Abstract

Background-amylases catalyze the endo-hydrolysis of -1,4-D-glycosidic bonds in starch into smaller moieties. While industrial processes are usually performed at harsh conditions, -amylases from mainly the bacteria, fungi and yeasts are preferred for their stabilities (thermal, pH and oxidative) and specificities (substrate and product). Microbial -amylases can be purified and characterized for industrial applications. While exploring novel enzymes with these properties in the nature is time-costly, the advancements in protein engineering techniques including rational design, directed evolution and others have privileged their modifications to exhibit industrially ideal traits. However, the commentary on the strategies and preferably mutated residues are lacking, hindering the design of new mutants especially for enhanced substrate specificity and oxidative stability. Thus, our review ensures wider accessibility of the previously reported experimental findings to facilitate the future engineering work.Survey methodology and objectivesA traditional review approach was taken to focus on the engineering of microbial -amylases to enhance industrially favoured characteristics. The action mechanisms of - and -amylases were compared to avoid any bias in the research background. This review aimed to discuss the advances in modifying microbial -amylases via protein engineering to achieve longer half-life in high temperature, improved resistance (acidic, alkaline and oxidative) and enhanced specificities (substrate and product). Captivating results were discussed in depth, including the extended half-life at 100C, pH 3.5 and 10, 1.8 M hydrogen peroxide as well as enhanced substrate (65.3%) and product (42.4%) specificities. These shed light to the future microbial -amylase engineering in achieving paramount biochemical traits ameliorations to apt in the industries.ConclusionsMicrobial -amylases can be tailored for specific industrial applications through protein engineering (rational design and directed evolution). While the critical mutation points are dependent on respective enzymes, formation of disulfide bridge between cysteine residues after mutations is crucial for elevated thermostability. Amino acids conversion to basic residues was reported for enhanced acidic resistance while hydrophobic interaction resulted from mutated hydrophobic residues in carbohydrate-binding module or surface-binding sites is pivotal for improved substrate specificity. Substitution of oxidation-prone methionine residues with non-polar residues increases the enzyme oxidative stability. Hence, this review provides conceptual advances for the future microbial -amylases designs to exhibit industrially significant characteristics. However, more attention is needed to enhance substrate specificity and oxidative stability since they are least reported.

Highlights

  • In recent years, protein engineering has been equipped as a powerful tool to elucidate the structural functions of proteins and modify them for enhanced properties to solve various global issues

  • This review provides an overview on the advances of modifying microbial α-amylases via protein engineering techniques to achieve longer half-life in high temperature, improved resistance as well as enhanced substrate and product specificities

  • The engineering of microbial α-amylases should be a continuous and sustained effort to design the enzymes for their pertinent roles in various industrial applications

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Summary

Introduction

Protein engineering has been equipped as a powerful tool to elucidate the structural functions of proteins (enzymes) and modify them for enhanced properties to solve various global issues. In treating multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections through lysis, the fusion of peptidoglycan hydrolase (PGHase) with an albumin binding domain (ABD) had rendered the mutant (enzymbiotic) to exhibit an elevated half-life in human blood serum, strengthening its therapeutics potential (Sobieraj et al, 2020). While β-glucosidase had been utilized to reduce the fossil-based fuels dependency through lignocellulosic biomass conversion into second-generation biofuels (Contreras et al, 2020), its engineering had improved its glucose tolerance (end-product inhibition) besides enhancing its half-life at intermediate temperature (50 ◦C) (Cao et al, 2020). Out of 170 glycoside hydrolase (GH) families, the biggest group of α-amylases is in GH 13 with 109,801 protein sequences deposited as of March 2021

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