Abstract

Site-specific saturation mutagenesis within enzyme active sites can radically alter reaction specificity, though often with a trade-off in stability. Extending saturation mutagenesis with a range of noncanonical amino acids (ncAA) potentially increases the ability to improve activity and stability simultaneously. Previously, an Escherichia coli transketolase variant (S385Y/D469T/R520Q) was evolved to accept aromatic aldehydes not converted by wild-type. The aromatic residue Y385 was critical to the new acceptor substrate binding, and so was explored here beyond the natural aromatic residues, to probe side chain structure and electronics effects on enzyme function and stability. A series of five variants introduced decreasing aromatic ring electron density at position 385 in the order para-aminophenylalanine (pAMF), tyrosine (Y), phenylalanine (F), para-cyanophenylalanine (pCNF) and para-nitrophenylalanine (pNTF), and simultaneously modified the hydrogen-bonding potential of the aromatic substituent from accepting to donating. The fine-tuning of residue 385 yielded variants with a 43-fold increase in specific activity for 50mm 3-HBA and 100% increased kcat (pCNF), 290% improvement in Km (pNTF), 240% improvement in kcat /Km (pAMF) and decreased substrate inhibition relative to Y. Structural modelling suggested switching of the ring-substituted functional group, from donating to accepting, stabilised a helix-turn (D259-H261) through an intersubunit H-bond with G262, to give a 7.8°C increase in the thermal transition mid-point, Tm , and improved packing of pAMF. This is one of the first examples in which both catalytic activity and stability are simultaneously improved via site-specific ncAA incorporation into an enzyme active site, and further demonstrates the benefits of expanding designer libraries to include ncAAs.

Highlights

  • As our understanding and control of biocatalytic reactions improves, organic chemists are increasingly able to employ naturally occurring or engineered enzymes to catalyse otherwise difficult synthetic chemical reactions

  • The amino acids used in this study can be ranked in order of aromatic ring electron density from most dense to least dense: p-aminophenylalanine> tyrosine (Y)> phenylalanine (F)> p-cyanophenylalanine> pnitrophenylalanine (Fig. 1)

  • The characteristics of the ring-substituted functional groups may have an impact on both catalysis and stability, as they differ in size, polarity and H-bonding potential from donating, to nonbonding (F), and accepting

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Summary

Introduction

As our understanding and control of biocatalytic reactions improves, organic chemists are increasingly able to employ naturally occurring or engineered enzymes to catalyse otherwise difficult synthetic chemical reactions. Transketolase has considerable potential for asymmetric C-C bond formation by catalysing the transfer of a two-carbon ketol group from a donor substrate to an aldehyde acceptor substrate [1]. Abbreviations 3-HBA, 3-hydroxybenzaldehyde; ncAA, noncanonical amino acid; pAMF, para-aminophenylalanine; pCNF, para-cyanophenylalanine; pNTF, para-nitrophenylalanine; TK, transketolase; TPP, thiamine pyrophosphate. The FEBS Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of.

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