Abstract

Glucose oxidase (GOx) holds considerable advantages for various applications. Nevertheless, the thermal instability of the enzyme remains a grand challenge, impeding the success in applications outside the well-controlled laboratories, particularly in practical bioelectronics. Many strategies to modify GOx to achieve better thermal stability have been proposed. However, modification of this enzyme by adding extra disulfide bonds is yet to be explored. This work describes the in silico bioengineering of GOx from Aspergillus niger by judiciously analyzing characteristics of disulfide bonds found in the Top8000 protein database, then scanning for amino acid residue pairs that are suitable to be replaced with cysteines in order to establish disulfide bonds. Next, we predicted and assessed the mutant GOx models in terms of disulfide bond quality (bond length and α angles), functional impact by means of residue conservation, and structural impact as indicated by Gibbs free energy. We found eight putative residue pairs that can be engineered to form disulfide bonds. Five of these are located in less conserved regions and, therefore, are unlikely to have a deleterious impact on functionality. Finally, two mutations, Pro149Cys and His158Cys, showed potential for stabilizing the protein structure as confirmed by a structure-based stability analysis tool. The findings in this study highlight the opportunity of using disulfide bond modification as a new alternative technique to enhance the thermal stability of GOx.

Highlights

  • Glucose oxidase (GOx; Enzyme Commission Number: 1.1.3.4) is an enzyme found in several natural sources, including insects, fruits, and fungi

  • GOx is widely extracted from Aspergillus niger, a haploid filamentous fungus, which can be abundant in warm environments, in field conditions, and in stored foods [1,2]

  • The characteristics of the disulfide bonds found in this data set were used for screening for candidate residues of GOx that are suitable for mutagenesis

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Summary

Introduction

Glucose oxidase (GOx; Enzyme Commission Number: 1.1.3.4) is an enzyme found in several natural sources, including insects, fruits, and fungi. GOx is widely extracted from Aspergillus niger, a haploid filamentous fungus, which can be abundant in warm environments, in field conditions, and in stored foods [1,2]. GOx from A. niger is of great importance, in trade. This commercially available GOx is one of the most common biomolecular structures used in research and industries. The GOx-based catalysis uses oxygen as an electron acceptor. As such an important bioreaction involves glucose, oxygen, H2 O2 , and electrons, GOx has been applied to several domains, ranging from food and pharmaceutical sciences to biosensors and bioelectronics

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