Abstract

The split trehalase biosensor has potential as a versatile diagnostic technology. Split enzymes are engineered proteins, divided into inactive fragments, which can reassemble and regain activity when brought together by an analyte. The split TreA biosensor requires no sample processing and produces stable signals (in the form of glucose). Split trehalase reagents can function in blood, but periplasmic trehalase of E.coli requires blood acidification for maximal activity. The objective of this study was to obtain split trehalase with near physiological pH optimum. For this purpose, periplasmic trehalases of Cellvibrio spp. with higher activity at neutral pH, were split in analogy with the E. coli TreA into hood and catalytic domains. However, these split trehalases displayed self-complementation due to spontaneous reassembly. In contrast, when catalytic domains of Cellvibrio trehalases were combined with E.coli hood domains, these hybrids displayed conditional complementation capacity when split trehalase fragments fused to immunoglobulin-binding protein G (STIGA) were used to quantify immunoglobulin concentrations. Other hybrid combinations of Cellvibrio spp. had increased activity compared to the cognate pairs, albeit with strong self-complementation. A mutagenesis analysis of residues responsible for self-complementation led to uncoupling of self-complementation from allostery. The Michaelis-Menten kinetics of Cellvibrio enzymes and fragment pairs confirmed improved activity of a mutated hybrid pair of Cellvibrio hood and catalytic domains at physiological pH. In conclusion, the improvements in pH optimum and activity, demonstrated with STIGA, can now be leveraged to enhance other variations of the split trehalase biosensor platform, broadening its utility for testing clinical samples.

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