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1.
Enzymes are widely applied in various industrial applications and processes, including the food and beverage, animal feed, textile, detergent and medical industries. Enzymes screened from natural origins are often engineered before entering the market place because their native forms do not meet the requirements for industrial application. Protein engineering is concerned with the design and construction of novel enzymes with tailored functional properties, including stability, catalytic activity, reaction product inhibition and substrate specificity. Two broad approaches have been used for enzyme engineering, namely, rational design and directed evolution. The powerful and revolutionary techniques so far developed for protein engineering provide excellent opportunities for the design of industrial enzymes with specific properties and production of high-value products at lower production costs. The present review seeks to highlight the major fields of enzyme application and to provide an updated overview on previous protein engineering studies wherein natural enzymes were modified to meet the operational conditions required for industrial application.  相似文献   

2.
Since wild-type enzymes do not always have the properties needed for various applications, enzymes are often engineered to obtain desirable properties through protein engineering techniques. In the past decade, complementary to the widely used rational protein design and directed evolution techniques, noncanonical amino acid incorporation (NCAAI) has become a new and effective protein engineering technique. Recently, NCAAI has been used to improve intrinsic functions of proteins, such as enzymes and fluorescent proteins, beyond the capacities obtained with natural amino acids. Herein, recent progress on improving enzyme properties through NCAAI in vivo is reviewed and the challenges of current approaches and future directions are also discussed. To date, both NCAAI methods-residue- and site-specific incorporation-have been primarily used to improve the catalytic turnover number and substrate binding affinity of enzymes. Numerous strategies used to minimize structural perturbation and stability loss of a target enzyme upon NCAAI are also explored. Considering the generality of NCAAI incorporation, we expect its application could be expanded to improve other enzyme properties, such as substrate specificity and solvent resistance in the near future.  相似文献   

3.
Recent developments to modify enzymes for use in organic synthesis have targeted several areas. These include altering the reaction mechanism of the enzyme to catalyse new reactions, switching substrate specificity, expanding substrate specificity, and improving substrate specificity, such as enantioselectivity in kinetic resolutions. Such modifications can be achieved either by rational redesign, which requires knowledge of the enzyme structure, or by random mutagenesis methods followed by screening. Both strategies of enzyme engineering can be successful and are very useful for improving the utility of enzymes for applied catalysis. Several examples illustrating these concepts in a variety of enzyme classes have appeared recently.  相似文献   

4.
Protein engineering constitutes a powerful tool for generating novel proteins that serve as catalysts to induce selective chemical and biological transformations that would not otherwise be possible. Protocols that are commonly employed for altering the substrate specificity and selectivity profiles by mutating known enzymes include rational and random methods as well as techniques that entail evolution, selection and screening. Proteins identified by these techniques play important roles in a variety of industrial and medicinal applications and in the study of protein structure-function relationships. Herein we present a critical overview of methods for creating new functional proteins having altered specificity profiles and some practical case studies in which these techniques have been applied to solving problems in synthetic and medicinal chemistry and to elucidating enzyme function and biological pathways.  相似文献   

5.
Substrate-assisted catalysis (SAC) is the process by which a functional group in a substrate contributes to catalysis by an enzyme. SAC has been demonstrated for representatives of three major enzyme classes: serine proteases, GTPases, and type II restriction endonucleases, as well as lysozyme and hexose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase. Moreover, structure-based predictions of SAC have been made for many additional enzymes. Examples of SAC include both naturally occurring enzymes such as type II restriction endonucleases as well as engineered enzymes including serine proteases. In the latter case, a functional group from a substrate can substitute for a catalytic residue replaced by site-directed mutagenesis. From a protein engineering perspective, SAC provides a strategy for drastically changing enzyme substrate specificity or even the reaction catalyzed. From a biological viewpoint, SAC contributes significantly to the activity of some enzymes and may represent a functional intermediate in the evolution of catalysis. This review focuses on advances in engineering enzyme specificity and activity by SAC, together with the biological significance of this phenomenon.  相似文献   

6.
Disaccharide phosphorylases are increasingly applied for glycoside synthesis, since they are very regiospecific and use cheap and easy to obtain donor substrates. A promising enzyme is cellobiose phosphorylase (CP), which was discovered more than 50 years ago. Many other bacterial CP enzymes have since then been characterized, cloned and applied for glycoside synthesis. However, the general application of wild-type CP for glycoside synthesis is hampered by its relatively narrow substrate specificity. Recently we have taken some successful efforts to broaden the substrate specificity of Cellulomonas uda CP by directed evolution and protein engineering. This review will give an overview of the obtained results and address the applicability of the engineered CP enzymes for glycoside synthesis. CP is the first example of an extensively engineered disaccharide phosphorylase, and may provide valuable information for protein engineering of other phosphorylase enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Disaccharide phosphorylases are increasingly applied for glycoside synthesis, since they are very regiospecific and use cheap and easy to obtain donor substrates. A promising enzyme is cellobiose phosphorylase (CP), which was discovered more than 50 years ago. Many other bacterial CP enzymes have since then been characterized, cloned and applied for glycoside synthesis. However, the general application of wild-type CP for glycoside synthesis is hampered by its relatively narrow substrate specificity. Recently we have taken some successful efforts to broaden the substrate specificity of Cellulomonas uda CP by directed evolution and protein engineering. This review will give an overview of the obtained results and address the applicability of the engineered CP enzymes for glycoside synthesis. CP is the first example of an extensively engineered disaccharide phosphorylase, and may provide valuable information for protein engineering of other phosphorylase enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Bacillus lipases are industrially attractive enzymes due to their broad substrate specificity and optimum alkaline pH. However, narrow temperature range of action and low thermostability restrain their optimal use and thus, necessitate attention. Several laboratories are engaged in protein engineering of Bacillus lipases to generate variants with improved attributes for decades using techniques such as directed evolution or rational design. This review summarizes the effect of mutations on the conformational changes through in silico modeling and their manifestation with respect to various biochemical parameters. Various studies have been put together to develop a perspective on the molecular basis of biocatalysis of lipases holding industrial importance.  相似文献   

9.
Primordial enzymes are proposed to possess broad specificities. Through divergence and evolution, enzymes have been refined to exhibit specificity towards one reaction or substrate, and are thus commonly assumed as “specialists”. However, some enzymes are “generalists” that catalyze a range of substrates and reactions. This property has been defined as enzyme promiscuity and is of great importance for the evolution of new functions. The promiscuities of two enzymes, namely glycerol dehydratase and diol dehydratase, were herein exploited for catalyzing long-chain polyols, including 1,2-butanediol, 1,2,4-butanetriol, erythritol, 1,2-pentanediol, 1,2,5-pentanetriol, and 1,2,6-hexanetriol. The specific activities required for catalyzing these six long-chain polyols were studied via in vitro enzyme assays, and the catalytic efficiencies were increased through protein engineering. The promiscuous functions were subsequently applied in vivo to establish 1,4-butanediol pathways from lignocellulose derived compounds, including xylose and erythritol. In addition, a pathway for 1-pentanol production from 1,2-pentanediol was also constructed. The results suggest that exploiting enzyme promiscuity is promising for exploring new catalysts, which would expand the repertoire of genetic elements available to synthetic biology and may provide a starting point for designing and engineering novel pathways for valuable chemicals.  相似文献   

10.
We are interested in constructing a model for the substrate-binding site of fatty acid elongase-1 3-ketoacyl CoA synthase (FAE1 KCS), the enzyme responsible for production of very long chain fatty acids of plant seed oils. Arabidopsis thaliana and Brassica napus FAE1 KCS enzymes are highly homologous but the seed oil content of these plants suggests that their substrate specificities differ with respect to acyl chain length. We used in vivo and in vitro assays of Saccharomyces cerevisiae-expressed FAE1 KCSs to demonstrate that the B. napus FAE1 KCS enzyme favors longer chain acyl substrates than the A. thaliana enzyme. Domains/residues responsible for substrate specificity were investigated by determining catalytic activity and substrate specificity of chimeric enzymes of A. thaliana and B. napus FAE1 KCS. The N-terminal region, excluding the transmembrane domain, was shown to be involved in substrate specificity. One chimeric enzyme that included A. thaliana sequence from the N terminus to residue 114 and B. napus sequence from residue 115 to the C terminus had substrate specificity similar to that of A. thaliana FAE1 KCS. However, a K92R substitution in this chimeric enzyme changed the specificity to that of the B. napus enzyme without loss of catalytic activity. Thus, this study was successful in identifying a domain involved in determining substrate specificity in FAE1 KCS and in engineering an enzyme with novel activity.  相似文献   

11.
Many research groups successfully rely on whole-gene random mutagenesis and recombination approaches for the directed evolution of enzymes. Recent advances in enzyme engineering have used a combination of these random methods of directed evolution with elements of rational enzyme modification to successfully by-pass certain limitations of both directed evolution and rational design. Semi-rational approaches that target multiple, specific residues to mutate on the basis of prior structural or functional knowledge create 'smart' libraries that are more likely to yield positive results. Efficient sampling of mutations likely to affect enzyme function has been conducted both experimentally and, on a much greater scale, computationally, with remarkable improvements in substrate selectivity and specificity and in the de novo design of enzyme activities within scaffolds of known structure.  相似文献   

12.
The prolyl peptidase that removes the tetra-peptide of pro-transglutaminase was purified from Streptomyces mobaraensis mycelia. The substrate specificity of the enzyme using synthetic peptide substrates showed proline-specific activity with not only tripeptidyl peptidase activity, but also tetrapeptidyl peptidase activity. However, the enzyme had no other exo- and endo-activities. This substrate specificity is different from proline specific peptidases so far reported. The enzyme gene was cloned, based on the direct N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified enzyme, and the entire nucleotide sequence of the coding region was determined. The deduced amino acid sequence revealed an N-terminal signal peptide sequence (33 amino acids) followed by the mature protein comprising 444 amino acid residues. This enzyme shows no remarkable homology with enzymes belonging to the prolyl oligopeptidase family, but has about 65% identity with three tripeptidyl peptidases from Streptomyces lividans, Streptomyces coelicolor, and Streptomyces avermitilis. Based on its substrate specificity, a new name, "prolyl tri/tetra-peptidyl aminopeptidase," is proposed for the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
There are two aspects of enzyme specificity: recognition of the substrate by the formation of an enzyme-substrate compound and recognition of the transition state by catalysis of the reaction. Kinetic studies with inactive substrate analogues as potential competitive inhibitors, and structural studies of their compounds with enzymes, give information about the first of these specificity elements. Comparative kinetic studies with alternative substrates give information about both. There is a great deal of information from kinetic studies of dehydrogenases about the coenzyme specificities, substrate specificities and stereospecificities and mechanisms of these enzymes, particularly alcohol dehydrogenases. Recent X-ray diffraction studies of dehydrogenases have given insight into the molecular basis of some of their specificity elements. An attempt is made to correlate the available kinetic and structural data for alcohol and lactate dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract

Enzyme promiscuity can be defined as the capability of enzymes to catalyse side reaction in addition to its main reaction. The side reaction of an enzyme is termed as promiscuous or sometimes as the “darker” side of enzyme cross-reactivity/specificity. This unique property of enzyme allows organisms to adapt under varying environmental conditions. Promiscuous enzymes can modify their catalytic activities with altered substrates and can adjust their catalytic and kinetic mechanisms according to substrate properties. This group of enzymes evolved from ancestral proteins found in primitive organisms like archaea that survive under extreme environmental conditions. Such ancestral proteins possessed the potential to catalyse a wide range of reactions at low levels, hence create families or superfamilies of highly specialized enzymes. Further, some enzymes were identified which have non-catalytic functions in addition to their major catalytic activities. These enzymes are referred to as moonlighting enzymes. The study of these enzymes will provide important information regarding enzyme evolution and will help in optimizing protein engineering applications.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Growing pharmaceutical interest in benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIA) coupled with their chemical complexity make metabolic engineering of microbes to create alternative platforms of production an increasingly attractive proposition. However, precise knowledge of rate‐limiting enzymes and negative feedback inhibition by end‐products of BIA metabolism is of paramount importance for this emerging field of synthetic biology. In this work we report the structural characterization of (S)‐norcoclaurine‐6‐O‐methyltransferase (6OMT), a key rate‐limiting step enzyme involved in the synthesis of reticuline, the final intermediate to be shared between the different end‐products of BIA metabolism, such as morphine, papaverine, berberine and sanguinarine. Four different crystal structures of the enzyme from Thalictrum flavum (Tf 6OMT) were solved: the apoenzyme, the complex with S‐adenosyl‐l ‐homocysteine (SAH), the complexe with SAH and the substrate and the complex with SAH and a feedback inhibitor, sanguinarine. The Tf 6OMT structural study provides a molecular understanding of its substrate specificity, active site structure and reaction mechanism. This study also clarifies the inhibition of Tf 6OMT by previously suggested feedback inhibitors. It reveals its high and time‐dependent sensitivity toward sanguinarine.  相似文献   

17.
The binding between an enzyme and its substrate is highly specific, despite the fact that many different enzymes show significant sequence and structure similarity. There must be, then, substrate specificity-determining residues that enable different enzymes to recognize their unique substrates. We reason that a coordinated, not independent, action of both conserved and non-conserved residues determine enzymatic activity and specificity. Here, we present a surface patch ranking (SPR) method for in silico discovery of substrate specificity-determining residue clusters by exploring both sequence conservation and correlated mutations. As case studies we apply SPR to several highly homologous enzymatic protein pairs, such as guanylyl versus adenylyl cyclases, lactate versus malate dehydrogenases, and trypsin versus chymotrypsin. Without using experimental data, we predict several single and multi-residue clusters that are consistent with previous mutagenesis experimental results. Most single-residue clusters are directly involved in enzyme-substrate interactions, whereas multi-residue clusters are vital for domain-domain and regulator-enzyme interactions, indicating their complementary role in specificity determination. These results demonstrate that SPR may help the selection of target residues for mutagenesis experiments and, thus, focus rational drug design, protein engineering, and functional annotation to the relevant regions of a protein.  相似文献   

18.
Studies on the glutamine substrate specificities of human plasma factor XIIIa and guinea pig liver transglutaminase have been made using variants of the synthetic peptide substrate, Ser-Val-Leu-Ser-Leu-Ser-Gln-Ser-Lys-Val-Leu-Pro-Val-Pro-Glu. The sequence of this effective peptide substrate corresponds to the primary site of factor XIIIa-catalyzed amine incorporation into beta-casein, the most sensitive known macromolecular substrate for this enzyme (Gorman, J.J., and Folk, J.E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 419-427). Variations in specificity observed with factor XIIIa for peptides containing single substitutions and multiple substitutions in this sequence are indications that several important determinants for enzyme recognition are contained therein. Among these are several of the hydrophobic amino acid residues and the lysine residue. Less pronounced changes in specificity occur with the liver enzyme and the differences in effects of the various substitutions reveal important differences in specificity requirements of factor XIIIa and the liver enzyme. Comparisons of the activities of the enzymes toward the synthetic peptides to their activities toward macromolecular substrates suggest that higher order macromolecular structural features contribute to specificity.  相似文献   

19.
Homoisocitrate dehydrogenase is involved in the alpha-aminoadipate pathway of biosynthesis of l-lysine in fungi, yeast, some prokaryotic bacteria, and archaea. This enzyme catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of (2R,3S)-homoisocitrate into 2-oxoadipate using NAD(+) as a coenzyme. Substrate specificity of two homoisocitrate dehydrogenases derived from Deinococcus radiodurans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae was analyzed using a series of synthetic substrate analogs, which indicated a relatively broad substrate specificity of these enzymes. Based on the substrate specificity, 3-hydroxyalkylidene- and 3-carboxyalkylidenemalate derivatives were designed as a specific inhibitor for homoisocitrate dehydrogenase. The synthetic inhibitors showed a moderate competitive inhibitory activity and (R,Z)-3-carboxypropylidenemalate was the most inhibitory among the synthesized inhibitors. Therefore, homoisocitrate dehydrogenase appeared to recognize preferentially an extended conformation of homoisocitrate.  相似文献   

20.
A novel method for assaying the substrate specificity of proteolytic enzymes has been developed utilizing ligand-enhanced lanthanide ion fluorescence. This approach was used to develop peptide libraries to probe substrate specificity in the prime sites of proteolytic enzymes. A positional scanning synthetic combinatorial library of fluorogenic peptides was synthesized and used to determine the extended prime site specificity of bovine -chymotrypsin. The enzyme showed a preference for Lys and Arg in the P1′ position, rather broad specificity in the P2′ position, and a slight Arg specificity in the P3′ position. The specificity profile of bovine -chymotrypsin agrees well with previously reported data, and the substrate library reported herein should provide valuable information about the prime site substrate specificities of other proteolytic enzymes as well. Furthermore, the continuous fluorogenic assay described may prove useful in analyzing the activity of other hydrolytic enzymes.  相似文献   

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