Abstract

Site-directed mutagenesis (SDM), an indispensable method in molecular biology and protein engineering, is rather time-consuming and laborious. Protein engineering, especially that of enzymes, nowadays increasingly relies on rational design approaches in which both SDM and protein expression are the bottlenecks because they are generally based on the recombinant DNA technology. Here, we developed a new PCR-based mutagenesis method, DiRect, that achieves high performance in product quality (≥99% substitution) without recombinant DNA technology. We applied DiRect in combination with a cell-free protein expression system to an industrially relevant enzyme, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent 3-quinuclidinone reductase from Rhodotorula rubra. In a single round of screening, 90 newly designed mutant proteins were produced within two days, and an unreported mutant (Q135I) exhibiting much higher thermostability than the wild-type enzyme was successfully identified within one extra day. Thus, DiRect is a simple, efficient, and potentially scalable SDM method.

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