Abstract

Through millions of years of the evolutionary journey, contemporary enzymes observed in extant metabolic pathways have evolved to become specialized, in contrast to their ancestors, which displayed promiscuous activities with wider substrate specificities. However, there remain critical gaps in our understanding of how these early enzymes could show such catalytic versatility despite lacking the complex three-dimensional folds of the existing modern-day enzymes. Herein, we report the emergence of a promiscuous catalytic triad by short amyloid peptide based nanofibers that access paracrystalline folds of β-sheets to expose three residues (lysine, imidazole, and tyrosine) toward solvent. The ordered folded nanostructures could simultaneously catalyze two metabolically relevant chemical transformations via C-O and C-C bond manipulations, displaying both hydrolase and retro-aldolase-like activities. Further, the latent catalytic capabilities of the short peptide based promiscuous folds also helped in processing a cascade transformation, suggesting the important role they might have played in protometabolism and early evolutionary processes.

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