, show that the structural determinants contributing to the overall thermostability of BLA concentrate in domain B and at its interface with the central A domain. This region contains a triadic Ca-Na-Ca metal-binding site that appears extremely sensitive to any modification that may alter or reinforce the network of electrostatic interactions entrapping the metal ions. In particular, a loop spanning from residue 178 to 199, which undergoes pronounced conformational changes upon removal of calcium, appears to be the key feature for maintaining the enzyme structural integrity. Outside this region, most salt-bridges that were destroyed by mutations were found to be dispensable, except for an Asp121-Arg127 salt-bridge that contributes to the enhanced thermostability of BLA compared to other homologous bacterial alpha-amylases. Finally, our studies demonstrate that the natural resistance of BLA against high temperature is not optimized and can be enhanced further through various means, including the removal of possibly deamidating residues.  相似文献   

5.
The thermostability of xylanase XynR8 from uncultured Neocallimastigales rumen fungal was improved by combining random point mutagenesis with site-directed mutagenesis guided by rational design, and a thermostable variant, XynR8_VNE, was identified. This variant contained three amino acid substitutions, I38V, D137N and G151E, and showed an increased melting temperature of 8.8?°C in comparison with the wild type. At 65?°C the wild-type enzyme lost all of its activity after treatment for 30?min, but XynR8_VNE retained about 65?% activity. To elucidate the mechanism of thermal stabilization, three-dimensional structures were predicted for XynR8 and its variant. We found that the tight packing density and new salt bridge caused by the substitutions may be responsible for the improved thermostability. These three substitutions are located in the N-terminus, cord and α-helix domains, respectively. Hence, the stability of these three domains may be crucial for the thermostability of family 11 xylanases.  相似文献   

6.
Understanding the structural basis for protein thermostability is of considerable biological and biotechnological importance as exemplified by the industrial use of xylanases at elevated temperatures in the paper pulp and animal feed sectors. Here we have used directed protein evolution to generate hyperthermostable variants of a thermophilic GH11 xylanase, EvXyn11. The Gene Site Saturation Mutagenesis (GSSM) methodology employed assesses the influence on thermostability of all possible amino acid substitutions at each position in the primary structure of the target protein. The 15 most thermostable mutants, which generally clustered in the N-terminal region of the enzyme, had melting temperatures (Tm) 1-8 degrees C higher than the parent protein. Screening of a combinatorial library of the single mutants identified a hyperthermostable variant, EvXyn11TS, containing seven mutations. EvXyn11TS had a Tm approximately 25 degrees C higher than the parent enzyme while displaying catalytic properties that were similar to EvXyn11. The crystal structures of EvXyn11 and EvXyn11TS revealed an absence of substantial changes to identifiable intramolecular interactions. The only explicable mutations are T13F, which increases hydrophobic interactions, and S9P that apparently locks the conformation of a surface loop. This report shows that the molecular basis for the increased thermostability is extraordinarily subtle and points to the requirement for new tools to interrogate protein folding at non-ambient temperatures.  相似文献   

7.
The thermostability of maltogenic amylase from Thermus sp. strain IM6501 (ThMA) was improved greatly by random mutagenesis using DNA shuffling. Four rounds of DNA shuffling and subsequent recombination of the mutations produced the highly thermostable mutant enzyme ThMA-DM, which had a total of seven individual mutations. The seven amino acid substitutions in ThMA-DM were identified as R26Q, S169N, I333V, M375T, A398V, Q411L, and P453L. The optimal reaction temperature of the recombinant enzyme was 75°C, which was 15°C higher than that of wild-type ThMA, and the melting temperature, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry, was increased by 10.9°C. The half-life of ThMA-DM was 172 min at 80°C, a temperature at which wild-type ThMA was completely inactivated in less than 1 min. Six mutations that were generated during the evolutionary process did not significantly affect the specific activity of the enzyme, while the M375T mutation decreased activity to 23% of the wild-type level. The molecular interactions of the seven mutant residues that contributed to the increased thermostability of the mutant enzyme with other adjacent residues were examined by comparing the modeled tertiary structure of ThMA-DM with those of wild-type ThMA and related enzymes. The A398V and Q411L substitutions appeared to stabilize the enzyme by enhancing the interdomain hydrophobic interactions. The R26Q and P453L substitutions led potentially to the formation of genuine hydrogen bonds. M375T, which was located near the active site of ThMA, probably caused a conformational or dynamic change that enhanced thermostability but reduced the specific activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Previously, we calculated a consensus amino acid sequence from 13 homologous fungal phytases. A synthetic gene was constructed and recombinantly expressed. Surprisingly, consensus phytase-1 was 15-26 degrees C more thermostable than all parent phytases used in its design [Lehmann et al. (2000)Protein Eng., 13, 49-57]. In the present study, inclusion of six further phytase sequences in the amino acid sequence alignment resulted in the replacement of 38 amino acid residues in either one or both of the new consensus phytases-10 and -11. Since consensus phytase-10, again, was 7.4 degrees C more thermostable than consensus phytase-1, the thermostability effects of most of the 38 amino acid substitutions were tested by site-directed mutagenesis. Both stabilizing and destabilizing mutations were identified, but all affected the stability of the enzyme by <3 degrees C. The combination of all stabilizing amino acid exchanges in a multiple mutant of consensus phytase-1 increased the unfolding temperature from 78.0 to 88.5 degrees C. Likewise, back-mutation of four destabilizing amino acids and introduction of an additional stabilizing amino acid in consensus phytase-10 further increased the unfolding temperature from 85.4 to 90.4 degrees C. The thermostabilization achieved is the result of a combination of slight improvements from multiple amino acid exchanges rather than being the effect of a single or of just a few dominating mutations that have been introduced by chance. The present findings support the general validity of the consensus concept for thermostability engineering of proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Buettner K  Hertel TC  Pietzsch M 《Amino acids》2012,42(2-3):987-996
The thermostability of microbial transglutaminase (MTG) of Streptomyces mobaraensis was further improved by saturation mutagenesis and DNA-shuffling. High-throughput screening was used to identify clones with increased thermostability at 55°C. Saturation mutagenesis was performed at seven "hot spots", previously evolved by random mutagenesis. Mutations at four positions (2, 23, 269, and 294) led to higher thermostability. The variants with single amino acid exchanges comprising the highest thermostabilities were combined by DNA-shuffling. A library of 1,500 clones was screened and variants showing the highest ratio of activities after incubation for 30 min at 55°C relative to a control at 37°C were selected. 116 mutants of this library showed an increased thermostability and 2 clones per deep well plate were sequenced (35 clones). 13 clones showed only the desired sites without additional point mutations and eight variants were purified and characterized. The most thermostable mutant (triple mutant S23V-Y24N-K294L) exhibited a 12-fold higher half-life at 60°C and a 10-fold higher half-life at 50°C compared to the unmodified recombinant wild-type enzyme. From the characterization of different triple mutants differing only in one amino acid residue, it can be concluded that position 294 is especially important for thermostabilization. The simultaneous exchange of amino acids at sites 23, 24, 269 and 289 resulted in a MTG-variant with nearly twofold higher specific activity and a temperature optimum of 55°C. A triple mutant with amino acid substitutions at sites 2, 289 and 294 exhibits a temperature optimum of 60°C, which is 10°C higher than that of the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The thermal stability and catalytic activity of phospholipase A(1) from Serratia sp. strain MK1 were improved by evolutionary molecular engineering. Two thermostable mutants were isolated after sequential rounds of error-prone PCR performed to introduce random mutations and filter-based screening of the resultant mutant library; we determined that these mutants had six (mutant TA3) and seven (mutant TA13) amino acid substitutions. Different types of substitutions were found in the two mutants, and these substitutions resulted in an increase in nonpolar residues (mutant TA3) or in differences between side chains for polar or charged residues (mutant TA13). The wild-type and mutant enzymes were purified, and the effect of temperature on the stability and catalytic activity of the enzymes was investigated. The melting temperatures of the TA3 and TA13 enzymes were increased by 7 and 11 degrees C, respectively, compared with the melting temperature of the wild-type enzyme. Thus, we found that evolutionary molecular engineering was an effective and efficient approach for increasing thermostability without compromising enzyme activity.  相似文献   

11.
Oh KH  Nam SH  Kim HS 《Protein engineering》2002,15(8):689-695
N-Carbamyl-D-amino acid amidohydrolase (N-carbamoylase), which is currently employed in the industrial production of unnatural D-amino acid in conjunction with D-hydantoinase, has low oxidative and thermostability. We attempted the simultaneous improvement of the oxidative and thermostability of N-carbamoylase from Agrobacterium tumefaciens NRRL B11291 by directed evolution using DNA shuffling. In a second generation of evolution, the best mutant 2S3 with improved oxidative and thermostability was selected, purified and characterized. The temperature at which 50% of the initial activity remains after incubation for 30 min was 73 degrees C for 2S3, whereas it was 61 degrees C for wild-type enzyme. Treatment of wild-type enzyme with 0.2 mM hydrogen peroxide for 30 min at 25 degrees C resulted in a complete loss of activity, but 2S3 retained about 79% of the initial activity under the same conditions. The K(m) value of 2S3 was estimated to be similar to that of wild-type enzyme; however k(cat) was decreased, leading to a slightly reduced value of k(cat)/K(m), compared with wild-type enzyme. DNA sequence analysis revealed that six amino acid residues were changed in 2S3 and substitutions included Q23L, V40A, H58Y, G75S, M184L and T262A. The stabilizing effects of each amino acid residue were investigated by incorporating mutations individually into wild-type enzyme. Q23L, H58Y, M184L and T262A were found to enhance both oxidative and thermostability of the enzyme and of them, T262A showed the most significant effect. V40A and G75S gave rise to an increase only in oxidative stability. The positions of the mutated amino acid residues were identified in the structure of N-carbamoylase from Agrobacterium sp. KNK 712 and structural analysis of the stabilizing effects of each amino acid substitution was also carried out.  相似文献   

12.
An evolutionary route to xylanase process fitness   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Directed evolution technologies were used to selectively improve the stability of an enzyme without compromising its catalytic activity. In particular, this article describes the tandem use of two evolution strategies to evolve a xylanase, rendering it tolerant to temperatures in excess of 90 degrees C. A library of all possible 19 amino acid substitutions at each residue position was generated and screened for activity after a temperature challenge. Nine single amino acid residue changes were identified that enhanced thermostability. All 512 possible combinatorial variants of the nine mutations were then generated and screened for improved thermal tolerance under stringent conditions. The screen yielded eleven variants with substantially improved thermal tolerance. Denaturation temperature transition midpoints were increased from 61 degrees C to as high as 96 degrees C. The use of two evolution strategies in combination enabled the rapid discovery of the enzyme variant with the highest degree of fitness (greater thermal tolerance and activity relative to the wild-type parent).  相似文献   

13.
Limited thermostability of antibiotic resistance markers has restricted genetic research in the field of extremely thermophilic Archaea and bacteria. In this study, we used directed evolution and selection in the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus HB27 to find thermostable variants of a bleomycin-binding protein from the mesophilic bacterium Streptoalloteichus hindustanus. In a single selection round, we identified eight clones bearing five types of double mutated genes that provided T. thermophilus transformants with bleomycin resistance at 77 degrees C, while the wild-type gene could only do so up to 65 degrees C. Only six different amino acid positions were altered, three of which were glycine residues. All variant proteins were produced in Escherichia coli and analyzed biochemically for thermal stability and functionality at high temperature. A synthetic mutant resistance gene with low GC content was designed that combined four substitutions. The encoded protein showed up to 17 degrees C increased thermostability and unfolded at 85 degrees C in the absence of bleomycin, whereas in its presence the protein unfolded at 100 degrees C. Despite these highly thermophilic properties, this mutant was still able to function normally at mesophilic temperatures in vivo. The mutant protein was co-crystallized with bleomycin, and the structure of the binary complex was determined to a resolution of 1.5 A. Detailed structural analysis revealed possible molecular mechanisms of thermostabilization and enhanced antibiotic binding, which included the introduction of an intersubunit hydrogen bond network, improved hydrophobic packing of surface indentations, reduction of loop flexibility, and alpha-helix stabilization. The potential applicability of the thermostable selection marker is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Firefly luciferase catalyses a two-step reaction, using ATP-Mg2+, firefly luciferin and molecular oxygen as substrates, leading to the efficient emission of yellow-green light. We report the identification of novel luciferase mutants which combine improved pH-tolerance and thermostability and that retain the specific activity of the wild-type enzyme. These were identified by the mutagenesis of solvent-exposed non-conserved hydrophobic amino acids to hydrophilic residues in Photinus pyralis firefly luciferase followed by in vivo activity screening. Mutants F14R, L35Q, V182K, I232K and F465R were found to be the preferred substitutions at the respective positions. The effects of these amino acid replacements are additive, since combination of the five substitutions produced an enzyme with greatly improved pH-tolerance and stability up to 45 degrees C. All mutants, including the mutant with all five substitutions, showed neither a decrease in specific activity relative to the recombinant wild-type enzyme, nor any substantial differences in kinetic constants. It is envisaged that the combined mutant will be superior to wild-type luciferase for many in vitro and in vivo applications.  相似文献   

15.
The alpha-amylase of Bacillus licheniformis (BLA) is stable and active at high temperature. More than 80% of its activity is retained after heat treatment at 90 degrees C for 30 min, and the optimum temperature for its activity is 80-85 degrees C. In contrast, the alpha-amylase of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens (BAA), the amino acid sequence of which shows 80% homology with that of BLA, is rapidly inactivated at 90 degrees C. Various chimeric genes were constructed from the structural genes for the two enzymes, and their products were analyzed for stability as to irreversible thermoinactivation. Two regions in the amino acid sequence of BLA comprising Gln178 (region I) and the 255th-270th residues (region II), respectively, were shown to determine the thermostability of BLA. Region I plays a major role in determining the thermostability. By means of site-directed mutagenesis of the BAA gene, deletion of Arg176 and Gly177 in region I and substitutions of alanine for Lys269 and aspartic acid for Asn266 in region II were shown to be responsible for the enhancement of the thermostability. Mutant BAAs containing the above deletion and substitutions showed almost the same thermostability as BLA as to irreversible thermoinactivation. Nevertheless, the mutant BAAs showed a temperature optimum as low as that of BAA (65 degrees C), indicating that they are still susceptible to reversible inactivation at temperatures higher than 65 degrees C.  相似文献   

16.
Tang SY  Le QT  Shim JH  Yang SJ  Auh JH  Park C  Park KH 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(14):3335-3345
DNA shuffling was used to improve the thermostability of maltogenic amylase from Bacillus thermoalkalophilus ET2. Two highly thermostable mutants, III-1 and III-2, were generated after three rounds of shuffling and recombination of mutations. Their optimal reaction temperatures were all 80 degrees C, which was 10 degrees C higher than that of the wild-type. The mutant enzyme III-1 carried seven mutations: N147D, F195L, N263S, D311G, A344V, F397S, and N508D. The half-life of III-1 was about 20 times greater than that of the wild-type at 78 degrees C. The mutant enzyme III-2 carried M375T in addition to the mutations in III-1, which was responsible for the decrease in specific activity. The half-life of III-2 was 568 min while that of the wild-type was < 1 min at 80 degrees C. The melting temperatures of III-1 and III-2, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry, increased by 6.1 degrees C and 11.4 degrees C, respectively. Hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic interaction, electrostatic interaction, proper packing, and deamidation were predicted as the mechanisms for the enhancement of thermostability in the enzymes with the mutations.  相似文献   

17.
Prolyl endopeptidase is the only endopeptidase that specifically cleaves peptides at proline residues. Although this unique specificity is advantageous for application in protein chemistry, the stability of the enzyme is lower than those of commonly used peptidases such as subtilisin and trypsin. Therefore, we attempted to apply a directed evolution system to improve the thermostability of the enzyme. First, an efficient expression system for the enzyme in Escherichia coli was established using the prolyl endopeptidase gene from Flavobacterium meningosepticum. Then, a method for screening thermostable variants was developed by combining heat treatment with active staining on membrane filters. Random mutagenesis by error-prone PCR and screening was repeated three times, and as a result the thermostability of the enzyme was increased step by step as the amino acid substitutions accumulated. The most thermostable mutant obtained after the third cycle, PEP-407, showed a half-life of 42 min at 60 degrees C, which was 60 times longer than that of the wild-type enzyme. The thermostable mutant was also more stable with a high concentration of glycerol, which is a necessary condition for in vitro amidation.  相似文献   

18.
Fructosyl peptide oxidases are valuable for the determination of glycoproteins such as hemoglobin A1c. For practical use in clinical diagnosis, we applied directed evolution to improve the thermostability of these enzymes. After two rounds of random mutagenesis and high-throughput screening, six thermostabilizing amino acid substitutions were identified. Therefore, site-directed and cassette mutageneses were applied to combine these six stabilizing mutations. The simultaneous mutants showed that the stabilizing effect of the amino acid replacement was cumulative. The sextuple mutant enzyme, R94K/G184D/F265L/N272D/H302R/H388Y, had a half-life of thermal inactivation at 50°C that was 79.8-fold longer than that of the parental fructosyl peptide oxidase. The thermostable variants also showed increased tolerance to digestion by a protease. The sextuple mutant enzyme did not lose its activity on incubation with neutral protease, while the wild-type enzyme almost completely lost its activity. Furthermore, three amino acid substitutions were introduced into another fructosyl peptide oxidase with a different substrate specificity. The half-life of inactivation at 50°C was 3.61-fold longer than that of the parent enzyme. These engineered fructosyl peptide oxidases will be useful for industrial application to clinical diagnosis.  相似文献   

19.
We used directed evolution to enhance the thermostability of glycosyl hydrolase family-11 xylanase from Bacillus subtilis. By combining random point mutagenesis, saturation mutagenesis, and DNA shuffling, a thermostable variant, Xyl(st), was identified which contained three amino acid substitutions: Q7H, N8F, and S179C. The half-inactivation temperature (the midpoint of the melting curves) for the Xyl(st) variant compared with the wild-type enzyme after incubation for 10 min was elevated from 58 to 68 degrees C. At 60 degrees C the wild-type enzyme was inactivated within 5 min, but Xyl(st) retained full activity for at least 2 h. The stabilization was accompanied by evidence of thermophilicity; that is, an increase in the optimal reaction temperature from 55 to 65 degrees C and lower activity at low temperatures and higher activity at higher temperatures relative to wild type. To elucidate the mechanism of thermal stabilization, three-dimensional structures were determined for the wild-type and Xyl(st) enzymes. A cavity was identified around Gln-7/Asn-8 in wild type that was filled with bulky, hydrophobic residues in Xyl(st). This site was not identified by previous approaches, but directed evolution identified the region as a weak point. Formation of an intermolecular disulfide bridge via Cys-179 was observed between monomers in Xyl(st). However, the stability was essentially the same in the presence and absence of a reducing agent, indicating that the increased hydrophobicity around the Cys-179 accounted for the stability.  相似文献   

20.
The thermal stability and catalytic activity of phospholipase A1 from Serratia sp. strain MK1 were improved by evolutionary molecular engineering. Two thermostable mutants were isolated after sequential rounds of error-prone PCR performed to introduce random mutations and filter-based screening of the resultant mutant library; we determined that these mutants had six (mutant TA3) and seven (mutant TA13) amino acid substitutions. Different types of substitutions were found in the two mutants, and these substitutions resulted in an increase in nonploar residues (mutant TA3) or in differences between side chains for polar or charged residues (mutant TA13). The wild-type and mutant enzymes were purified, and the effect of temperature on the stability and catalytic activity of the enzymes was investigated. The melting temperatures of the TA3 and TA13 enzymes were increased by 7 and 11°C, respectively, compared with the melting temperature of the wild-type enzyme. Thus, we found that evolutionary molecular engineering was an effective and efficient approach for increasing thermostability without compromising enzyme activity.  相似文献   

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