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Substitutions of Thr-103-Ile and Trp-138-Gly in amidase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa are responsible for altered kinetic properties and enzyme instability
Authors:Amin Karmali  Rita Pacheco  Renée Tata  Paul Brown
Institution:(1) Laboratório de Engenharia Bioquímica do Departamento de Engenharia Química do Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa, Rua Conselheiro Emídio Navarro, 1900 Lisboa, Portugal;(2) Randall Centre for Molecular Mechanisms of Cell Functions, King’s College London. Hunt’s House, Guys Campus, St. Thomas Street, SE11UL London, United Kingdom
Abstract:Pseudomonas aeruginosa Ph1 is a mutant strain derived from strain AI3. The strain AI3 is able to use acetanilide as a carbon source through a mutation (T103I) in the amiE gene that encodes an aliphatic amidase (EC 3.5.1.4). The mutations in the amiE gene have been identified (Thr103Ile and Trp138Gly) by direct sequencing of PCR-amplified mutant gene from strain Ph1 and confirmed by sequencing the cloned PCR-amplified gene. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to alter the wild-type amidase gene at position 138 for Gly. The wild-type and mutant amidase genes (W138G, T103I-W138G, and T103I) were cloned into an expression vector and these enzymes were purified by affinity chromatography on epoxy-activated Sepharose 6B-acetamide/phenylacetamide followed by gel filtration chromatography. Altered amidases revealed several differences in kinetic properties, namely, in substrate specificity, sensitivity to urea, optimum pH, and enzyme stability, compared with the wild-type enzyme. The W138G enzyme acted on acetamide, acrylamide, phenylacetamide, and p-nitrophenylacetamide, whereas the double mutant (W138G and T103I) amidase acted only on p-nitrophenylacetamide and phenylacetamide. On the other hand, the T103I enzyme acted on p-nitroacetanilide and acetamide. The heat stability of altered enzymes revealed that they were less thermostable than the wild-type enzyme, as the mutant (W138G and W138G-T103I) enzymes exhibited t 1/2 values of 7.0 and 1.5 min at 55°C, respectively. The double substitution T103I and W138G on the amidase molecule was responsible for increased instabiliby due to a conformational change in the enzyme molecule as detected by monoclonal antibodies. This conformational change in altered amidase did not alter its M r value and monoclonal antibodies reacted differently with the active and inactive T103I-W138G amidase.
Keywords:Wild-type amidase  Ph1 mutant amidase            Pseudomonas aeruginosa            altered kinetic properties  enzyme instability  site-directed mutagenesis
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